+1 Charles.
Regarding this comment in Kijanki’s post:
Also, as stated in one of the papers at Ralph's site, "for a given number of stages of gain, differential amplifiers have about 50% more parts," rather than being closer to the equivalent of two single-ended amps that are otherwise comparable. Although with some other balanced architectures the parts count may indeed be close to double.
Best regards,
-- Al
Regarding this comment in Kijanki’s post:
In order to provide good common mode rejection two halves of FULLY balanced amp cannot be independent. Negative cross-feedback has to be used to equalize gains of each half and that might be far from perfect.With some fully balanced architectures the need for negative cross-feedback, or even any feedback, can be minimized or avoided. For example, Ralph’s designs employ an architecture based on differential stages, and are typically spec’d as using just 1 or 2 db of feedback. And in the solid state domain many fully balanced Ayre amps employ zero feedback, and I believe most or all fully balanced Pass amps use very minimal amounts of feedback.
Also, as stated in one of the papers at Ralph's site, "for a given number of stages of gain, differential amplifiers have about 50% more parts," rather than being closer to the equivalent of two single-ended amps that are otherwise comparable. Although with some other balanced architectures the parts count may indeed be close to double.
Best regards,
-- Al