Re: chips and tubes [message #10248 is a reply to message #10244] |
Tue, 07 December 2004 16:01 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18787 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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Could be anything. Could be the amp topology. Maybe the substrate. Might be the surrounding components. Might even be the music or the moods. When you compare 'em, please let us know. I remember the Yamaha receiver in the 1980's sounded really great. I was impressed with it in several ways. I don't know how it compares with some of the gear I have now, but it sure made an impression on me an many others that heard it. I ran it on seven π Speakers with all JBL Professional Series drivers. To tell the truth, the inexpensive Harman Kardon HK 3470 receiver I picked up on Crutchfield a year ago sounds pretty good. I bought it to see how an entry level home theater would sound with two π's and tower two π's. I wanted solid state with about 100 watts per channel for this particular setup. That way I could compare tubes and solid state in the price range that most would probably use with one π's and two π's. I've never opened it to see if it uses a chip amp or discrete components, but more than likely, it's a chip. Maybe a National chip, just like the gainclones. I dunno. But it sounds pretty good; Suprising, really. Wayne
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Re: chips and tubes [message #10259 is a reply to message #10257] |
Thu, 09 December 2004 16:35 |
hitsware
Messages: 51 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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>I know op-amps use sometimes 100db of Global Feedback. >But I was under the impression that GC's use some amount >of GF also. Is that incorrect?Correctomundo. The chips used for GC's are in fact op-amps. Perhaps more correctly 'power op-amps'. This is the same topology used in 99% of solid state amps (only the circuit is all on 1 'chip'). As much gain as possible is developed, affording massive feedback for low distortion specs. In fact so much gain that feedback must be used to define a reasonable operating condition. Fine and dandy. Some of them sound great. For my tastes though, amps with little or no feedback (and here I mean 'global' or 'active' feedback where the output is fed back (as opposed to 'degenerative' that simply limits the gain of a device)) have a truly more groovy sound. WAY more dynamic and open .... mike
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