Now how about the difference of 'soft clipping' as an amp design feature, compared to 'hard clipping'?
M. 🇿🇦
M. 🇿🇦
Still confused about clipping after reading all the articles.
@justmetoo: https://mixmasterforum.com/t/hard-clipping-vs-soft-clipping/1162 About the old NAD soft-clipping circuits and more on clipping: http://www.thefactoryaudio.com/blog/2017/1/28/soft-sabotage In that last tutorial; mention is made that the demo woofer’s voice-coil started to smoke, after only ten seconds of clipped signal and- that the driver could have handled much more unclipped power. |
All amplifiers have a maximum and minimum output voltage, if this is exceeded then the amplifier should output dc (a constant voltage) until the signal comes back into range. So if you imagine a sine wave with the top and bottom cut off then that is what an ideal amplifier will produce when clipping (I'm talking solid state, valve amp distortion is more benign). A good designer will ensure an amplifier will enter and exit clipping in a controlled way (without oscillation etc.) although this is not always the case. When designing an amplifier you can specify the maximum voltage and gain but you don't know what the level of the input signal will be. So if you take a consumer amplifier and provide a high level signal (most DACs put out a signal far higher than the nominal consumer level of +-0.447V) then the amplifier is in danger of clipping. There are ways of limiting the gain at the extremes to try to avoid clipping but these distort the signal close to maximum output. Probably the best approach is some sort of warning light a red light or VU meter however they are rarely used in modern equipment. |
My understanding is that SS and tube amps, generally speaking, tend to behave rather differently. Distortion will increase just a little until the SS amp reaches its limit, at which point distortion tends to skyrocket. Whereas tube amps will have rather more distortion gradually increasing over their standard operating range, but there is less of an "elbow" when clipping ensues. Is that about right? It's been suggested to me that this is one reason why people say that tube watt ratings are not the same as SS watts. |