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Tube sound



 
 
Tube sound (or valve
Vacuum tube

In electronics, a vacuum tube, electron tube , thermionic valve, or just valve is a device used to amplifier, switch, otherwise modify, or create an Electricity signal by controlling the movement of electrons in a low-pressure space....
 sound
) is the characteristic sound
Sound

Sound is vibration transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a threshold of hearing to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations....
 associated with a vacuum tube
Vacuum tube

In electronics, a vacuum tube, electron tube , thermionic valve, or just valve is a device used to amplifier, switch, otherwise modify, or create an Electricity signal by controlling the movement of electrons in a low-pressure space....
-based audio amplifier
Audio amplifier

An audio amplifier is an electronic amplifier that amplifies low-power audio signal to a level suitable for driving loudspeakers and is the final stage in a typical audio playback chain....
s. Some audiophile
Audiophile

An audiophile, from Latin audio "I hear" and Greek language philos "loving," is a person, who typically listens to music on high-end audio electronics....
s prefer the sound that is produced by the distortion
Distortion

A distortion is the alteration of the original shape of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of information or representation. Distortion is usually unwanted....
 characteristics of tube-based amplifiers. The audible significance of tube amplification on audio signals is a subject of continuing debate among audiophiles.

Some Electric guitar
Electric guitar

An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickup to convert the vibration of its steel-cored strings into an electrical current, which is made louder with an instrument amplifier and a speaker....
, electric bass
Electric Bass

Electric bass can mean:* Electric upright bass, the electric version of a double bass.* Electric bass guitar....
, and keyboard
Keyboard

Keyboard may refer to:* Alphanumeric keyboard* Keyboard , a set of alphanumeric and command keys used to input information to a computer* Musical keyboard, a set of adjacent keys or levers used to play a musical instrument...
 players in a range of popular and jazz
Jazz

Jazz is a primarily American musical art form which originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States from a confluence of African and European music traditions....
 genres also prefer the sound of tube instrument amplifier
Instrument amplifier

An instrument amplifier is an electronic amplifier that converts the inaudible electric or electronic signal from musical instruments such as an electric guitar, an bass guitar, or an Hammond organ into sounds which can be heard by the performers and audience....
s or preamplifiers.

History
Before the commercial introduction of transistor
Transistor

In electronics, a transistor is a semiconductor device commonly used to Electronic amplifier or switch Electronics signals. A transistor is made of a solid piece of a semiconductor material, with at least three terminals for connection to an external circuit....
s in the 1950s, electronic
Electronic

Electronic may refer to:*Electronics, devices that work by controlling the flow of electrons*Electronic music or electronica*Electronic ,**or their self-titled debut album Electronic ...
 amplifier
Amplifier

Generally, an amplifier or simply amp, is any machine that changes, usually increases, the amplitude of a Signal . The "signal" is usually voltage or current....
s used vacuum tubes (known in Great Britain
Great Britain

Great Britain is an island lying to the northwest of Continental Europe. It is the List of islands by area, and the largest in Europe. With a population of 58.9 million people it is List of islands by population....
 as "valves").






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Encyclopedia


Tubes
Tube sound (or valve
Vacuum tube

In electronics, a vacuum tube, electron tube , thermionic valve, or just valve is a device used to amplifier, switch, otherwise modify, or create an Electricity signal by controlling the movement of electrons in a low-pressure space....
 sound
) is the characteristic sound
Sound

Sound is vibration transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a threshold of hearing to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations....
 associated with a vacuum tube
Vacuum tube

In electronics, a vacuum tube, electron tube , thermionic valve, or just valve is a device used to amplifier, switch, otherwise modify, or create an Electricity signal by controlling the movement of electrons in a low-pressure space....
-based audio amplifier
Audio amplifier

An audio amplifier is an electronic amplifier that amplifies low-power audio signal to a level suitable for driving loudspeakers and is the final stage in a typical audio playback chain....
s. Some audiophile
Audiophile

An audiophile, from Latin audio "I hear" and Greek language philos "loving," is a person, who typically listens to music on high-end audio electronics....
s prefer the sound that is produced by the distortion
Distortion

A distortion is the alteration of the original shape of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of information or representation. Distortion is usually unwanted....
 characteristics of tube-based amplifiers. The audible significance of tube amplification on audio signals is a subject of continuing debate among audiophiles.

Some Electric guitar
Electric guitar

An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickup to convert the vibration of its steel-cored strings into an electrical current, which is made louder with an instrument amplifier and a speaker....
, electric bass
Electric Bass

Electric bass can mean:* Electric upright bass, the electric version of a double bass.* Electric bass guitar....
, and keyboard
Keyboard

Keyboard may refer to:* Alphanumeric keyboard* Keyboard , a set of alphanumeric and command keys used to input information to a computer* Musical keyboard, a set of adjacent keys or levers used to play a musical instrument...
 players in a range of popular and jazz
Jazz

Jazz is a primarily American musical art form which originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States from a confluence of African and European music traditions....
 genres also prefer the sound of tube instrument amplifier
Instrument amplifier

An instrument amplifier is an electronic amplifier that converts the inaudible electric or electronic signal from musical instruments such as an electric guitar, an bass guitar, or an Hammond organ into sounds which can be heard by the performers and audience....
s or preamplifiers.

History


Before the commercial introduction of transistor
Transistor

In electronics, a transistor is a semiconductor device commonly used to Electronic amplifier or switch Electronics signals. A transistor is made of a solid piece of a semiconductor material, with at least three terminals for connection to an external circuit....
s in the 1950s, electronic
Electronic

Electronic may refer to:*Electronics, devices that work by controlling the flow of electrons*Electronic music or electronica*Electronic ,**or their self-titled debut album Electronic ...
 amplifier
Amplifier

Generally, an amplifier or simply amp, is any machine that changes, usually increases, the amplitude of a Signal . The "signal" is usually voltage or current....
s used vacuum tubes (known in Great Britain
Great Britain

Great Britain is an island lying to the northwest of Continental Europe. It is the List of islands by area, and the largest in Europe. With a population of 58.9 million people it is List of islands by population....
 as "valves"). By the 1960s, solid state
Solid state (electronics)

Solid-state electronic components, devices, and systems are based entirely on the semiconductor, such as transistors, microprocessor chips, and the bubble memory....
 (transistorized) amplification had become more common because of its smaller size, lighter weight, lower heat production, and improved reliability. Tube amplifiers have retained a loyal following amongst some audiophile
Audiophile

An audiophile, from Latin audio "I hear" and Greek language philos "loving," is a person, who typically listens to music on high-end audio electronics....
s and musician
Musician

A musician is a person who plays or writes music. Musicians can be classified by their roles in creating or performing music:* An instrumentalist plays a musical instrument....
s. Some tube designs command very high prices, and tube amplifiers have been going through a revival since Chinese
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 and Russian
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
 markets have opened to global trade — tube production never went out of vogue in these countries.

Sound reproduction

Some audiophiles prefer the sound produced with tube amplifiers on the grounds that it is more natural and satisfying than the sound from typical transistor
Transistor

In electronics, a transistor is a semiconductor device commonly used to Electronic amplifier or switch Electronics signals. A transistor is made of a solid piece of a semiconductor material, with at least three terminals for connection to an external circuit....
 amplifiers. Typically, in sound reproduction systems, accurate reproduction of the sound of the original recording is the goal; gross distortion is something designers do not deliberately seek to introduce. At the upper end of audio systems ("high end" or "audiophile" systems) it is debated whether "accuracy" can best be described by measuring a "wide frequency response" and "low measured distortion levels" or whether highest quality reproduction is subjectively determined by listening alone.

Musical instrument amplification

Some musicians also prefer the distortion
Distortion (guitar)

Distortion, also known as overdrive or fuzzbox, is an guitar effects applied to the electric guitar, the bass guitar, and other amplified instruments such as the Hammond organ, synthesizers, and even harmonica and vocals....
 characteristics of tubes over transistors for electric guitar
Electric guitar

An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickup to convert the vibration of its steel-cored strings into an electrical current, which is made louder with an instrument amplifier and a speaker....
, bass
Bass guitar

The electric bass guitar is a stringed instrument played primarily with the fingers or thumb , or by using a plectrum.The bass guitar is similar in appearance and construction to an electric guitar, but with a larger body, a longer neck and Scale length, and usually four strings tuned to the same pitches as those of the double bass, whic...
, and other instrument amplifier
Instrument amplifier

An instrument amplifier is an electronic amplifier that converts the inaudible electric or electronic signal from musical instruments such as an electric guitar, an bass guitar, or an Hammond organ into sounds which can be heard by the performers and audience....
s. In this case, generating deliberate (and sometimes considerable, in the case of electric guitars) audible distortion or overdrive
Overdrive

Overdrive may refer to:* Operation Overdrive , a scheme to improve public transportation in and around the Medway Towns in north Kent, England...
 is usually the goal. The term can also be used to describe the sound created by specially-designed transistor amplifiers or digital
Digital

A digital system uses discrete values, usually but not always symbolized numerically to represent information for input, processing, transmission, storage, etc....
 modeling devices that try to closely emulate the characteristics of the tube sound.

The tube sound is often subjectively described as having a "warmth" and "richness", but the source of this is by no means agreed on. It may be due to the non-linear clipping that occurs with tube amps, or due to the higher levels of second-order harmonic distortion
Distortion

A distortion is the alteration of the original shape of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of information or representation. Distortion is usually unwanted....
, common in single-ended designs resulting from the characteristics of the tube interacting with the inductance
Inductance

Inductance is the property in an electrical circuit where a change in the current flowing through that circuit induces an Electromotive force that opposes the change in current ....
 of the output transformer.

Some tube fans attribute the "naturalness" of the perceived sound to the reduced number of components used by tube amplifiers. This is especially so for single-ended triode amplifiers (SET). These are said to reduce the "smearing" of the sound; reducing the imperfections invariably introduced by each electronic component. Much emphasis is placed on phase
Phase

A phase is one part or portion in recurring or serial activities or occurrences logically connected within a greater process, often resulting in an output or a change....
 linearity. This minimalism is not solely the domain of tube amplifiers; there are some transistor amplifiers producing results that are similar. The JFET
JFET

The junction gate field-effect transistor is the simplest type of field effect transistor. It can be used as an electronics-controlled switch or as a voltage-controlled Electrical resistance....
, for example, behaves much like a triode
Triode

A triode is an electronic amplifier device having three active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a vacuum tube with three elements: the Electrical filament or cathode, the control grid, and the Plate electrode or anode....
 in its "ohm
Ohm

The ohm is the SI unit of electrical impedance or, in the direct current case, electrical resistance, named after Georg Ohm....
ic" region.

Another advantage of most tube amplifier designs is the high input impedance
Electrical impedance

Electrical impedance, or simply impedance, describes a measure of opposition to a sinusoidal alternating current . Electrical impedance extends the concept of Electrical resistance to AC circuits, describing not only the relative amplitudes of the voltage and Electric current, but also the relative Phase ....
 (typically 100 
Ohm

The ohm is the SI unit of electrical impedance or, in the direct current case, electrical resistance, named after Georg Ohm....
) in modern designs and as much as 1 MO in classic designs. By contrast, transistor amplifiers for home use may have much lower input impedances, some as low as 20 kO. This implies that it requires more energy
Energy

In physics, energy is a scalar physical quantity that describes the amount of Work_ that can be performed by a force. Energy is an attribute of objects and systems that is subject to a conservation law....
 to excite the input of a typical transistor
Transistor

In electronics, a transistor is a semiconductor device commonly used to Electronic amplifier or switch Electronics signals. A transistor is made of a solid piece of a semiconductor material, with at least three terminals for connection to an external circuit....
 amplifier to any given voltage than it does a typical tube amplifier. If sensitivity to small signals is a significant goal, then tube designs will typically outperform transistor designs.

Negative feedback


Commodity transistor amplifiers, especially from the 1980s, typically used large amounts of negative feedback. This allowed for a very low measure of total harmonic distortion. Typical tube amplifiers have little or no negative feedback applied, and in recent years there has been a tendency in transistor amplifiers to use less feedback and design more linear stages; a process which has again narrowed the sonic
Sonic

Sonic may refer to:*Sonic, , of or relating to audible sounds.*-sonic-, a Prefix /infix/suffix for words with meanings that relate to acoustics....
 differences between tube and transistor designs.

Audible differences


Some audiophiles prefer the sound of tubes over transistors. This sound is partly a function of the circuit topologies typically used with tubes versus the circuit topologies typically used with transistors, as much as the gain devices themselves. Beyond circuit design, there are other differences such as the electronic characteristics of a triode and MOSFET
MOSFET

The metal?oxide?semiconductor field-effect transistor is a device used to amplify or switch electronic signals. The basic principle of the device was first proposed by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925....
, or a tetrode
Tetrode

A tetrode is an electronic device having four active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a two-grid vacuum tube. It has the three electrodes of a triode and an additional screen grid which significantly changes its behaviour....
 and a bipolar transistor.

Some sonic qualities are easy to explain objectively based on an analysis of the distortion characteristics of the gain device and/or the circuit topology. For example, the triode SE gain stage produces a stereotypical monotonically decaying harmonic distortion spectrum that is dominated by significant second-order harmonics making the sound seem rich or even "fat".

However, other audible differences in sound have proven difficult to define or measure, and it is difficult to explain these sound differences in words as the vocabulary available to describe sound is rather limited -even though the underlying sonic effects may be real. Audiophiles often use words like warm, liquid, smooth and midrange magic to describe the sound from tube amplifiers.

Some claim that the midrange reproduction is more extended and smoother with tube amplifiers, but that high frequencies are somewhat rolled off. Historically this was often the case due to limitations in capacitor performance. Modern audiophile-grade tube amplifiers however, using modern and/or premium quality (and cost) capacitors can have frequency response that are essentially flat to octave
Octave

In music, an octave The octave is occasionally referred to as a diapason.The octave above an indicated note is sometimes abbreviated 8va, and the octave below 8vb....
s beyond the audio range: −3 dB
Decibel

The decibel is a logarithmic units of measurement that expresses the magnitude of a physical quantity relative to a specified or implied reference level....
 above 85 kHz is quite common.

Similarly, some would characterize "tube sound" as bass response with less power and/or less definition (perhaps even "sloppy" bass or a bass boom with some speakers). This again can be explained by many tube amplifiers having high output impedance (Z out) compared to transistor designs, due to the combination of both higher device impedance itself and typically reduced feedback margins (more feedback results in a lower Z out).

So for example a hypothetical design in two otherwise equal variants with just different amounts of feedback, might result in the higher feedback version having a "drier" midrange (due to reduced second-order harmonics due to greater reduction of distortion) but a "tighter" bass due lower output impedance. The speaker impedance divided by the Z out is sometimes referred to as the "damping factor
Damping factor

In audio system terminology the damping factor gives the ratio of the rated impedance of the loudspeaker to the source impedance. Only the resistive part of the loudspeaker impedance is used....
" - the amplifier's ability to control the mechanical movement of the speaker.

In general terms the sound from a tube amplifier will typically have a softer attack and the bass frequencies will be more prominent giving a warmer and less "harsh" sound. Instrumentation such as pianos and vocals sound softer and "fatter" than with transistor amplifiers. But as noted the reasons for these effects are not simply and unavoidably related to the gain device type, today a good designer using either technology has to make synergistic design compromise choices. And the sonic differences are less stereotyped than they used to be as a result.

Harmonic content and distortion

Triodes (and MOSFETs) produce a monotonically decaying harmonic distortion spectrum. Psychoacoustic effects include that the stronger, lower harmonic products tend to dominate and mask the sound of the weaker, higher harmonic products. Even-order harmonics sound as musical chords (notably octaves), which subjectively makes the sound "richer". Odd-order harmonics sound less pleasant. Inharmonic distortion is discordant and is often implicated in designs that sound "brash", "harsh", "brittle", etc.

Push-pull amplifiers use two nominally identical gain devices "back to back". One consequence of this is that all even-order harmonic products cancel, leaving the - subjectively less musical, less "rich" - odd order products to dominate. The total (measured) harmonic distortion content is lowered, but subjectively the design may sound worse. A push-pull amplifier is said to have a symmetric (odd symmetry
Even and odd functions

In mathematics, even functions and odd functions are function s which satisfy particular symmetry relations, with respect to taking additive inverses....
) transfer characteristic, and accordingly produces only odd harmonics.

A single-ended amplifier has an asymmetric
Asymmetric

* In general, something is Asymmetry if it is not symmetry.* See Asymmetric relation for information on asymmetric relations in mathematics and set theory....
 transfer characteristic, and produces both even and odd harmonics. As tubes are often run single-ended, and semiconductor amplifiers are often push-pull, the types of distortion are incorrectly attributed to the devices (or even the amplifier class) instead of the topology. Push-pull tube amplifiers can be run in class A, AB, or B. Also, a class AB amplifier may have crossover distortion that will be typically inharmonic and thus sonically very undesirable indeed.

Another factor is that the distortion content of class A circuits (SE or PP) typically monotonically reduces as the signal level is reduced, asymptotic to zero during quiet passages of music. For this reason class A amplifiers are especially desired for classical and acoustic music etc. cf. class B and AB amplifiers, for which the amplitude of the crossover distortion is more or less constant, and thus the distortion relative to signal in fact increases as the music gets quieter. Class A amplifiers measure best at low power, class AB and B amplifiers measure best just below max rated power.

Loudspeakers present a reactive load to an amplifier (capacitance
Capacitance

In electromagnetism and electronics, capacitance is the ability of a body to hold an electrical charge.Capacitance is also a measure of the amount of electric charge stored for a given electric potential....
, inductance
Inductance

Inductance is the property in an electrical circuit where a change in the current flowing through that circuit induces an Electromotive force that opposes the change in current ....
 and resistance
Electrical resistance

The electrical resistance of an object is a measure of its opposition to the passage of a steady electrical current. An object of uniform cross section will have a resistance proportional to its length and inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area, and proportional to the resistivity of the material....
). This impedance
Electrical impedance

Electrical impedance, or simply impedance, describes a measure of opposition to a sinusoidal alternating current . Electrical impedance extends the concept of Electrical resistance to AC circuits, describing not only the relative amplitudes of the voltage and Electric current, but also the relative Phase ....
 may vary in value with signal frequency and amplitude. This variable loading affects the amplifier's performance both because the amplifier has finite output impedance (it cannot keep its output voltage perfectly constant when the speaker load varies) and because the phase of the speaker load can change the stability margin of the amplifier. The influence of the speaker impedance is different between tube amplifiers and transistor amplifiers, principally because tube amplifiers normally use output transformers and they tend to use relatively low feedback.

The design of speaker crossover networks and other electro-mechanical properties may result in a speaker with a very un-even impedance curve, for a nominal 8 O speaker, being as low as 6 O at some places and as high as 30-50 O elsewhere in the curve. An amplifier with little or no feedback will always perform poorly when faced with a speaker where little attention was paid to the impedance curve.

Design comparison

There has been considerable debate over the characteristics of tubes versus bipolar junction transistor
Bipolar junction transistor

A bipolar transistor is a type of transistor. It is a three-terminal device constructed of Doping semiconductor material and may be used in Electronic amplifier or switching applications....
s. Some audiophiles have argued that the quadratic
Quadratic function

A quadratic function, in mathematics, is a polynomial function of the form , where . The graph of a function of a quadratic function is a parabola whose major axis is parallel to the y-axis....
 transconductance
Transconductance

Transconductance, also known as mutual conductance, is a property of certain Electronics components. Electrical conductance is the reciprocal of resistance and transconductance is the ratio of the current at the output port and the voltage at the input ports and is written as gm:...
 of tubes compared with the exponential
Exponential function

The exponential function is a function in mathematics. The application of this function to a value x is written as exp. Equivalently, this can be written in the form ex, where e is the mathematical constant that is the base of the natural logarithm and that is also known as Euler's number....
 transconductance of transistors is an important factor. This has not been proven.

Some audiophiles argue that devices are not as important as circuit
Circuit

Circuit may mean:* Circuit * Circuit * Circuit court* Circuit , a 2001 gay-themed film* Circuit , from the Munna Bhai Series* Circuit , a group of theaters among which the same acts circulate, especially in vaudeville...
 topology
Topology

Topology is a major area of mathematics that has emerged through the development of concepts from geometry and set theory, such as those of space, dimension, shape, transformation and others....
. Triode
Triode

A triode is an electronic amplifier device having three active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a vacuum tube with three elements: the Electrical filament or cathode, the control grid, and the Plate electrode or anode....
s and MOSFET
MOSFET

The metal?oxide?semiconductor field-effect transistor is a device used to amplify or switch electronic signals. The basic principle of the device was first proposed by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925....
s have certain similarities in their transfer characteristics, whereas later forms of the tube, the tetrode
Tetrode

A tetrode is an electronic device having four active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a two-grid vacuum tube. It has the three electrodes of a triode and an additional screen grid which significantly changes its behaviour....
 and pentode
Pentode

A pentode is an electronic device having five active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a three-grid vacuum tube, which was invented by the Dutchman Bernard Tellegen in 1926....
, have quite different characteristics that are in some ways similar to the bipolar transistor. Despite this, eg MOSFET amplifier circuits typically do not reproduce tube sound any more than typical bipolar designs, due to the circuit topology differences between a typical tube design and a typical MOSFET design. But there are always exceptions: for example some very interesting designs such as the Zen series by Nelson Pass
Nelson Pass

Nelson Pass is a noted and widely respected designer of audio amplifiers.Unlike some audio engineers, Pass remains vocal that listening tests remain valuable and that electrical measurements alone do not fully characterize the sound of an amplifier....
 which can be found on the web.

Soft clipping

Soft clipping is a very important aspect of tube sound especially for guitar amplifier
Guitar amplifier

A guitar amplifier is an electronic amplifier designed to make the signal of an electric guitar or an acoustic guitar louder and modify the tone by emphasizing or de-emphasizing certain frequencies and/or by adding electronic effects....
s, although a HiFi amplifier should not normally ever be driven into clipping. A tube amplifier will reproduce a wave
Wave

A wave is a disturbance that propagates through space and time, usually with transference of energy. While a mechanical wave exists in a medium , waves of electromagnetic radiation can travel through vacuum, that is, without a medium....
 relatively linearly to a point, and as the signal moves beyond the linear
Linear

The word linear comes from the Latin word linearis, which means created by lines.In mathematics, a linear map or function f is a function which satisfies the following two properties......
 range of the tube (into overload
Overload

Overload may refer to:* Overload * Audio Overload, an audio player that plays music from various video game music audio files* Overload , an episode of the television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation...
), it distorts the signal with a smooth curve instead of a sudden, sharp-edged cutoff (or even ringing and/or lockup) as occurs with transistors. The harmonics added to the signal are of lower energy with soft clipping than hard clipping. However, soft clipping is not exclusive to tubes, it can be simulated in transistor circuits (below the point that real hard clipping would occur); see section "Intentional creation of distortion" below.

Note also that tube circuits often have huge headroom (overload) margins due to the high voltages they run from, so hard clipping is in reality very rare in a tube stage itself. However core saturation in the output transformer may be "designed in" to some guitar amplifiers when driven hard, and/or the tube biasing may be designed so that the tube passes from class AB1 to class AB2 and starts to draw grid current etc. (these effects are perhaps beyond the scope of this article)

Circuit design may also play an important role in the tube sound; tube circuits are often less complex and laid out differently. It is argued that simplicity is usually best, as the length and complexity can change the inductance
Inductance

Inductance is the property in an electrical circuit where a change in the current flowing through that circuit induces an Electromotive force that opposes the change in current ....
 and capacitance
Capacitance

In electromagnetism and electronics, capacitance is the ability of a body to hold an electrical charge.Capacitance is also a measure of the amount of electric charge stored for a given electric potential....
 of a circuit. A more complex circuit will have a more complex sonic distortion characteristic. Minimalist DH-SEs for example typically have a dominant very simple harmonic distortion spectrum. Complex modern transistor designs often have low level but extremely complex harmonic distortion spectra.

Bandwidth

Early tube amplifiers often had limited response bandwidth, in part due to the characteristics of the inexpensive passive components
Passivity (engineering)

Passivity is a property of engineering systems, most commonly used in electronic engineering and control systems. A passive component, depending on field, may either refer to a component that consumes energy, or to a component that is incapable of gain....
 then available. In power amplifiers most limitations come from the output transformer; low frequencies are limited by transformer core saturation and high frequencies by winding inductance and capacitance. Another limitation is in the combination of high output impedance, decoupling capacitor and grid resistor, which acts as a high-pass filter
High-pass filter

A high-pass filter is a electronic filter that passes high frequency well, but attenuation frequencies lower than the cutoff frequency. The actual amount of attenuation for each frequency varies from filter to filter....
. If interconnections are made from long cable (for example guitar to amp), tube input impedance with cable capacitance acts as a low-pass filter
Low-pass filter

A low-pass filter is a electronic filter that passes low-frequency signal but attenuates signals with frequencies higher than the cutoff frequency....
. However, modern premium components make it easy to produce amplifiers that are essentially flat over the audio band, with less than 3 dB attenuation at 6 Hz and 70 kHz, well outside the audible range.

Negative feedback

Tube amplifiers could not, and did not need to, use as much negative feedback
Negative feedback

Negative feedback feeds part of a system's output, inverted, into the system's input; generally with the result that fluctuations are attenuated....
 (NFB) as transistor amplifiers due to the large phase shifts caused by the output transformers and their lower stage gains. While the absence of NFB slightly increases harmonic distortion, it avoids instability, as well as slew rate
Slew rate

In electronics, the slew rate represents the maximum rate of change of a signal at any point in a circuit.Limitations in slew rate capability can give rise to non linear effects in electronic amplifiers....
 and bandwidth limitations imposed by dominant-pole compensation in transistor amplifiers.

Power supplies

Early tube amplifiers usually used unregulated power supplies. This was due to the high cost associated with high-quality high-voltage power supplies. The typical anode
Anode

An anode is an electrode through which electric charge flows into a polarized electrical device. Mnemonic: ACID . Electrons flow in the opposite direction to the positive electric current....
 supply was simply a rectifier
Rectifier

A rectifier is an electrical device that converts alternating current to direct current , a process known as rectification. Rectifiers have many uses including as components of power supply and as detector s of radio signals....
, an inductor and a filter capacitor
Electronic filter

Electronic filters are electronic circuits which perform signal processing functions, specifically to remove unwanted frequency components from the signal and/or to enhance wanted ones....
. When the tube amplifier was operated at high volume
Volume

The volume of any solid, liquid, plasma, vacuum or theoretical object is how much three-dimensional space it occupies, often quantified numerically....
, the power supply
Power supply

Power supply is a reference to a source of electrical power. A device or system that supplies electrical or other types of energy to an output External electric load or group of loads is called a power supply unit or PSU....
 voltage
Voltage

Electrical tension is the potential difference between two points of an electrical or electronic circuit, expressed in volts. It is the measurement of the potential for an electric field to cause an electric current in an electrical conductor....
 would dip, reducing power output and causing signal modulation. This dipping effect is known as "sag", which may be preferable to some electric guitarists (almost invariably using a class AB1 amplifier). Note that for a class A stage the average current does NOT sag, it is constant.

In contrast, modern amplifiers often use high-quality, well-regulated power supplies. In theory, the output voltage remains constant, but in reality it never does — not least due to resistive losses in the cabling from the power supply to the gain stage. This problem is proportionately much worse in transistor amplifiers because they operate at low voltage and high current, whereas tube voltage amplification stages operate at low currents and high voltages. Ohmic losses are a function of current through resistance.

Tube versus solid state rectification

Some high end tube amplifier designs also include vacuum tube rectifier circuits instead of modern silicon diode or bridge rectifier circuits. A cheap solid state rectifier does introduce audible noise into the circuit. Audibility of the effects is disputed by many. In unregulated power supplies the switching noise from silicon diodes can affect the amplifier's performance by introducing noise into the high voltage circuit. In guitar amplifiers, tube rectification is used in order to intentionally cause the high voltage supply to sag in order to add distortion and compress the output signal.

The practical advantage to tube rectification is that the relatively inexpensive rectifier tubes require some time to warm up before they begin to conduct. This gives the time for the heaters in the output tubes to warm up as well and therefore extend their lifespan. If the high voltage supply is brought up too quickly, the cathodes might be damaged. Some high end manufacturers, such as Welborne Labs in their premium kits, feature ultrafast soft-recovery silicon diodes bridged by snubber networks on the basis that the cost and power required to operate a vacuum tube rectifier does not yield any measurable improvement in the sound.

Push-pull amplifiers

A Class A push-pull
Push-pull

Push?pull can refer to several things or concepts:*Push-pull train *Push?pull strategy *Push?pull output *Push?pull converter *Push-pull connector ...
 amplifier produces exceptionally low distortion
Distortion

A distortion is the alteration of the original shape of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of information or representation. Distortion is usually unwanted....
 for any given level of applied feedback
Feedback

Feedback describes the situation when output from an event or phenomenon in the past will influence the same event/phenomenon in the present or future....
, and also cancels the flux
Flux

In the various subfields of physics, there exist two common usages of the term flux, both with rigorous mathematical frameworks.*In the study of transport phenomena , flux is defined as the amount that flows through a unit area per unit time....
 in the transformer
Transformer

A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one electrical network to another through inductive coupling conductors — the transformer's coils or "windings"....
 cores, so this topology is seen by some as the ultimate "engineering" approach to the tube hi-fi amplifier for use with normal speakers. Output power of as high as 15 watts can be achieved even with classic tubes such as the 2A3, see RCA data sheet, October 15, 1947. or 18 watts from the type 45. Classic pentodes such as the EL34 and KT88 can output as much as 60 and 100 watts respectively. Special types such as the V1505 can be used in designs rated at up to 1100 watts. See "An Approach to Audio Frequency Design", a collection of reference designs originally published by G.E.C.

The majority of commercial HiFi amplifier designs are Class AB, in order to deliver greater power
Electric power

Electric power is defined as the rate at which electrical energy is transferred by an electric circuit. The SI unit of power is the watt .When electric current flows in a circuit, it can transfer energy to do mechanical work or work ....
 and efficiency
Electrical efficiency

The efficiency of an entity in electronics and electrical engineering is defined as useful power output divided by the total electrical power consumed , typically denoted by the Greek letter small Eta ....
, typically 12 - 25 watts upwards. Such designs will invariably use at least some NFB.

Class AB push-pull topology is nearly universally used in tube amps for electric guitar applications that produce power of more than about 10 watts. Whereas audiophile amps are primarily concerned with avoiding distortion, a guitar amp embraces it. When driven to their respective limits, tubes and transistors distort quite differently. Tubes clip more softly than transistors, allowing higher levels of distortion (which is sometimes desired by the guitarist) whilst still being able to distinguish the harmonies of a chord. This is because the soft profile of the tube amplifier's distortion means that the intermodulation products of the distortion are generally more closely related to the harmonies of the chord.

Single-Ended Triode (SET) amplifiers

SET amplifiers typically show poor measurements for distortion with a resistive load, have low output power, are inefficient, have poor damping factor
Damping factor

In audio system terminology the damping factor gives the ratio of the rated impedance of the loudspeaker to the source impedance. Only the resistive part of the loudspeaker impedance is used....
s and high measured harmonic distortion. But they perform very well in dynamic and impulse response. Also, SET-amplifiers already sound very well at low powerlevels without the perceived need for higher soundlevels like transistor amplifiers often do.

The triode
Triode

A triode is an electronic amplifier device having three active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a vacuum tube with three elements: the Electrical filament or cathode, the control grid, and the Plate electrode or anode....
, despite being the oldest signal amplification device, also has the most linear transfer characteristic, and thus requires little or no negative feedback
Negative feedback

Negative feedback feeds part of a system's output, inverted, into the system's input; generally with the result that fluctuations are attenuated....
 for acceptable distortion performance. NFB is used in most post 1950s amplifiers and although it usually reduces the measured distortion level, it results in an unpleasant combination of harmonics to some ears.

Audiophiles who prefer SET-amplifiers state that measured sound performance is a poor indicator of real world sound performance and distortion level is not the only criterion for good sound reproduction. There are measurements not using resistive load but actual loudspeakers to back this up. In the 1970s, designers started producing transistor amps with higher open loop gain to support a greater value of negative feedback
Negative feedback

Negative feedback feeds part of a system's output, inverted, into the system's input; generally with the result that fluctuations are attenuated....
. These amps produced near perfect measured results but some listeners felt that these amplifiers sounded "cold" or "dull". In the following years, amplifiers were built with modest gain but good open loop linearity, deployed with only minimal levels of NFB.

All amplifiers do distort, so do SETs. This for the most part harmonic
Harmonic

In acoustics and telecommunication, a harmonic of a wave is a component frequency of the Signalling that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency....
 distortion is a distortion with a unique pattern of simple and monotonically decaying series of harmonics, dominated by modest levels of second harmonic
Harmonic

In acoustics and telecommunication, a harmonic of a wave is a component frequency of the Signalling that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency....
. The result is like adding the same tone one octave
Octave

In music, an octave The octave is occasionally referred to as a diapason.The octave above an indicated note is sometimes abbreviated 8va, and the octave below 8vb....
 higher. The added harmonic tone is lower, at about 1-5% or less in a no feedback amp at full power and rapidly decreasing at lower levels. Some argue that this "distortion" can actually enhance the music, just like the body of a musical instrument does, making it sound somewhat richer. It has been also claimed that in some cases especially a single-ended power amplifier's harmonic distortion could reduce similar harmonic distortion in a single driver loudspeaker, if their harmonic distortions were equal and amplifier was connected to the speaker so that the distortions would neutralize each other.

SETs usually only produce about 2 watt
WATT

WATT is a radio station broadcasting a News radio-Talk radio-Sports radio format. Licensed to Cadillac, Michigan, it first began broadcasting in 1945....
 (W) for a 2A3 tube amp to 8 W for a 300B up to the practical maximum of 40 W for a 805 tube amp. The most expensive amp in existence, the Wavac SH-833 monoblock SETs (which cost about US$350,000) produces about 150 W using an 833A
833A

The 833A is a vacuum tube constructed for medium power radio frequency transmitter applications. It is a High-mu power triode intended for use as an RF power amplifier....
 tube. The resulting SPL depends on the sensitivity of the loudspeaker and the size and acoustics of the room as well as amplifier power output. Their low power also makes them ideal for use as preamps. SET amps have a power consumption of a minimum of 8 times the stated stereo power. For example a 10 W stereo SET uses a minimum of 80 W, and typically 100 W.

Intentional distortion


Tube sound from transistor amplifiers

Some individual characteristics of the tube sound, such as the waveshaping
Distortion synthesis

Distortion synthesis is a group of sound synthesis techniques which modify existing sounds to produce more complex sounds , usually by using Nonlinearity circuits or mathematics....
 on overdrive, are straightforward to produce in a transistor circuit or digital filter
Digital filter

In electronics, computer science and mathematics, a digital filter is a system that performs mathematical operations on a Sampling , discrete-time Signal to reduce or enhance certain aspects of that signal....
. For more complete simulations, engineers have been successful in developing transistor amplifiers that produce a sound quality very similar to the tube sound. Usually this involves using a circuit topology similar to that used in tube amplifiers.

In 1982, Tom Scholz
Tom Scholz

Donald Thomas "Tom" Scholz , is an United States rock music musician, songwriter, guitarist, inventor, and electronics engineer. He is best known as the founder of the hard rock band Boston and inventor of the Rockman guitar amplifier....
, a graduate of MIT and a member of Boston
Boston (band)

Boston is an United States Rock music band from Boston, Massachusetts that achieved its most notable successes during the 1970s and 1980s. Centered on guitarist, keyboardist, songwriter, and record producer Tom Scholz, the band is a staple of classic rock radio playlists....
, introduced the Rockman, which used bipolar transistors, but achieved a distorted sound adopted by many well known musicians. Advanced digital signal processing
Digital signal processing

Digital signal processing is concerned with the representation of the signal s by a sequence of numbers or symbols and the processing of these signals....
 offers the possibility to simulate tube sound. Computer
Computer

A computer is a machine that manipulates Data according to a list of Code .The first devices that resemble modern computers date to the mid-20th century , although the computer concept and various machines similar to computers existed earlier....
 algorithms are currently available that transform digital sound from a CD or other digital source into a distorted digital
Digital

A digital system uses discrete values, usually but not always symbolized numerically to represent information for input, processing, transmission, storage, etc....
 sound signal.

Using modern passive components, and modern sources, whether digital
Digital

A digital system uses discrete values, usually but not always symbolized numerically to represent information for input, processing, transmission, storage, etc....
 or analogue, and wide band loudspeaker
Loudspeaker

A loudspeaker, speaker, or speaker system is an electroacoustical transducer that converts an electricity signal processing to sound....
s, it is possible to have tube amplifiers with the characteristic wide bandwidth and "fast" sound of modern transistor amplifiers, including using push-pull circuits, class AB, and feedback. Some enthusiasts have built amplifiers using transistors and MOSFETs that operate in class A, including single ended, and these often have the "tube sound" .

Tube/transistor "HYBRID" amplifiers

Tubes are often used to impart characteristics that many people find audibly pleasant to solid state amplifiers, such as Musical Fidelity
Musical Fidelity

Musical Fidelity is a low volume producer of high-end audio equipment. Founded in the United Kingdom in 1982, they are known for the unusual industrial design applied to their products....
's use of Nuvistor
Nuvistor

The nuvistor is a type of vacuum tube announced by RCA in 1959. Most nuvistors are basically thimble-shaped, but somewhat smaller than a thimble....
s, tiny triode tubes, to control large bi-polar transistors in their NuVista 300 power amp. In America, Moscode and Studio Electric use this method, but use MOSFET transistors for power, rather than bi-polar. Pathos, an Italian company, has developed an entire line of hybrid amplifiers.

To demonstrate one aspect of this effect, one may use a light bulb in the feedback loop of an infinite gain multiple feedback (IGMF) circuit. The slow response of the light bulb's resistance
Conductance

Conductance can refer to:*Electrical conductance*Fluid conductance*Thermal_conductivity#Thermal_Conductance*Conductance *Conductance ...
 (which varies according to temperature
Temperature

In physics, temperature is a physical property of a Physical system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that feels hotter generally has the greater temperature....
) can thus be used to moderate the sound and attain a tube-like "soft limiting" of the output, though other aspects of "the tube sound" would not be duplicated in this exercise.

Tube sound enthusiasts

Some enthusiasts consider that "pure" tube amplifiers should not use anything except tubes as active devices. Others, in contrast, will use tubes for the audio circuit, but will accept the use of semiconductor gain devices in the power supply or as constant current sources. Other schisms concern the use of triode
Triode

A triode is an electronic amplifier device having three active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a vacuum tube with three elements: the Electrical filament or cathode, the control grid, and the Plate electrode or anode....
s vs. tetrode
Tetrode

A tetrode is an electronic device having four active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a two-grid vacuum tube. It has the three electrodes of a triode and an additional screen grid which significantly changes its behaviour....
s and pentode
Pentode

A pentode is an electronic device having five active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a three-grid vacuum tube, which was invented by the Dutchman Bernard Tellegen in 1926....
s, and the use of directly heated tubes vs. indirectly heated tubes. Often sticking to their point of view comes close to religion

Many of the explanations relate to the circuit topologies pioneered using tubes, and traditionally associated with them ever since, regardless of whether they are built using tubes today, notably the directly heated single-ended triode
Single-ended triode

A single-ended triode vacuum tube electronic amplifier operates in Class A in contrast to Push-pull output amplifiers where two output tubes work together in phase opposition ....
 amplifier circuit, which operates in class A and often has no external negative feedback
Negative feedback

Negative feedback feeds part of a system's output, inverted, into the system's input; generally with the result that fluctuations are attenuated....
; this topology is a classic source of the tube sound.

Feedback paths coupled through the secondary of the output transformer reduce distortion because they compensate for the transformer's distortion to some extent. However only limited NFB can be used around the transformer, as there is phase lag caused by the transformer, and this causes instability if NFB is incorrectly (without any phase / frequency correction) used.

See also

  • Audio system measurements
    Audio system measurements

    Audio system measurements are made for several purposes. Designers take measurements so that they can specify the performance of a piece of equipment....
  • British Valve Association
    British Valve Association

    The British Valve Association was a cartel of vacuum tube manufacturers in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland that was designed to protect their interests from foreign competition....
  • European triode festival
    European triode festival

    Since 2000 each year the "European Triode Festival" has been held in various venues in Europe For the first 3 years, the festival was organised by Kurt Steffensen and held in Aarhus, Denmark....