Yeah digital technology has become predictable and a bit boring in terms of sound, IMO. Sure a good solid state amp sounds amazing these days but there is just something about valves that always pulls me back.
Yeah digital technology has become predictable and a bit boring in terms of sound, IMO. Sure a good solid state amp sounds amazing these days but there is just something about valves that always pulls me back.
It's all personal taste. It's not that black and white.
Yeah, it is, but there is still a quantifiable reason tubes sound better. Solid state amplifiers often distort with odd-order harmonics while vacuum tube amplify with even-order harmonics, which is natural multiple of the input frequency (0 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 etc). Solid state amplifiers distort differently (1 - 3 - 5 - 7 etc) and this results in a less full, detailed, and warm sound. It has a more edgy and aggressive sound. A naturally distorted solid state amp sounds like a tin of bees while a naturally distorted tube amp sounds... natural.
Then you have the softer compression of tubes that handle the louder transients better, or 'peaks' (think 'pops' or 'thumps'). You also have the gradual distortion that occurs from using higher voltages in valve amps. Solid-state amps use lower voltage supply rails to operate and the output can exceed the supply voltage. When that happens they don't compress and gradually clip, they simply cut off the output signal at that level. Sine waves become square waves immediately and the sound is not pleasant.
It's subjective whether you prefer that sound, but there is more to it than just personal taste.
Yeah, it is, but there is still a quantifiable reason tubes sound better. Solid state amplifiers often distort with odd-order harmonics while vacuum tube amplify with even-order harmonics, which is natural multiple of the input frequency (0 - 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 etc). Solid state amplifiers distort differently (1 - 3 - 5 - 7 etc) and this results in a less full, detailed, and warm sound. It has a more edgy and aggressive sound. A naturally distorted solid state amp sounds like a tin of bees while a naturally distorted tube amp sounds... natural.
Then you have the softer compression of tubes that handle the louder transients better, or 'peaks' (think 'pops' or 'thumps'). You also have the gradual distortion that occurs from using higher voltages in valve amps. Solid-state amps use lower voltage supply rails to operate and the output can exceed the supply voltage. When that happens they don't compress and gradually clip, they simply cut off the output signal at that level. Sine waves become square waves immediately and the sound is not pleasant.
It's subjective whether you prefer that sound, but there is more to it than just personal taste.
Pretty sure you copied that from somewhere. I've read that nearly word for word before
It is personal taste and there is no "this is better" because xxxx reasons. You cannot quantify it because nobody hears the same at every frequency. The transients you refer to are different yes, but you need to get to a point where it becomes noticeable, and at that volume, you'd be stupid to try. For guitar amps and such many people still use tube based because to them it's just better. Whether it's the elitism of "tube" amps or not, bassists in general prefer it. Good for them, more options won't hurt them. it just means they think they get the best sound and for a music listener, that's all I care about.
Also personal opinion, but "natural" sound is subjective to the person. Which leads us back to the personal taste thing. I'm not saying one is better than the other, but you two make it seem like it's a immediately noticeable thing and everyone could blind test and get it right, but it's honestly not the case.
Before I was so into PCs (I'm quite new to PCs to be honest compared to you chaps) I was big into amplifiers. I definitely had to refresh my memory by reading a little, but this was the kind of stuff is what I nerded out over from around 2010 to 2015. I didn't copy anything verbatim as I (for once) actually understand something.
I think it comes down to experience. The more amplifiers you listen the more attuned you become to the nuances and differences. Most musicians who start out can't tell the difference between a £2000 tube amp with mil spec capacitors and a £200 Chinese solid state amp. But given time they likely will.
Headphone amps and guitar amp though are different. They are aimed at different things..
Anyway, do you think tube headphone amps provide better bass at lower volume levels?