
January 22nd 08, 12:08 PM
posted to rec.audio.tubes, uk.rec.audio
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The Schumpeter Solution
Small is also beautiful. The small is the genesis of the large.
It's funny that some cannot grasp this fundamental concept with single
ended triode (SET) amps. We routinely build preamps and voltage
multipliciton stages of triodes operating single-ended, and the
diehards who with a convulsive kneejerks reject any amp without a push-
pull power stage will be the last to let go of the single-ended gain
stage, yet they cannot see that the small signal stage is a template
for the sweetest power stage.
What is sauce of quail must be sauce for the goose and the gander too.
Very difficult to understand how some people think.
Andre Jute
Visit Jute on Amps at http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/
"wonderfully well written and reasoned information
for the tube audio constructor"
John Broskie TubeCAD & GlassWare
"an unbelievably comprehensive web site
containing vital gems of wisdom"
Stuart Perry Hi-Fi News & Record Review
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January 22nd 08, 12:19 PM
posted to rec.audio.tubes, uk.rec.audio
|
|
The Schumpeter Solution
Small is also beautiful. The small is the genesis of the large.
It's funny that some cannot grasp this fundamental concept with
single
ended triode (SET) amps. We routinely build preamps and voltage
multiplication stages of triodes operating single-ended, and the
diehards who with a convulsive kneejerk reject any amp without a
push-
pull power stage will be the last to let go of the single-ended gain
stage, yet they cannot see that the small signal stage is a template
for the sweetest power stage.
What is sauce of quail must be sauce for the goose and the gander
too.
Very difficult to understand how some people think.
Andre Jute
Visit Jute on Amps at http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/
"wonderfully well written and reasoned information
for the tube audio constructor"
John Broskie TubeCAD & GlassWare
"an unbelievably comprehensive web site
containing vital gems of wisdom"
Stuart Perry Hi-Fi News & Record Review
|

January 22nd 08, 04:03 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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The Schumpeter Solution
"Rob" wrote in message
...
Andre Jute wrote:
Small is also beautiful. The small is the genesis of the large.
Don't know about that. Schumpeter argued (in an analysis of western
capitalism) that economics measures well-being by the standard of living
(variously, average incomes and consumption). This is best achieved by
maximising production and consumption. Buddhism (his 'foil' and the basis
of the small thesis) does not measure well being as such, but consider
that it is maximised when consumption is minimised. Basically this means
that well being is not dependent on consumption – the ‘given ends’ (a
difficult concept, granted, but take it as live in comfort perhaps) with
the minimum means. An example might be hifi – why do we need all this
stuff?! Large is a sort of antithesis, not genesis.
Indeed, though I'm not sure that can be seen as a reason for using SET
amplifiers. Their output power may be small, but as they are so inefficient
their power consumption isn't. And the permanent dissatisfaction with what
one already has (which is the basis of the audiophile philosophy) is the
antithesis of the Schumpeter ideal. My Quad 405 may be "large", in the sense
that it has an output power significantly greater than I really need, but it
probably draws less energy from the mains than a SET amplifier does.
Furthermore it has powered my main audio system for over 25 years without
needing any replacement parts, so in terms of the energy used in manufacture
and transport it has had a fairly low impact on the planet.
David.
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January 22nd 08, 11:12 PM
posted to rec.audio.tubes, uk.rec.audio
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The Schumpeter Solution
On Jan 22, 10:30*pm, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote:
"David Looser" wrote in message
...
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
"Andre Jute" wrote in message
....
Small is also beautiful. The small is the genesis of the large.
It's funny that some cannot grasp this fundamental concept with
single
ended triode (SET) amps. We routinely build preamps and voltage
multiplication stages of triodes operating single-ended, and the
diehards who with a convulsive kneejerk reject any amp without a
push-
pull power stage will be the last to let go of the single-ended gain
stage, yet they cannot see that the small signal stage is a template
for the sweetest power stage.
What is sauce of quail must be sauce for the goose and the gander
too.
Very difficult to understand how some people think.
**Speak for yourself. The best valve preamps I've ever heard are push
pull (Alan Wright's fabulous balanced preamps spring to mind).
And those pre-war WE cinema amplifiers that were referred to in another
thread had one or two stages of push-pull amplification before the output
stage. But then they were money-no-object designs, designed to produce the
best performance possible with the technology of their time.
**Pre-zactly. Since the advent of push-pull, SE has been negated, except in
cheap, crappy amplifiers.
Trevor Wilson
Let's hear that again?
Since the advent of push-pull, SE has been negated,
Then why are you spending so much time, Wilson, trying to stem the
tide of SE amps chosen by sophisticated music lovers?
except in
cheap, crappy amplifiers.
Eh? Most SE amps built or bought by audiophiles are not far off the
price of a reasonable used car.
Do you ever reread these vomitings you send out, Wilson, and reflect
that their irrationality and ignorance cannot reflect well on you?
Unsigned out of exasperation with this idiot Wilson
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January 22nd 08, 11:28 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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The Schumpeter Solution
On Jan 22, 5:03 pm, "David Looser"
wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message
...
Andre Jute wrote:
Small is also beautiful. The small is the genesis of the large.
Don't know about that. Schumpeter argued (in an analysis of western
capitalism) that economics measures well-being by the standard of living
(variously, average incomes and consumption). This is best achieved by
maximising production and consumption. Buddhism (his 'foil' and the basis
of the small thesis) does not measure well being as such, but consider
that it is maximised when consumption is minimised. Basically this means
that well being is not dependent on consumption - the 'given ends' (a
difficult concept, granted, but take it as live in comfort perhaps) with
the minimum means. An example might be hifi - why do we need all this
stuff?! Large is a sort of antithesis, not genesis.
Indeed, though I'm not sure that can be seen as a reason for using SET
amplifiers. Their output power may be small, but as they are so inefficient
their power consumption isn't. And the permanent dissatisfaction with what
one already has (which is the basis of the audiophile philosophy) is the
antithesis of the Schumpeter ideal. My Quad 405 may be "large", in the sense
that it has an output power significantly greater than I really need, but it
probably draws less energy from the mains than a SET amplifier does.
Furthermore it has powered my main audio system for over 25 years without
needing any replacement parts, so in terms of the energy used in manufacture
and transport it has had a fairly low impact on the planet.
David.
Mmm. I too have a 405 which has given sterling service. If it is so
efficient, I wonder why Peter Walker, not notably a waster, included
that large, expensive heatsink at the back.
I have a PSE 300B amp that cost about 1600 Euro to build, about the
price of a modern equivalent of the Quad 405 MkII. It's lasted fifteen
years. It consumes about 120W for stereo. That's *less* draw at full
power than the Quad 405 MkII. A smaller SE 300B amp consumes about 50W
for stereo and just idles along with horns but the 405 must draw down
more than the SE amp to drive ESL-63 to the same SPL as the 300B
drives the horns.
But the amazing thing here isn't your carelessness with the numbers
but the hubris of telling me how your flavour of an obscenely
expensive hobby is saving he planet! The only reason I'm not sarcastic
about it is that your flavour, the Quad 405, is also one of my
flavours.
Andre Jute
Catholic tastes
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