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Class A “class D killer” amplifier with THD less than -120dB

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DanielT

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Maybe some ancient class D amps are as you describe. A friend runs his horns (110dB/!W/!M CDs) directly from Hypex UcD180 modules. No audible noise.
Why so much power?

180 W i 4 Ohm, 120 W i 8 Ohm. Speaker "110dB/!W/!M"

 

fpitas

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Why so much power?
Lol I asked that. The smallest one he could get his hands on. I was skeptical, but it works. He might use a watt peak at full blast. Probably less.
 

DanielT

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Lol I asked that. The smallest one he could get his hands on. I was skeptical, but it works. He might use a watt peak at full blast. Probably less.
Well.. :)
20220815_195653783.jpeg


 

fpitas

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DanielT

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Right? They are 16 ohm diaphragms we installed, but even so. I expected noise and/or crossover distortion to be problems. But no.
The noise in itself, does not have to be a problem.:)

But you know, you're hungry. Order food at a restaurant. Nice good food. One plate is enough. Plenty of food. But just to be safe, order two plates. So you get really full. To be on the safe side. On the other hand, ordering 50 plates of food is a bit unnecessary. That's just what I was wondering.

Bass, sub-bass can in and of themselves require a lot of power. May require an amplifier that can handle tricky loads. But beyond that.:)
 

fpitas

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The noise in itself, does not have to be a problem.:)

But you know, you're hungry. Order food at a restaurant. Nice good food. One plate is enough. Plenty of food. But just to be safe, order two plates. So you get really full. To be on the safe side. On the other hand, ordering 50 plates of food is a bit unnecessary. That's just what I was wondering.

Bass, sub-bass can in and of themselves require a lot of power. May require an amplifier that can handle tricky loads. But beyond that.:)
He wanted to go all Class D, and for the woofers that was a slam-dunk. Like you say, they need some power.

I use a 25W amp for my horns, a First Watt J2. But I'll admit, his way was cheaper.
 

DanielT

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A bit OT but still. Those who insist on using low powered tube amps with high sensitive speakers. Old school "high end" that is. I don't understand why they don't let an efficient class D amp take care of the sub bass frequencies? Unload the tube amp and let it take care of everything above 80-100 Hz?

Note. HiFi is a hobby. Those who want to stick with tube amps are of course allowed to do so (let's not scold them), but why not relieve tube amps and let it "breathe" a little easier?:)

It's still "only" sub-bass (of course more than "only") Why let a tube amp take care of that? The lowest frequencies that is. I don't understand why tube dudes want to do that.:)

Edit:
If you are a true tube amp believer, maybe you are "cheating" if you were to do it? Redistributing the signal that way? Maybe you shouldn't "mess" with tube amp believers? What do I know.:)

Edit 2:
The thing about tube amps.Let those who think they can color the artist's work to what they deem better do so. People can do what they want.
(whether there will now be any audible difference, but that is another question)
 
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Hipocrates

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I don't understand why they don't let an efficient class D amp take care of the sub bass frequencies?
That's usually handled by powered subs, and those use class AB or class D amps inside.
 
D

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Class A “class D killer” amplifier with THD less than -120dB

Intro


6 years ago I built a low-power (high heat) class A amplifier, with very low distortion. It had true class A output stage with local negative feedback to reduce distortion and a global feedback network across the whole amplifier circuit. The power was not high, like 2x25W/4ohm or 2x13W/8ohm. However, a lot of heat :). The sound was fantastic. I was not able to measure distortion of that amplifier with my system limits, so I took it on my colleague's AP2712 where we made some basic measurements, but too little to give a whole view. The amplifier needed about 170VA at idle (true class A has highest power consumption at idle) and it heated the living room identifiably. The power was not high enough for all my needs, so after about 2 years of operation I have dismounted the casework and used it elsewhere, leaving the amplifier boards assembled and working.

Time after time I resurrect these boards, make some small modifications and measure them. Now I was provoked in further measurements by those simple and never ending amplifier SINAD debates. As many of you know, I am not a big friend of 1kHz/5W SINAD as a measure or rating of amplifier quality. I am deeply convinced that there are much more important parameters and that talking about amplifier SINAD higher than 100dB is completely pointless. This is based on my more than 40 years long experience as a circuit designer and system designer and 50+ years of interest in audio circuits.

However, if you want it ….
First, why to be limited to just 1kHz numbers. If we want to consider the linearity, then not only mid-frequency linearity is important, but also low and high frequency linearity. The argument of inaudibility of high frequency distortion is pointless, as it creates intermodulation distortion products deep in the most audible part of the audio spectrum. Same stands for restricting of measuring bandwidth to 20kHz, yes we do not see the ultrasound products then, but again we know nothing about possible intermodulations in the audio band or in tweeters. The actual reason why the measuring range has been restricted in the past decade is a rapid entry of class D amplifiers to the market and corresponding business interests of the manufacturers, the parameters must look nice and there must be a continuous progress to justify new and new products.

Strictly technically speaking, the class D amplifiers still have not reached the parameters that are achievable with linear amplifiers. Now I am not talking solely about that 1kHz SINAD (or THD+N that has been used for decades to name the same parameter), but also about high frequency linearity, wide bandwidth with minimum phase shift in the audio band, fast rise time and clean output spectrum above audio band. The one and only advantage of class D amplifiers is reduced power consumption and thus smaller size, though the manufacturers and OEM assemblers then do not care much about proper thermal handling and it results in lower reliability of such products.

Back to that small class A amplifier. Class A (push-pull), in principle, keeps both + and – output halves always ON, supplied by current, so there is no switching distortion we may see in class AB, class B and class D. The biggest contributor to amplifier nonlinearity is excluded.

The PCB with the amp module looks like this

View attachment 201560

Oscilloscope measurements

Oscilloscope measurements are a key for every circuit designer and builder even in audio. Maybe not that much for the reviewers, as we can see. Understanding of oscilloscope measurements is important, as well as lab experience. These measurements tell us about amplifier stability and help us to identify possible issues inside the amplifier circuitry, which is impossible to be done by another measuring method. The king of oscilloscope measurements are square wave measurements, which tell us very quickly if the amplifier is stable, if it has flat frequency response and if it is flat at lowest and highest frequencies. From the square response (step response) rise time and fall time we read the -3dB high frequency cut off, from the pulse tilt at lower frequency we read the low frequency cut off. From the step response shape and overshoot we read the reserve in stability or tendency to oscillations. We can see all of this in 2 minutes if we are experienced operators.

Some oscilloscope measurements on the class A module

View attachment 201561

10kHz square response is used very often in audio reviews. The plot shows input signal (blue) and amplifier output (red). We can see that there is no overshoot and the response is smooth.

We can switch the time base to see rising edge in better resolution

View attachment 201562

Now we read rise time of the input square edge is 2.3us, of the output edge it is 2.64us. From these numbers we calculate amplifier rise time as 1.296us. From 1.296us rise time we calculate -3dB bandwidth as 270kHz. Easy.

Let's see the 100Hz square response

View attachment 201563

Almost no tilt of the output wave, so the low frequency extension goes well below 2Hz. We can read Gain = 28.08/1.26 = 22.29 (26.96dB)

And the 100Hz square response spectrum

View attachment 201565

Another way to see where the frequency response starts to fall at high frequencies. So we have a nice 2Hz – 200kHz amplifier, a good old standard to be 10x better than is the band of interest, to minimize time and phase errors. Where have all that requests gone.

So now to the frequency domain view

Let's see the THD vs. output power at frequencies from 1kHz to 15kHz, measured with 45kHz measuring bandwidth (REW). Sorry I would not show THD+N as well, because the “+N” component is in case of this amplifier totally defined by my measuring chain noise and this would confuse the issue and would not allow to see the distortion, which would be completely buried in noise at all levels.

View attachment 201566

Still, the distortion is rather a system distortion than amplifier distortion. Even in such case we can see 1kHz THD going below -120dB and 15kHz THD between -100dB and -110dB, show mw a class D amp which can do it when measured with @45kHz BW.

Any measurement of similar kind should be verified by another method, to exclude possible systematic error. So here is the measurement made with ARTA. ARTA is unable to calibrate X-axis in [W], so you will see voltage axis [V]. Both ARTA and REW results are closely similar.

View attachment 201567

Conclusion

Class D approaches to linear amplifiers in low and mid frequency linearity. We can still make linear amplifiers with much wider bandwidth, cleaner spectrum, shorter rise time and better step/square response than any class D amplifier. There is still what to investigate in class D and it should not be the 1kHz SINAD race only.
Although I’m a little late to this post, I appreciate it. As someone that runs both Pascal Class D amps, and class A/B amps I have a little bit of input, even if it is subjective. Both technologies are 700-800 WPC monoblocks. It’s funny the tricks (and what people suggest online) the mind can play on you because the moment I heard the class D amps all I thought of was bright and harsh. I even brought it up to the manufacturer, and his answer was welcome to the world of high resolution. So I let them settle in, and more me settling in to them, and I found it they sound very close to my 30 year old class A/B room heater monoblocks. Yes, when those class A/B amps are on for a couple of hours it will cause the temperature in the room to go up a couple degrees. But I have a soft spot for those class A/B amps, they’re just an amazing product.

This being said, I don’t see myself without having the class D amps in my set up, and I’m 95% 2 channel and 5% home theater. They are a permanent fixture in my room, and I honestly don’t think I’m giving up anything as far as sound quality goes. By the way mine are D-Sonic M3a-600M Pascal monoblocks which are built like a tank, and Dennis the owner is a great guy, and the service to his customers is top notch. This is the second purchase I heve made from him, and I bought a set of Revel F-52 speakers from him when they were changing models.


I appreciate the comparison thanks.

@pma do you use any class D amplifiers, and what are your thoughts when listening to them?
 
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pma

pma

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@pma do you use any class D amplifiers, and what are your thoughts when listening to them?

Yes, you may find something at my web page

and also many post here at ASR, please use the search engine. Difficult or impossible to tell in a properly made DBT test from class A or AB amplifiers. With the exception of AIYIMA A07, which I was able to tell because of its primitive circuit topology with output LC filter behind the FB loop, which results in frequency response modulation by speaker complex impedance, in high frequencies. Please respect I do not wish to discuss this again, as I described it in a dozen of posts in another threads.
 
D

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Yes, you may find something at my web page

and also many post here at ASR, please use the search engine. Difficult or impossible to tell in a properly made DBT test from class A or AB amplifiers. With the exception of AIYIMA A07, which I was able to tell because of its primitive circuit topology with output LC filter behind the FB loop, which results in frequency response modulation by speaker complex impedance, in high frequencies. Please respect I do not wish to discuss this again, as I described it in a dozen of posts in another threads.
Thanks for your reply and understood. I will definitely check out your website.
 

egellings

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That -120dB figure is amazing from an engineering standpoint, but I doubt that human hearing is able to appreciate that.
 
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pma

pma

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Ripples, Pavel. :)

It's actually textbook perfect isn't it? Crazy good.
Thanks John. Unfortunately, only good as a low power amplifier. High power pure class A would make the thermal management impossible. Or we can accept higher distortion when it moves to class AB. Here, it moves to class AB above 18W/4ohm or 36W/8ohm. Then we get the typical "dirty" spectrum with plenty of high order harmonics, as we can see with underbiased class AB or poor class D.

I like the clean spectrum. In fact, this is what I consider most important, speaking about distortion.
 

levimax

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Thanks John. Unfortunately, only good as a low power amplifier. High power pure class A would make the thermal management impossible. Or we can accept higher distortion when it moves to class AB. Here, it moves to class AB above 18W/4ohm or 36W/8ohm. Then we get the typical "dirty" spectrum with plenty of high order harmonics, as we can see with underbiased class AB or poor class D.

I like the clean spectrum. In fact, this is what I consider most important, speaking about distortion.
That would be plenty of power if speakers weren't so inefficient. The common wisdom is "cheap power" makes inefficient speakers "OK"..... I am not so sure this is such a great compromise.
 

LtMandella

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On other sites I have extolled the sonic virtues of my class A Musical Fidelity A1-2008 so many times they are tired of hearing about it from me. :p

The MF A1-2008 puts out 32 watts@8 ohms. It's been running reliably now for about 15 years. I run a fan at the top plate/heat sink of the chassis. I have to admit that my Aiyima A07 comes suprisingly close in overall listening satisfaction and lack of listening fatigue at about 1/20th the cost in both manufacturing and operation.

I do run fairly sensitive speakers with relatively benign impedance curve ( Ref3A DeCapo I ) in only a 22' x 14' room.
 

LKA

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This is a Class-D and Class-A killer, single-supply (output capacitor) 100W/4R amp that idles at 3W.
 

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Geert

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This is a Class-D and Class-A killer, single-supply (output capacitor) 100W/4R amp that idles at 3W.

You want us to guess which one it is?
 
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