What I understood from George's comments based on his experience was that bipolar designed circuits would not typically have a 100k input impedance and many examples of this design had less than the 47k ohm the LSA requires, in some cases significantly less.
Could it be possible to design a circuit using bipolar transistors that is an exception? Obviously the answer is yes assuming the Samson specs are accurate and I have no reason to believe they are not. I'm basically accepting the designers statements at face value since I don't have the amp myself to take a measurement and lack the necessary experience to refute the claim.
In somewhat of an analogy Roger Modjeski wrote an application for an EL-84 circuit that gets at least twice as much power than others have been able to achieve using the standard circuits published in books. So perhaps this is a new twist on a standard design that allows for a higher than normal input impedance. The only people who can actually tell us are the designer or an owner who has the ability take a proper measurement. Personally its hardly worth the trouble.
Could it be possible to design a circuit using bipolar transistors that is an exception? Obviously the answer is yes assuming the Samson specs are accurate and I have no reason to believe they are not. I'm basically accepting the designers statements at face value since I don't have the amp myself to take a measurement and lack the necessary experience to refute the claim.
In somewhat of an analogy Roger Modjeski wrote an application for an EL-84 circuit that gets at least twice as much power than others have been able to achieve using the standard circuits published in books. So perhaps this is a new twist on a standard design that allows for a higher than normal input impedance. The only people who can actually tell us are the designer or an owner who has the ability take a proper measurement. Personally its hardly worth the trouble.