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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair
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![]() Bret Ludwig wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: Bret is also implicitly claiming that a 20 watt tubed amp can sound as good as a 500 watt amp when 500 watts would be required to avoid clipping. This is complete and total nonsense. Your debating petard has hoist you as usual. Watch which petard you have in your own back pocket, Mr. Ludwig, a'fore you make such comments. My claim was based on the idea that when listening to classical music at normal room volumes through a speaker of particular efficiency, (where I don't know what efficiency that is the author-it might have been PWK or an employee thereof), the average power might be two to five watts, You made absolutely NO such claim, Mr. Ludwig. You're claim was VERY simple, unambiguous and wrong: "Subjectively tube amps of a given specification often (not always) sound better than solid state amps of better spec. Russ Hamm proved it in 1973 with his paper which appeared in JAES and it has not been contradicted." Hamm's article makes NO such claim, it deals SPECIFICALLY with operation under conditions of sever clipping when THD amounts are on the order of 30%. with peak overloads that a 20-watt tube amplifier would render listenably clipped whereas to be similarly undistracting (to say nothing of not killing tweeters) a 250 watt (output) solid state amplifier would be needed. Absolute nonsense. Hamm's article makes no such statement. You have not provided a single shred of evidence to support such a claim. Further, NO one here ever made such a claim, save you. The statement was VERY simpe: ANY solid state amplifier with substantially more power than 20 watts is going to sound MUCH better than ANY 20 watt tube amplifier when both are being asked to deliver more than 20 watts. That means a 50 watt SS amplifier will do better at 35 watts than a 20 watt tube amplifier trying to do 35 watts,. A Class B amplifier is of roughly 50 percent efficiency and so I figured 500 watts power consumption. So what? What on earth does class B operation have to do with it, since almost NO audio amplifier since that time ran class B. There is but one or two such examples, and all are LONG off the market. Further, what on earth does power consumption and efficiency have to do with it? A 20 watt Class AB tube amplifier might at most pull fifty watts, Just like a class AB solid state amplifier, which comprises MOST of the solid state amplifiers on the market. The only difference is the SS amplfiier doesn't have to provide power for filaments.. Therefore, as anyone can see, the solid state amplifier has better power efficiency, but, the tube amp at 50 watts pulls less power than the SS amp at 500 (at full output) or even 80 (I speculated its quiescent draw.) to do what to the human listener is "the same job". This is utter and completely irrelevant claptrap, Mr. Ludwig. We're not talking about efficiency, we're simply dealing with the fact that ANY higher power amplifier will sound better than any LOWER power power amplifier when trying to produce more power than the lower power amplifier is capable. It has nothing to do with bias class, it has nothing to do with amplfiier efficiency. My numbers may be a little off Your numbers are WAY off and completely irrelevant. but anyone but you would get the concept. The concept that is clear is that you made a specific claim which was wrong: "Subjectively tube amps of a given specification often (not always) sound better than solid state amps of better spec. Russ Hamm proved it in 1973 with his paper which appeared in JAES and it has not been contradicted." and now you're making further claims which have only solidified the fact that you were wrong to begin with. That ought to be self-evident. What is evident is either your inability or dogged refusal to deal with the fundamental tecnnical errors behind your assertions, not to mention the fact that your cited an article which utterly fails to support your, ahem, "thesis." |
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