Tube Amps and Friendly Speakers - Back Impedance


The issue of tube amp friendly speakers has been taken apart on the Forum. However, I have another tube amp/speaker compatibility question that I hope will attract the attention of our tech oriented members, especially those members who manufacture speakers or amps. As I will explain below, the question relates to what I call "back impedance." Although this OP is longer than I would have wanted, the subject is complicated. Please accept my apologies. In the end, I'm not sure there is a best answer or practical advice. But here goes.

First a warm-up. I think many tech oriented members, such as Ralph (Atmasphere), Duke (Audiokinesis) and Al (Almarg) to name a few, have written extensively about Voltage and Power Paradigm amps, and how these amps produce current and power when presented with varying speaker impedances that change as a function of frequency.

Very generally, Voltage Paradigm amp (i.e., usually SS amps) usually maintain constant voltage and as a result produce more current, and correlatively more power (i.e., watts), when speaker impedance drops. However, SS amps produce less current and correlatively less power as impedance increases. By contrast, Power Paradigm amps (i.e., usually tube amps) tend to produce constant power as speaker impedance changes. The Atmasphere White Paper on the so-called Voltage and Power Paradigms contains a much more cogent and comprehensive discussion of the highly simplified points in this paragraph.

Second, a tube amp twist. Our tech members have explained at great length that SS amps usually have very low output impedances. This characteristic goes hand-in-hand with high damping factors (DF) and the Voltage Paradigm attribute of SS amps being constant voltage sources.

Third, the tube amp twist is that some tube amps use negative feedback of various types which has the effect of lowering output impedance and raising DF. In short, this design attribute enables a tube amp to perform somewhat solid state-like. That is, this class of tube amps is able to produce output voltages that don't vary very much as speaker impedance changes as a function of frequency.

As a case in point, my tube amp, the ARC Ref 150, has 3 different output taps (4, 8 and 16 ohms), each of which has a different output impedance: 4 ohm tap -- +/- .4 db; 8 ohm tap -- +/- .8 db; and 16 ohm tap -- +/- 1.4 db. Take a look at John Atkinson's 2012 bench test measurements of the Ref 150 to get a better sense for how it performs when presented with a simulated speaker load -- Graph 1 in particular.

Now to the back impedance question. And let me caveat my question by saying that it applies to tube amps that use output transformers -- not OTL amps like Atmasphere amps. In addition, I am thinking about tube amps that have low output impedance.

As I mentioned above, this issue has been discussed before, but I'm not sure sufficiently so. I say this because without knowing more, I would have jumped to the conclusion that a tube amp that has a low output impedance tap like the Ref 150 should perform sufficiently "SS like" so that it could drive speakers that were voiced to be driven by solid state amps. In fact, if the 4 ohm tap produces the lowest output impedance, just use it regardless of the speaker's impedance characteristics (nominal or varying). Not so fast ...

As I also mentioned, the Ref 150, like many tube amps has 3 output taps (4, 8 and 16) that are intended to correspond to the nominal impedance of the speaker. The theory is that the amp and speakers will perform better if there's a good impedance match between the two components. Great! What the heck does that mean and how does it impact performance??

The explanations I read on some of the older Forum posts seems to go like this. One of the key functions of output transformers is to match the impedance load of the speakers to the optimal operating range of a tube amp's output tubes. So, in a crazy way that I still don't understand yet, an output tranny works two ways -- (1) it steps-down the output tubes' plate voltage and high impedance to match the speakers, and at the same time (2) it steps up the impedance loading presented to the output tubes through the interaction of the tranny's primary and secondary windings (or, back impedance). In the latter case, the impedance step-up relates to the speaker's impedance presented to the tranny's secondary windings.

So, if I got this halfway correct, the inference that one should always hook his/her speakers up to the 4 ohm tap just because it generally presents the lowest output impedance to the speakers is flawed. The fallacy is that blindly using the 4 ohm tap may not result in an optimal impedance match for the output tubes.

And I think our tech members mentioned that if the output tubes are presented with a stepped up impedance that is outside the optimal design range of the output tubes, the result could be higher distortion and/or loss of power delivery capability at a given frequency as a function of the speaker's impedance characteristics at that frequency. Perhaps that's why the sage advice of using the tap that sounds best keeps cropping up. There's a lot of variables in play that affect what's comes out of the business end of a speaker, e.g., DF, output voltage regulation, power delivery and distortion, all changing as a function of frequency.

Ok, so using a low impedance tap doesn't solve all the problems with varying speaker impedances. Then, is it practical to know how much variation in a particular speaker's impedance viz-a-viz the amp's output tap impedance can be tolerated to be assured that the back impedance presented to the output tubes is in the tubes' operating sweet spot. Stated differently, if one plugs a speaker having a nominal impedance of 8 ohms into the amp's 8 ohm tap, how much can the speaker's impedance vary, yet still maintain optimal back impedance presented to the output tubes by the output transformer. Plus or minus 2 ohms ??, 4 ohms ??, etc.

If the practical answer is not more than 4 ohms total variation (or -/+ 2 ohms), then that's one heck of a pretty flat speaker by any accounts. So, my hypothetical speaker's impedance should not be greater than 10 ohms or less than 6 ohms or else the amp's output tubes will be operating outside their sweet spot, possibly producing more distortion or less power than predicted, especially if driven hard (e.g., at high gain, especially in the bass region).

So, in summary: is it practical to know how much variation in a particular speaker's impedance viz-a-viz the amp's output tap impedance can be tolerated to be assured that the back impedance presented to the output tube is in the tube's sweet spot? And that is the question!

P.S. I apologize for any typos. Just had eye surgery and my vision is still coming back.
bifwynne
Unsound .... I'm not aware of any tube amp that functions "SS-like" and that can adapt to a speaker's impedance variations.

Not to say there isn't such a beast out there. Just don't know what the model is.

The closest analogy I can think of is the ARC HD 220, a hybrid tube/SS amp, which matches a tube based front end with a SS output stage.

Notwithstanding the foregoing variation, I wonder if there's a tube amp configuration that can do double as your inquiry posits??

But here's a EE question for the techies. New Sensor is coming out with a new audio power tube, the KT-150 which may be a drop in replacement for the KT-120 -- TBD??? ARC has advised me NOT to drop in the KT-150 yet because its engineering department is still studying it.

I wonder out loud if the "sweet spot impedance range" of an output tube changes if a tube model is changed, i.e., the KT-120 viz the KT-150? Or, is an output tube's sweet spot impedance range more dependent on the circuit topology???

Bruce
Clockmeister ... not sure exactly what Ken Zelin had in mind. If he noticed that the sound and timber of the system changed as a function of the amp's output tap used, and therefore suggested that one compensate by adjusting room acoustic characteristics, that kinda looked passed the underlying reason for the acoustic difference.

But a fix is a fix be it a Band-Aid of moving the furniture around or me trying to creatively use all the taps on my amp. Whatever works I suppose.
Unsound, you may be right. But here's a little exercise that might be of interest to you and/or others that responds to your last quip. I make several references to the 2013 Stereophile list of recommended components, which includes recommended tube amps.

Drill into the Stereophile reports for the Class A recommended tube amps, and in particular John Atkinson's bench test reports. He runs all the tubes amps through the pretty much the same bench tests. I think Graph 1 reports the results of the amp's voltage output across the full frequency spectrum when driving a simulated speaker load that presents varying impedances and phase angles. JA also measures the amp's output impedances off the various output taps.

What you will learn from the exercise is whether the tube amp in question will perform SS like with respect to varying speaker impedances - that is operate like a constant voltage source. As has been said numerous times, this is largely a function of the amp's output impedance. What you will NOT learn is anything about back impedance, other than the reviewer's subjective opinion about how well the amp sounds on the reference speakers used.

Here's an important caveat -- just because the tube amp being reviewed sounds great (or not) on the reviewer's reference speakers could be misinformation on how well the amp will sound on YOUR speakers. This is because the electrical characteristics of YOUR speaker may be very different that the reviewer's reference speakers. And I'm not even talking about the speakers' acoustic performance (i.e., design and build).

My advice to members who are interested in buying a tube amp is to try and grab a bench test report about the amp that will show the types of information disclosed in the JA reports. Look for a tube amp with low output impedance. Presumably, that type of amp will be able to adapt best to changing speaker impedances -- that is act like a constant voltage. Correlatively, the amp will have a DF that will not be in the sub-basement. This is not my subjective opinion -- it's Ohm's Law.

At the same time, try not to go overboard with a tube amp that uses tons of NF for the all reasons that Ralph Karsten, Al (Almarg) and other have already explained. Namely, TIM distortion and odd ordered harmonic distortion.

In addition, the amp should have robust power supply and wpc specs. That may help mitigate some of the problems associated with non-optimal amp and speaker impedance matching. AT the same time, I would try to match the amp with speakers having the flattest possible impedance and phase angle curves.

Finally, and most important -- listen carefully to what looks like might be a good match on paper. Actual results may not line up with projected results. And, as stated many times in this OP, one stat that could affect sound quality is how well the tube amp and speaker can match back impedance.

I sincerely hope this OP has been helpful to the members. I've learned a lot from our techie members and my amateur experiments. I realize that there are technical gaps that I simply cannot bridge because of the multitude of electrical variables in play. Nevertheless, I think one can avoid making highly probable bad matches if certain key electrical attributes that simply don't mesh well are avoided.

Best,

Bruce
What you post is true, however: impedance affects sensitivity.

Correct- but its important to understand that impedance has no effect on *efficiency* whatsoever. IOW, efficiency is the measure of *power* driving a speaker while sensitivity is the measure of the *voltage* involved and ignores the resulting power.

Audiophiles and speaker designers are both guilty of conflating the two terms as the same; the result can be confusion and people talking past each other.