Vladimir
New member
davedotco said:chebby said:How about the Alan Shaw “all competently designed amps operating within their design limits should sound the same” school of thought?
Should amplifiers have a recognisable ‘house sound’?
But only if his comments are taken in context. When engineers (rather than 'hi-fi people) talk about amplifiers, they are really talking about power amps. With compedent designs and under controlled conditions, I doubt anyone could tell power amps apart.
The real complication comes when we consider integrated amplifiers, it is the difference in the way that the amps sensitivity and gain stages are managed. There was a long thread (prompted by Vladimir) about these effects and, for example, describing how high levels of gain in the input stages of some amplifiers seems to be responsible for their 'fast' slightly aggressive character.
In normal systems I think this is what makes the difference, obvious examples would be the smooth, slightly relaxed feel of a modern Arcam against the pacier more assertive qualities of a Naim, the Arcam having much lower sensitivity and balanced gain structure compared to the sensitive, overdriven Naim.
This is a pretty 'broad brush' explanation, backed only by personal experience, but it does help explain why amps sound different in real world applications with different speakers and in different systems.
Added complication is how loudness is integrated (tapering off as you turn up volume) comparative to input sensitivity. Maybe there is no loudness compensation. Cyrus uses digital volume control, so it may sound different than amp with analogue pot that happens to have significant channel imbalance. etc.
In the end, these are mostly design interface variations that give the impression of different sonic character.