Bruce, enjoy!
I have several minor corrections and clarifications to most of the recent posts, though (excluding Ralph's, of course!).
Best regards,
-- Al
I have several minor corrections and clarifications to most of the recent posts, though (excluding Ralph's, of course!).
10-30-13: BifwynneAs I believe you realize, the output impedance of the 4 ohm tap of your amp (and that of most other tube amps, aside mainly from some OTL's and SETs) is much less than 4 ohms. It would be more correct to say that the load impedance that the tap is designed to drive or work into is 4 ohms.
LT: The zero tap goes to the neg. terminal and the 4 ohm tap feeds the hot. If I've got that right, the amp's output impedance with the LT configuration is 4 ohms, which matches the LT woofer and lower midrange impedance ...
UT: The 4 ohm tap is split wire, so I'm using the other head of the 4 ohm bi-wire to feed the negative terminal. Then, I'm running Tom's single cable off the 16 ohm tap to the hot. If I've got this right, the amp's output impedance on the UT configuration is 8 ohms.... An important point is that the amp's voltage gain off the 4 ohm taps is about 2.5 db less than off the 8 ohm taps. As a result, the speakers may be a tad bright.Both statements are not correct. The load impedance that from the perspective of the amplifier is optimal for connection between the 4 ohm and 16 ohm taps is 4 ohms. As indicated in the paper Bruce referenced earlier, when 4, 8, and 16 ohm taps are provided the 4 ohm tap will normally be the center tap of the secondary winding of the transformer, with an equal number of turns "above" and "below" that point. That follows from the fact that transformers transform impedances in proportion to the square of the turns ratio. Presumably the transformer is designed such that a 4 ohm load connected between the common (negative or black) terminal and the 4 ohm tap will present the same impedance to the output tubes as when a 16 ohm load is connected between the common terminal and the 16 ohm tap. Therefore the number of secondary windings between the common terminal and the 16 ohm tap will be twice the number of windings between the common terminal and the 4 ohm tap. Therefore the number of secondary windings between the 4 and 16 ohm taps will be the same as the number of windings between the common terminal and the 4 ohm tap.
10-31-13: F1a
Is the UT impedance really 8 ohms? Would it not be 12 - the difference between 16 and 4 ohm taps?? If so, the gain may even be higher than 2.5 dB.
11-01-13: MinorlI don't see anything wrong with Bruce's statement, Minorl. As I'm sure you realize, almost all solid state amps have output impedances that are close to zero (i.e., a very small fraction of 1 ohm). Therefore, as a consequence of Ohm's Law and assuming that the amp is operated within the limits of its voltage, current, power, and thermal capabilities, the higher the load impedance the less current and power it will deliver, while delivering essentially constant voltage as load impedance varies. Power supply robustness will increase the CAPABILITIES of the amp under demanding conditions (especially into LOW impedances, and difficult impedance phase angles), and hopefully improve its sonics under most conditions.
"However, SS amps produce less current and correlatively less power as impedance increases."
Very interesting post. I'm enjoying the interactions. However one clarification. Your statement in quotes above is really not correct. For well designed solid state amplifiers with well designed power supplies, this statement is not accurate. Not starting a tube vs solid state conversation, just a clarification.
Best regards,
-- Al