Yep. The Musical Fidelity A1, designed by Tim de Paravicini. My friend with the "golden ears" paid a lot of money to have his revised.
It sounds like at tube amp to my "wooden" ears
Jörg.
The Levinson ML2, Levinson 27.5, Pass Aleph 0 come to mind.
Yep. The Musical Fidelity A1, designed by Tim de Paravicini. My friend with the "golden ears" paid a lot of money to have his revised.
It sounds like at tube amp to my "wooden" ears
Jörg.
Fast forward to today and I no longer have the KSA-250 or the KRC-HR. I now own an ARC REF 5SE and REF 75. I only have a scant few hours on both of them and am a long way from the magic 600 hour mark. So far, it's good to be back to tubes.
About what I would expect in a hobby in which fashion is more important than fact. Sigh - double....
Myles; hey - tubes are not as reliable as transistors. Think about a chunk of ARC gear where the tubes are "ganged" in pairs and when they fail - they take out both themselves and a local resistor. Tubes are mostly junk. While you may very well have a Phd - you do NOT possess a PhD in electronics. Wishful thinking does not a fact make.
In regards 'stats; sorry dude - to these ears they have always sounded "lean and thin" hence the need for some ringing tubes to flesh them out. With respect to OTL - they don't have the long sustains and generally euphoric presentation of transformer coupled tubes. Though, in all honesty, they do have that tube sound to a lesser degree - as to why? You have me on that one.
Mep,
In regards radar - you are without a clue. In the SPY-1 all of the active aperture elements are solid state. You never responded to the last time I attempted to straighten out your confused thinking. Practically you are just trolling for an argument - so be happy - now you have one.
To everybody;
Have any of you ever heard Lamm go on about why his TUBE gear sounds the way it does (and his distortion figures are absurdly high). He freely admits that he has discovered (or stumbled on to) a psycho-acoustic phenomena that he exploits (at an incredible price) in his tube amplifiers. While the Lamm gear is truly pleasant to listen to - there is no doubt that the sound is a complete distortion.
Which leads to the real question; if your hollow state whatever makes a sound that you find more pleasing - despite it being inaccurate stuff - who cares? I listen for the music - bring that to me in a more pleasing manner (SUBJECTIVE) then hey!!! Go for it.
This is all so silly - I guess we get as much joy arguing about this stuff as we do listening to it.
What is largely relevant is pattern of that distortion and whether it falls above audible thresholds. It turns out that as long as the distortion patteren is effectively masked by ear/brain functions then it is as if the distortion does not exist.
I think Lamm has hit on what Jean Hiraga and others have been saying about the distortion pattern, it matters and if you follow certain psychoacoustic principles you don't have to get rid of distortion you just need to shape it so it falls in our auditory "blind spot".
^^ IOW engineering has to be applied to building equipment that obeys human hearing/perceptual rules rather than arbitrary numbers on paper. That is, if you want something to have good sound.
Herein lies the basis of the objectivist/subjectivist debate: We know plenty about how design affects function, but very little about how the human ear/brain system perceives sound. The more we know about the latter, the less the relevant the traditional specs on paper will become- I expect them to be supplanted by different, more accurate specs that actually relate to how we hear
How would "masked" and inaudible sound different?
Does "blind spot" mean the distortion is inaudible? I'm very confused as to how inaudible distortion could create a characteristic sound that capitalizes on human auditory perception to be more pleasing, which is more or less what Lamm says he has done, isn't it?
It's there but it's hiding; it's not there. Is this a semantic argument?
OK, so if I'm following this so far, euphonic (not the best term, I suspect) designer endeavors to create components in which the distortion is masked by an ear/brain function (This begs for further explanation. has this function been analyzed? Identified even? Are there studies? If not, how does the designer know how to manipulate it?). The objectivist - for lack of a better word - deigner endeavors to design components in which all known distortions are below the threshold of audibility?
If maskin it is a good idea, wouldn't eliminating it be a better one?
How would "masked" and inaudible sound different?
Does "blind spot" mean the distortion is inaudible? I'm very confused as to how inaudible distortion could create a characteristic sound that capitalizes on human auditory perception to be more pleasing, which is more or less what Lamm says he has done, isn't it?
It's there but it's hiding; it's not there. Is this a semantic argument?
Tim
The problem is that there is NO SUCH THING as a linear amplification device...not tubes, not bipolar transistors, not MOSFETS or even transformers (you can get a few db gain from them but only at line level). This means that elimination is not really possible so "hiding" the distortion where the ear/brain doesn't notice it is key.
Now, you might say "Hey, I know that Halcro has 0.000001% THD so they got rid of nearly all the distortion" but what they have really done is reduced the part that isn't particularly audible and left behind the stuff that is very audible and the ear/brain looks at patterns and if those patterns are not correct it perceives the sound as unnatural. In addition, you get a signal modulated "noise" floor that is really a myriad of distortion peaks that have gone through endless loops of negative feedback. Norman Crowhurst first described this in the 1950s. I suggest reading the Master's Thesis of Daniel Cheever, the AES papers of Earl Geddes (available on his website), the theoretical simulations of Boyk and Sussman and the white paper by Nelson Pass...all of which is available on the internet by googling.
BTW, if you have heard the Halcro amp then you might understand what I am talking about that despite it's stellar numbers it sounds cold, lifeless and sterile. Not at all what music should sound like.
Assume that when I speak of eliminating distortion it's theoretical talk; I understand perfection has not been achieved. But neither that imperfection, nor all the reading you would have me do is going to give "masking" distortion a different result than reducing it to below audible levels. You can't simultaneously hide the coloration from audibility and use the coloration to create sound that triggers all the right psychoacoustic perceptions that neither you, nor Ralph, nor Lamm (need I go on?) seem to be able to explain in any way that would be particularly useful to someone voicing an amplifier.
And none of this is about those old diversions, THD and negative feedback.
You and Ralph and Lamm seem to be asserting that, using knowledge of human audio perception, audio equipment can be designed that sounds much better than it measures. I don't doubt that statement is theoretically true. But with no better explanation of what those perceptual triggers are, and how they're being manipulated by the gear in question, I have every reason to doubt that you guys are pulling it off. I can, of course, listen and hear the difference between a Lamm and a Mark Levinson. And they are different, I'm sure. Pleasant distortion or skillful manipulation of human perception to create a superior result? The latter is the claim. It has not been supported here, or anywhere I'm aware of. Is it in the papers you recommended? Time is valuable.
Tim
No one who is trying to do SOTA gear is using coloration to give the right psychoacoustic perception.
It is the FACT that certain patterns of distortion or inaudible, as long as they are not above certain thresholds, that means as long as a deisgners product adheres to that pattern (and it is one set by evolution not arbitrarily by us) it will appear to sound distortion free. In the end do you care if there is distortion if you can't hear it?
The problem with techniques that are implemented to reduce distortion (namely negative feedback) is that it has the negative consequence of causing the amplifier from deviating from the right pattern, thus exposing the harmonics that are left and high order harmonics are not pleasant even to very low levels.
" but when we reduce those patterns of distortion using negative feedback, a negative consequence isIt is the FACT that certain patterns of distortion or inaudible
. So, reducing the inaudible distortions exposes the audible ones? How's that work?exposing the harmonics that are left and high order harmonics are not pleasant even to very low levels
There is another good article by Keith Howard in Stereophile where he used a computer program to add distortion to a music file. He then compared the undistorted to the distorted files and unsurprisingly he found the undistorted file sounded the best...in other words IF the distortion is audible then it is ALWAYS a detriment to the sound and there is no such thing as "Euphonic" distortion.
However, when he compared different distortion patterns, the pattern that would conform most closely to what Cheever refers to as "Aural harmonics" was the least damaging to the sound and patterns of predominantly odd order harmonics sounded the worst. Now, since we can't in the real world have the truly pure signal then the best of the worst is still the best we can get.
You need to expand your awareness if you want to claim that people don't know what's going on with human perception.
Time IS valuable and yours would be well spent reading what I have suggested and then reapproaching the subject with hopefully a deeper understanding of what's going on.
(...) There is another good article by Keith Howard in Stereophile where he used a computer program to add distortion to a music file. He then compared the undistorted to the distorted files and unsurprisingly he found the undistorted file sounded the best...in other words IF the distortion is audible then it is ALWAYS a detriment to the sound and there is no such thing as "Euphonic" distortion. However, when he compared different distortion patterns, the pattern that would conform most closely to what Cheever refers to as "Aural harmonics" was the least damaging to the sound and patterns of predominantly odd order harmonics sounded the worst. Now, since we can't in the real world have the truly pure signal then the best of the worst is still the best we can get.
You need to expand your awareness if you want to claim that people don't know what's going on with human perception. How do you think MP3 was invented? They figured out how much information you could actually throw away and still get a passable representation of the original signal. It isn't quite the same but it is related. Time IS valuable and yours would be well spent reading what I have suggested and then reapproaching the subject with hopefully a deeper understanding of what's going on. The meter readers don't have this one right, I am afraid and I would argue that they set back true high fidelity (to the listener) by a good 50 years. Now, if some genius out there can come up with a linear amplification device we might make true progress to a final goal that satisfies both listeners and measurers! BTW, I am a measurer by training (PhD in Analytical Chemistry) so I know quite a bit about the limitations of measurements and the validity of specifications to actually explain a phenomenon (usually they are just good for QC work to make sure everything is working the same from sample to sample).
Assume that when I speak of eliminating distortion it's theoretical talk; I understand perfection has not been achieved. But neither that imperfection, nor all the reading you would have me do is going to give "masking" distortion a different result than reducing it to below audible levels. You can't simultaneously hide the coloration from audibility and use the coloration to create sound that triggers all the right psychoacoustic perceptions that neither you, nor Ralph, nor Lamm (need I go on?) seem to be able to explain in any way that would be particularly useful to someone voicing an amplifier.
And none of this is about those old diversions, THD and negative feedback.
You and Ralph and Lamm seem to be asserting that, using knowledge of human audio perception, audio equipment can be designed that sounds much better than it measures. I don't doubt that statement is theoretically true. But with no better explanation of what those perceptual triggers are, and how they're being manipulated by the gear in question, I have every reason to doubt that you guys are pulling it off. I can, of course, listen and hear the difference between a Lamm and a Mark Levinson. And they are different, I'm sure. Pleasant distortion or skillful manipulation of human perception to create a superior result? The latter is the claim. It has not been supported here, or anywhere I'm aware of. Is it in the papers you recommended? Time is valuable.
Tim
I'm just asking questions and looking for a solid case here. You guys may know, and be leveraging all kinds of principles of human auditory perception in your amp designs. Which ones? How? No need to reveal any proprietary technical secrets, I wouldn't understand them anyway. But I do undetstand the basics of how MP3s use perception, and masking, to work. Talk slow; I'll try to keep up.
Maybe. But, pardon my skepticism, I don't expect to find answers to my simple questiosn in the sources you refer me to if you can't or won't answer them here. Are any of these sources going to explain to me how "patterns of distortion that are inaudible" mask anything?
Tim
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