Who know Class D amp? could it used in guitar amp? How about it noise?
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
what about calss D
Collapse
X
-
As I understand it, a Class D amplifier is a switchmode power supply being fed audio as a reference signal. No reason it can't be used for guitar, but you'd want some serious shielding between any tube circuits and the class D section, and strictly segregate the D grounds and tube grounds approaching the grounding star point.
I was wondering the other month about using an SMPS as an output transformer.
-
The point of digital amps is to get a lot of power at high efficiency. WHile 100 watts of guitar seems loke a lot - it is very loud after all - it is not a lot of power. That is why it would be more likely to see it on a bass or Pa amp, where hundreds or even a thousand watts is output.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
class D not mean digital
Originally posted by Enzo View PostThe point of digital amps is to get a lot of power at high efficiency. WHile 100 watts of guitar seems loke a lot - it is very loud after all - it is not a lot of power. That is why it would be more likely to see it on a bass or Pa amp, where hundreds or even a thousand watts is output.
Comment
-
Originally posted by kldguitar View PostClass D is not means digital, it is wrong name
If so, that's why I would call it a digital amp too.
Comment
-
-
PWM meaning pulse width. That means the output voltage is switched on an off for a variable period of time - the pulse width. On and off, not analog - that means digital to me.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
They dont need any digital processing. They can use completely analog circuitry to convert the audio signal to pulses of varying width. It's sort of like amplitude modulation, but instead of modulating the amplitude of a carrier frequency, it modulates the width of the pulses at the carrier frequency.
Here's an explanation: http://www.ee.ucr.edu/~rlake/EE135/C...p_notes_AL.pdf
The only real similarity to digital is that the output devices are either on or off at all times. But that's it. It doesn't have registers, doesn't have A/D or D/A converters, and doesn't necessarily need logic circuity (other than one comparator) or a clock.
Class D has already been used for guitar amplication, in the Crate Power Block -- 150 watts in a package that's smaller than a toaster, weighs less than 5 pounds, and doesn't get hot. And it's also the best sounding solid state guitar amp I've ever heard.
Because a Class D amp has reactive compenents connected to the output, in order to filter out high-end noise from the carrier signal, the Power Block's tone is more dependent on the speaker than a typical solid-state amp. That's both a blessing and a curse. The good part is that you can expect your speaker choice to affect the tone pretty much the same way as it would with a tube amp. The drawback is that they sound a lot better at higher volumes than lower volumes, also like a tube amp.
Shea
Comment
-
OK, I'll accept the distinction. To me, any amp whose output was devices switching on or off I just called digital. If the whole amp has to be digital circuitry for that name, then I stand corrected.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
It is right and good ideas about Class D
Originally posted by Shea View PostThey dont need any digital processing. They can use completely analog circuitry to convert the audio signal to pulses of varying width. It's sort of like amplitude modulation, but instead of modulating the amplitude of a carrier frequency, it modulates the width of the pulses at the carrier frequency.
Here's an explanation: http://www.ee.ucr.edu/~rlake/EE135/C...p_notes_AL.pdf
The only real similarity to digital is that the output devices are either on or off at all times. But that's it. It doesn't have registers, doesn't have A/D or D/A converters, and doesn't necessarily need logic circuity (other than one comparator) or a clock.
Class D has already been used for guitar amplication, in the Crate Power Block -- 150 watts in a package that's smaller than a toaster, weighs less than 5 pounds, and doesn't get hot. And it's also the best sounding solid state guitar amp I've ever heard.
Because a Class D amp has reactive compenents connected to the output, in order to filter out high-end noise from the carrier signal, the Power Block's tone is more dependent on the speaker than a typical solid-state amp. That's both a blessing and a curse. The good part is that you can expect your speaker choice to affect the tone pretty much the same way as it would with a tube amp. The drawback is that they sound a lot better at higher volumes than lower volumes, also like a tube amp.
Shea
Comment
-
Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
a 20W kit Class D
Ramsay electronics sells a 20W class D kit. It will fit on the back of a speaker magnet (one of the suggested mountings) I built one and used it in a subwoofer.
Pretty nifty, I think it was about $35.
I did remember a few short words when I was soldering the surface mount parts...made my eyes hurt too.
I used a laptop power supply to power it.
Marc
Comment
-
I'm actually working on a Class-D amp just now. I bought a ready-made 400W power module from Coldamp and hooked it up to my own design of JFET preamp. It sounds surprisingly good, even on guitar overdriven with a boost pedal.
I ended up limiting it to 200W because I had trouble with the switching power supply I was using, and had to go back to a regular iron-cored transformer. A transformer big enough for 400W wouldn't fit in the size of case I wanted."Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"
Comment
Comment