Originally posted by: Howard
Strange that you tell subjectivists to suck it when the final word in audio is completely subjective? ESPECIALLY when we don't have a universally-accepted concrete metric for how good something sounds?
Well, we do.
Ever take a look at the Nelson Pass amplifiers? Or perhaps the Halcros? They're considered the best amplifiers in the world for a good reason: intermodulation distortion (IMD), harmonic distortion (THD), and noise are all so low you can't measure them.
Of course, they also cost about as much as a small car.
Furthermore, the Halcros are about as complex as your average Tokamak, with more gain stages and feedback loops than a whole recording studio. On the other other hand, the designs of Nelson Pass, using a more minimalist approach, simply use a dozen output transistors per channel biased so that, while highly linear, the whole amp is maybe 20% efficient on a good day. (They also make great space heaters - turn up the volume, and you can warm your house!)
Admittedly, some people do like the small amount of harmonic distortion created by most tube amplifiers. However, it drives me absolutely nuts anywhere outside a guitar amplifier. Perhaps the best stereo system I have ever heard consisted of a nice pair of Paradigm Reference series towers and a Pass Aleph amp - products with the numbers to back up their claims.
Originally posted by: Analog
Your specs are lacking some specifics. Usually, distortion is rated at a power level over a set of frequencies at a specific load. For instance, 200W into 8 ohms from 20 - 20KHz, 0.05% THD. That tells me the load, the wattage, the bandwidth etc. To do that sort of measuring, a precise THD analyzer may be necessary. Otherwise, you'll have to do some comparisons on your own.
I looked through his design notes on the DIYaudio forum. It looks to be a pretty solid design, with low distortion shown on the scope even at 100w into 4 ohms at 10khz.
To be honest, these amplifiers won't be used anywhere near even 100 watts per channel. In fact, I'd estimate a maximum of 20 watts into 8 ohms from the smaller amp, and 40 watts from the larger ones. These will be used for a pair of bi-amped speakers with an active crossover.
Phase distortion is also something of a non-issue. I'll also have phase distortion from the active crossover, and by mucking around with the active filters, one can cancel out the other.