The reactive nature of a speaker load does not alter the clipping characteristics of different circuits. The change in signal amplitude you can measure is due to interaction of amplifier’s output- and speaker’s impedance. If only small amounts of negative feedback are used the amplifier actually has more voltage gain with higher impedance loads – such as at resonance peaks of the speaker or at higher frequencies where speaker load’s inductivity becomes more prominent. Tube amplifiers have this type of characteristic inherently due to their high output impedance and low amount of global NFB. Emulating this characteristic in a solid-state amplifier is extremely simple. So simple that maybe about 90% of modern SS guitar amps incorporate it. It does not account for loudness although it has a distinct effect to frequency response and to amount of overdrive/clipping at different frequencies.
Yes. Some circuits could have a wider non-linear (saturating) region of output signal swing. After the amplifier’s linear region is exceeded most solid-state amplifiers just hard clip to rails (in other words, saturate) and their peak output power remains about the same as what it was when the amp was “clean”. However, from that point on some tube amplifiers have a broader transition to full sturation, thus they only slightly begin to compress the signal and at best they can even double their peak output power before the signal begins to show signs of abrupt clipping and “flat topping”.
While this may seem like a big deal it only accounts for a difference of about 3 dB – which is not much loudness-wise. And even before that took place we would have been able to clearly perceive that the signal has been distorted.
Yes, this smoother compression allows boosting the lower-amplitude signal portions while keeping the signal “seemingly clean”, as the signal lacks the harsher, annoying clipping artefacts that are results from the “hard knees” in the clipped waveform. This boosting thus creates a sense of increased loudness, although the peak loudness level hasn’t really increased notably. You can hear examples of this all the time in TV commercials and on radio stations. But this is really not something that you couldn’t do with an ordinary compressor/soft clipper in front of the power amp as well. Today many SS guitar amps are finally beginning to have one.
And all the time we must remember that not all tube amplifiers are even capable of this kind of smooth compression. In most cases the power supply can’t keep up with the increased current demand and the rail voltages sag causing earlier clipping – which then also makes the clipping more abrupt given that the amplitude of the driving signal does not change. Then we have the issue of different circuit topologies and tubes clipping differently. So, not all tube amps clip “heavenly”, “softly” or “transparently”. I have heard plenty of tube amplifiers that sound downright horrible when they clip. They really weren’t any better in that regard than generic SS amps.
With bass amplifiers the detrimental effects of clipping are even more prominent than with guitar amps, which shows that this whole toleration of clipping is just a subjective issue and pretty much tied to specific genres of music or types of musical instruments. We can’t talk objectively about subjective issues. That became obvious already in Steve Conner's comment about Hendrix. ...And as much as I like his guitar tone I wouldn't want to sound like him when playing classical guitar.
I still think that this whole tube watts are louder –thing is just a big myth that has been created by misunderstanding the processes involved. All these years of talking, yet no one has proved it to be true. ...Perhaps that tells something?
Yes. Some circuits could have a wider non-linear (saturating) region of output signal swing. After the amplifier’s linear region is exceeded most solid-state amplifiers just hard clip to rails (in other words, saturate) and their peak output power remains about the same as what it was when the amp was “clean”. However, from that point on some tube amplifiers have a broader transition to full sturation, thus they only slightly begin to compress the signal and at best they can even double their peak output power before the signal begins to show signs of abrupt clipping and “flat topping”.
While this may seem like a big deal it only accounts for a difference of about 3 dB – which is not much loudness-wise. And even before that took place we would have been able to clearly perceive that the signal has been distorted.
Yes, this smoother compression allows boosting the lower-amplitude signal portions while keeping the signal “seemingly clean”, as the signal lacks the harsher, annoying clipping artefacts that are results from the “hard knees” in the clipped waveform. This boosting thus creates a sense of increased loudness, although the peak loudness level hasn’t really increased notably. You can hear examples of this all the time in TV commercials and on radio stations. But this is really not something that you couldn’t do with an ordinary compressor/soft clipper in front of the power amp as well. Today many SS guitar amps are finally beginning to have one.
And all the time we must remember that not all tube amplifiers are even capable of this kind of smooth compression. In most cases the power supply can’t keep up with the increased current demand and the rail voltages sag causing earlier clipping – which then also makes the clipping more abrupt given that the amplitude of the driving signal does not change. Then we have the issue of different circuit topologies and tubes clipping differently. So, not all tube amps clip “heavenly”, “softly” or “transparently”. I have heard plenty of tube amplifiers that sound downright horrible when they clip. They really weren’t any better in that regard than generic SS amps.
With bass amplifiers the detrimental effects of clipping are even more prominent than with guitar amps, which shows that this whole toleration of clipping is just a subjective issue and pretty much tied to specific genres of music or types of musical instruments. We can’t talk objectively about subjective issues. That became obvious already in Steve Conner's comment about Hendrix. ...And as much as I like his guitar tone I wouldn't want to sound like him when playing classical guitar.
I still think that this whole tube watts are louder –thing is just a big myth that has been created by misunderstanding the processes involved. All these years of talking, yet no one has proved it to be true. ...Perhaps that tells something?
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