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Velleman K40x0, the very model of an all-round amp
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October 25th 07, 07:53 PM posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.tubes
John Byrns
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Posts: 116
Output classes A and AB
In article ,
(Don Pearce) wrote:
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 15:40:55 +0100, Eeyore
wrote:
John Byrns wrote:
Patrick Turner wrote:
Cancelation of even order harmonics occurs in amps working in class AB
during that part of the wave forms which are in class A, ie, the bits
either side of the zero crossing.
But once each tube moves into cut off, nothing is cancelled.
Patrick, I'm surprised to hear you say this. What are you trying to
tell us, that the even order harmonics are only cancelled during those
parts of the cycle when both tubes are conducting, but that the even
order distortion components reappear during those parts of the cycle
when only one tube is conducting? If you actually believe that you
should go back to the books and study the theory of harmonic distortion
more carefully. I hope you didn't get this notion from the RDH4, I
haven't read the RDH4's harmonic distortion explanation, but if this is
what it says I have just lost any respect I had for the book. In a
perfectly balanced PP amplifier the even order harmonic distortion is
completely cancelled even when the tubes are cut off for parts of the
cycle.
I'd love to know how that happens. There's no cancellation of ANYTHING once
one
side has ceased conducting !
Graham
Because if you add an even harmonic to a signal, you have to make it
asymmetrical. You always get a peak coinciding with a trough on one
half cycle, followed by a peak coinciding with a peak on the next. If
you modify the signal to remove any asymmetry, you must by definition
remove the even harmonics.
Finally a man who understands the theory!
Regards,
John Byrns
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