If his amp is an SET you would have your explanation.I still do not understand why Ron stubbornly insists on separating dynamics from transparency, especially since he has failed to provide a compelling explanation for that separation.
If his amp is an SET you would have your explanation.I still do not understand why Ron stubbornly insists on separating dynamics from transparency, especially since he has failed to provide a compelling explanation for that separation.
I think i used the picture to make a point about the beauty and "transparency " of tubes !I’ve p’rolly seen it before too.
That is the good thing about tequila - one either doesn’t remember, or they do not want to remember.
It pretty much visually sums up the idea of transparency and distortion, although the SETs might be more transparent than the ‘doorty glass’.
Unfortunately I don't see. I still would like Ron to answer your question(s).
I remember bringing this up almost a year ago when we’re in Bali.If his amp is an SET you would have your explanation.
FWIW, if the amplifier is truly transparent, it will not be possible for it to not also convey dynamic contrast, because quite simply to be transparent it is being true to the signal, from which dynamic contrast arises. They cannot be two separate phenomena. .
That is mostly true. But SETs wouldn't be in business except for the way they make distortion, in particular their prodigious 2nd harmonic. And people also seem to like their 'dynamics', IOW the presence of higher ordered harmonics on the leading edges of transients. You read online and in print magazines about how SETs are so much more dynamic than their low power would seem to suggest quite frequently.I remember bringing this up almost a year ago when we’re in Bali.
There is no crime in high distortion, and distortion does not correlate with preference, or correlates as people liking it.
Definitely a Lysergic Acid Diethylamide tripster hipster type answer.I think your notion of characteristics through the window is the problem.
See if this analogy helps. I'm imagining a tank of water. In the tank is Stevie Nicks, breathing perfectly normally and happy.
Excellent transparency would mean there is no color or dye in the water; no dissolved solids in the water to obscure Stevie when you look through the tank; no waves; no sand in the water; no blurring vibration -- just clear, crystalline, see-through water, nothing adulterating in anyway your ability to see Stevie.
Transparency is a singular characteristic. It is a spectrum with total blockage and opaqueness on one end and perfectly clear, see-through, crystalline clarity on the other end.
If his amp is an SET you would have your explanation.
An amp with the harmonics will sound louder, have more presence, and be better focusing and resolving, whether or not it is a SET.…
FWIW, if the amplifier is truly transparent, it will not be possible for it to not also convey dynamic contrast, because quite simply to be transparent it is being true to the signal, from which dynamic contrast arises. They cannot be two separate phenomena. SET owners frequently do separate them, but that is only because of the distortion SETs make.
…
It should only exhibit dynamic contrast as the signal dictates. Anything else is caused by distortion and thus a lack of transparency. The two aspects (transparency and dynamic contrast) are not separate.I have a SET and I separate them only in the sense that one is necessary for the other. We can discuss them separately, but a transparent system will also be dynamic.
To your last point, this is why I use high efficiency speakers while the amps I use can make far more power than I would ever need.An amp with the harmonics will sound louder, have more presence, and be better focusing and resolving, whether or not it is a SET.
There are class-A/AB a D which also have predominently 2nd and 3rd harmonics.
One make get an expansion as we ask the SET to goes up into the distortion region.
It is harder to make an amplifier not sound dynamic, as they need to be used mostly below the level where the distortion products go vertical. So it is either super efficient speakers, low level listening, or high peak-power.
That has been my experience as well.I understand why SET owners like their amps; all I can say to that is if they get to hear a properly designed PP amp there isn't any going back.
It should only exhibit dynamic contrast as the signal dictates. Anything else is caused by distortion and thus a lack of transparency. The two aspects (transparency and dynamic contrast) are not separate.
To your last point, this is why I use high efficiency speakers while the amps I use can make far more power than I would ever need.
Most amps simply don't have the prodigious distortion that any zero feedback SET will exhibit. There literally is no power level at which an SET does not make audible distortion, since even just 1 Watt is a significant percentage of the usable power they make in most cases.
So I see them as a special case as their distortion is literally an order of magnitude higher than conventional tube amps. So perhaps this is a matter of scale which I've noticed is always tricky in internet conversation- we use many of the same terms but the scale, the effect of those terms is never communicated.
Regardless if an amplifier is going to make distortion above -120dB or so, its distortion must be innocuous which is to say the 2nd and 3rd should be dominant, otherwise the amp will have an unpleasant presentation.
Feedback changes the metric quite a lot. If you look at my posts you'll notice I was careful to mention 'zero feedback' SETs.18 watt SET with some feedback
18 watt SET with some feedback driving 105dB 16 ohm corner horns in small room. I hear dynamic contrast that I assume is the presentation of the information on the recording and not excessive distortion.
Feedback changes the metric quite a lot. If you look at my posts you'll notice I was careful to mention 'zero feedback' SETs.
The desperation being so palpable Is quite something to behold !
“Some feedback” …. Hmmm so kinda like only being a little bit pregnant then …
As I told you, I know about, respect and acknowledge Jim Strickland great work at Acoustat . However Peter Walker sentence I addressed predated the Acoustat Spectras (around 1987) for about 20 years ... In this period of time material technology evolved a lot.I owned three pairs, all original. The oldest were over 40 years old at the time and worked perfectly. The newest ones would be now 35 years old and worked perfectly fine.
As to arcing, well they don’t, even when the panel slaps the stators. They might break electrically or from panel material being over driven and stretched out, or some other abuse.
As to sound, the last generation Spectra solved both the imaging and transparency concerns. They were superior to all quads except 57s in transparency and imaged beautifully. If you don’t know what the Soectra technology was, I invite you to dig a bit and you will see it’s a good innovation and superior to panel curvature.
I am afraid your assumption is not correct. No, I would not ascribe transparency to your description of that presentation. In this description you discuss a variety of sonic things, but not one word about transparency.Consider a girl with guitar recording. You hear the notes and you hear the voice, but it sounds flat and lacks energy. The image is a bit too big and the guitar is not close enough to her voice. From what you have written, you would describe this presentation through a system as transparent, and I would not not.
Which question, exactly?You still refuse to actually answer the question, Ron.
I definitely don't think so.No, it seems that you are the one who is confused.
Maybe that's why you're making this complicated?We just apply logical thinking to the concept of transparency.
My PP tube amplifier has some modest feedback too. It does make a difference.
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