Thorty40: This was made clear back when they were introduced. While it is a brilliant design, it is not an OTL. It is a transformer based amplifier that is biased by a high speed oscillator to reduce hysteresis effect of the transformer.
An output transformerless amplifier does not have a transformer between the tubes and the speakers. The David Berning amplifier has one after the tubes. Ask to see the schematics published in the patent application. In your own statement, you aver:
"Ok, the RF re-mapping occurs through the use of a tiny RF transformer at a carrier freq. of 250kHz."
The transformer you speaker of, is in between the tubes and the speaker leads. Hence, it is in no way an OTL.
To reiterate, it is a brilliant design and while having the ability to drive impedance challenged speakers, if put head to head with a proper OTL on a stable load, you might be surprised at which one sounds better. Again, I want to make it clear that if I had a limited budget and a tough load to drive, I would give the Berning amps real consideration.
An output transformerless amplifier does not have a transformer between the tubes and the speakers. The David Berning amplifier has one after the tubes. Ask to see the schematics published in the patent application. In your own statement, you aver:
"Ok, the RF re-mapping occurs through the use of a tiny RF transformer at a carrier freq. of 250kHz."
The transformer you speaker of, is in between the tubes and the speaker leads. Hence, it is in no way an OTL.
To reiterate, it is a brilliant design and while having the ability to drive impedance challenged speakers, if put head to head with a proper OTL on a stable load, you might be surprised at which one sounds better. Again, I want to make it clear that if I had a limited budget and a tough load to drive, I would give the Berning amps real consideration.