tomp wrote:
If you want to get a good primer on audio transformers speak with David Berning. In reality it is very difficult to make a good output transformer especially with single ended amps because in those cases there is a considerable amount of DC in the core. Push pull amps like you have are not as great a problem but there are still many design tradeoffs to be made that involve leakage inductance, stray capacitance, etc.. If you design a transformer to provide good low frequency response it will probably have to compromise high frequency response and satability. Using feedback and other frequency selective tweaks to prop up a bad transformer inevitably leads to poor performance. That is why David developed the ZOTL to eliminate output transformers. It is not the same as conventional OTL amps or hybrids using solid state output drivers. Check out this link:
http://davidberning.com/technologyAs far as what you are hearing I would guess it is more related to frequency response changes caused by the output impedance of the amp reacting with varying input impedance of the speaker. If the amp has inherently poor flatness of frequency response it could also add to the problem. Both conditions can be tested.
The size of the driver is really not material. Rather the sensitivity, that is the ability to convert electrical power into acoustical power is the deciding factor on how much power the amp will need for a given SPL for a given size room. If the response of the driver falls off from nominal at any frequency, that is the response flatness is poor more power will be needed with EQ to bring the response back up. That is a gross oversimplification but fundamentally describes the situation.
Tom
Thanks Tom, I looked at the link. It's interesting but probably a little beyond my capabilities.
The bottom line is that I'm planning on keeping the amp, for the most part unmodified. I don't really have a complaint. It's more like just a simple observation of the difference between this one and my previous, much more expensive solid state amp. It might be nice to gain back some of the qualities I was used to with the other amp, and it seems to me that it should be a relatively simple thing to do, especially given that fact that I have a lot of different tubes I could swap out to experiment. It could be like Roscoe says, that I'm limited by the design of the amp, but I'm really only trying to achieve a couple relatively subtle changes! I'm not trying to rework the performance of the amp. I just want a little bit more "airiness" in the highs, and a little bit more tonal richness in the bass. It's so subtle in fact that I previously would have resorted to fooling around with cables and fuses to achieve it. Through previous experiments though, I have gathered the best cables I could find, so I don't think there is much more fooling around in that area for me to do. My speakers are at their pinnacle too! There is really no variable left that I can think of that I didn't already manipulate and optimize!
If I can't achieve it with a couple of tubes, then everything is probably going to stay the way it is.
Chris