My answer to the original posed question is "not at all, not even close"
I think Eric contributed some good stuff above.
As am amp designer, i think they ought to be voltage sources, with low output impedance. Now, for the record mine are not zero, because i don't like to employ global control (feedback) loops nor expose those loops to external elements that create unknown stability issues. But we are talking small fractions of an ohm.
I realize that a higher output impedance may result in a warmer 'bloom", but that's a coloration, whether you like it or not.
A current source would likely result in very distorted sound. Also note that the impedance of a speaker changes on many dimensions - with frequency, with excursion of the electromagnets, with volume, ....so why would we want to make the gain impedance dependent?
G
I think Eric contributed some good stuff above.
As am amp designer, i think they ought to be voltage sources, with low output impedance. Now, for the record mine are not zero, because i don't like to employ global control (feedback) loops nor expose those loops to external elements that create unknown stability issues. But we are talking small fractions of an ohm.
I realize that a higher output impedance may result in a warmer 'bloom", but that's a coloration, whether you like it or not.
A current source would likely result in very distorted sound. Also note that the impedance of a speaker changes on many dimensions - with frequency, with excursion of the electromagnets, with volume, ....so why would we want to make the gain impedance dependent?
G