I remember about 10-12 years ago when the DIY Hi-Fi community discovered and adopted soft-recovery diodes as the standard for solid state rectified power supplies, and, from what I've read, Schottky diodes are even better. I was wondering if that trend had ever found its way into musical instrument electronics.
The idea was that using soft-recovery diodes would reduce the broad spectrum switching noise of common diodes, making things like snubbers unnecessary. For example, these days, you can buy UF4007 diodes, the "ultrafast" soft-recovery version of the 1N4007.
I've done a couple of diode upgrades in Hi-Fi equipment where it did seem to yield some improvement, but I tried it in one of my solid-state rectified Leslie 122 amps, and it made no difference whatsoever--just to prove that I don't believe in "magic parts" solutions.
The reason I was thinking about this was because the Mesa Boogie amp I was working on recently has some noise in the input stages, and while some of it looked like typical background thermal noise of a high gain stage, the scope trace also showed very regular vertical spikes that looked like diode switching transients. The lower voltage power supplies are on the main audio circuit board, and, being from 1988, it uses standard 1N4006 diodes.
Please don't stereotype me as a believer in audiophile snake-oil. I'm really not. On one hand, I like to make use of advances in component technology if they are worthwhile, but, on the other hand, I try to maintain a healthy skepticism.
The idea was that using soft-recovery diodes would reduce the broad spectrum switching noise of common diodes, making things like snubbers unnecessary. For example, these days, you can buy UF4007 diodes, the "ultrafast" soft-recovery version of the 1N4007.
I've done a couple of diode upgrades in Hi-Fi equipment where it did seem to yield some improvement, but I tried it in one of my solid-state rectified Leslie 122 amps, and it made no difference whatsoever--just to prove that I don't believe in "magic parts" solutions.
The reason I was thinking about this was because the Mesa Boogie amp I was working on recently has some noise in the input stages, and while some of it looked like typical background thermal noise of a high gain stage, the scope trace also showed very regular vertical spikes that looked like diode switching transients. The lower voltage power supplies are on the main audio circuit board, and, being from 1988, it uses standard 1N4006 diodes.
Please don't stereotype me as a believer in audiophile snake-oil. I'm really not. On one hand, I like to make use of advances in component technology if they are worthwhile, but, on the other hand, I try to maintain a healthy skepticism.
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