Hi,
I normally avoid posting on audio/HIFI/audiophool threads.
I am fairly literate in electronics, I do appreciate music and I have a wide range of musical taste. Yet, I consider myself a normal person, a bit on the skeptical and realist side.
While I do agree that there is a lot of audiophooling in the market, from special cables to power filters, etc., I challenge anyone to actually spend a few hours listining to a propper high end audiophile class setup.
I have had the pleasure to do so and actually have a friend who designs and manufactures such audiophile amplifiers, mostly valve based.
Never had I listened to music like that. The sound can be described as totally transparent, like when you look through a fogged glass (bad audio system) and then suddenly this glass is replaced by a crystal clear and clean glass. Also, it is amazing to close your eyes and feel the musicians located around you. It's like they are playing right in front of you, you can accustically locate them, feel them.
All this is a totally subjective feeling and it definitly does not happen with:
- cheap/bad quality setup (amplifier, speakers and source)
- bad arranged speakers
- room with bad accoustics
- source with bad recording/mastering
- ...
Regarding "cheap setup", mind you, the best cheap amplifiers can be bought on eBay: look for premium amplifiers from the early 80ies! This is what I have now...
I dare to say, that since the 70/80ies, people have lost the drive to hear HIFI quality music - they prefer to listen to their favorite songs through convinient means (phone, mp3, internet streaming), at the cost of sound quality. It's an option.
So, before engineers start to claim EVERYTHING as audiophooling, please do ask some friend or store to give you a propper listening session. Take your favorite CD's with you and just listen to them. Be open minded to listen to their suggested CD's, which have been selected based on the quality they were produced. One great CD for this is the Dark Side of The Moon by Pink Floyd. Another popular CD to evaluate a HIFI setup is "Arne Domnerus Group - Jazz at the Pawnshop".
I am pretty sure, you cannot just scientifically measure the quality of an amplifier, when it comes to reproducing music.
For example, I had a comparitive test, where the same amplifier was driving three different pairs of speaker. All of them premium audiophile ones. And I definitly like the sound of one particular set of speakers more than the other two. But the host prefered a different speaker and he was far more literate than I am. Conclusion: in the end, it is the individual taste.
After such audiophile listening session, I went back to my regular stereo set and noticed how bad it actually sounds...
After some months, I don't notice that anymore, as I am used to it again.
Chers,
Vitor
This is a difficult point to illustrate. Quality and transparent definition as well as other factors means different things to different people, so, I will share a little story from my past (20 years ago).
A friend in North Carolina, (I'm from Montreal, Quebec), was having a big birthday and he heard my audio equipment which he told his wife about. She wanted to get him a small high end sound system for his office/man-room and since I was in town, we visited the only closest local HiFi audiophile grade store. In the budget of 1500$ for a good CD player, amp, and speakers & cable, nothing the store had sounded good, even vacuum tube amps and speakers sounded right to me and I recommended not to buy anything from there. Just because you have an 'Audiophile' store, if any still exist in your area, doesn't mean they necessarily have anything good to hear. The store owner may just be just as fooled by Audiophile Audiophoolery to have chosen the cherries from the overpriced phony stuff, or, the store is in the business of profiting on said overpriced stuff.
Anyways, we ended ordering a setup from Montreal from a friend's store and got a good entry level Jolida vacuum tube amp setup which really enjoyable and pleasing quality sound which outperformed what we heard with the way overpriced setup in North Carolina.
From my own personal experience, I got close to this quality sound with my own Class B amp BJT amp design back in the late 80's. But, to do so, I had it biased so heavily that it's idle power consumption was over 150 watts and it's heat sinks make a nice space heater with I drove the full 100wattsx2 out. It is possible to make a good BJT of MOSFet amp which can deliver most of the transparency of a vacuum tube amp except for 2 aspects unless you engineer them in.
1. Handling of signal levels outside the power rails of your amp. A tube amp softly distorts as you approach the rails instead of a harsh clip and perhaps a nasty inversion spike.
2. The air feeling of some vacuum tube designs. This where minuscule parts of your audio source get a little extra signal gain even in the presence of the major large signal tones when driving a dynamic load like a speaker. An effect some tube designs are purposely designed to enhance.
#2 can be an additional + as it may help compensate for the shortcomings of a physical speaker trying to generate all the signals it is being given.
Now, designing an amp to replicate #1 means you will be limiting the maximum potential power of your amp to allow for that soft distortion curve at the edge of your power supply, so, why dot it unless it is your goal to correct for someone who turns up the volume too loud on a pre-amp which has a +x db gain over-driving your amp and you want to hide that problem. (Or, just get a remastered CD version which has the volume boosted with soft clipping in the source...)
Designing a circuit to replicate #2 is much more tricky. To do it right, you need to respond to a speaker load in real-time making a mess of how negative feedback supposed to operate, and in attempting to do so will just mess something else up in the process. The vacuum tube is such a simple direct device that exhibit this behavior that it is probably the best way to achieve it. It's just not worth doing it any other way, if someone wants that sound, just buy a tube amp.
Now, what I've said here is not Audio Phoolery like unidirectional speaker cable, special audio grade network cables, special audio cable burn in kits. There is a price and quality range which does exist. Some of the better and more expensive (not super expensive) equipment tend to be simpler in design. No AMP all in 1 ICs, in fact, the all round best I've experienced only have a few transistor/mosfets in the audio path with many paralleled output transistors, large heatsinks and oversized toroid with huge power filter caps.
When it comes to peoples tastes, some people just want loud solid boom and noise as long as it doesn't distort. Most sturdy negative feedback designs will make them happy with an EQ on occasion. They also tend to prefer those cheap remastered versions of original music which has just the volume pumped up and at times some cheap anti-hiss filter with occasional treble and bass enhancement.
Those who look for that transparency, who listen to recordings with that quality of mastering, will tend closer to Tube or Class A amps, where the output isn't as linear as a negative feedback design, but, the fine breath of air still makes it through even with some massive fundamental tones included with the sound.
Those that want the best of both worlds, well, you can find affordable equipment to truly perform this feat, but, the louder you want to go, say above 100 watts per channel, the price does sky-rocket. If you are lucky to have a friend with an audio store who has great ears, gone through the gamut of amps and speakers equipment out there, and is willing to direct you in the right direction for your needs and sell you everything at cost, you are lucky indeed. I know I paid more than what many here would consider for 2 (stereo) speakers and an amp back in 1992, but what I have is still with me and cremates anything you can buy today at 1/4 the price. You know when one of my SciFi buddy friends finally came over to watch the new StarTrek movie on BluRay, and halfway through the movie, after being blasted into his chair, gets up an touches the case of the speakers and says these 7inch woofer things case just don't vibrate at all as the house shakes, and everyone sounds like they are actually there right in front of you, not like my cheap surround center channel speaker. With speakers and amp at over 20 years old, unless I'm willing to fork over 15K$US today, nothing will come close to replicating this experience, especially if you forget the Hollywood movie recorded junk and go for the Telarc CD recordings, even the first from the Telarc classical recordings from the 80s (their technical quality and equipment used is on a completely different level, their original normal CDs surpass most modern hidef recordings), this is where I get immersed into the music.