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educatedfilm
Registered User
Joined: 08/10/01
Posts: 882
educatedfilm
Registered User
Joined: 08/10/01
Posts: 882
02/12/2002 1:03 pm
WHY DO VALVE AMPS SOUND MUCH LOUDER THAN SOLID STATE AMPS (i mean seriously louder, like a 30watt valve can be deafening, but 50watt solid state amp just sound loud)


"Are Tube Amps louder than solid state amps of the same power?
No. However they do SOUND louder. Let me explain.
Some excellent scientific work on tube preamplifiers and their distortion products has turned up the mechanism for this. When tubes are driven outside their linear region, for the first 12db or so of overdrive the harmonics that they produce trick the human ear into thinking that the sounds are getting louder, when in fact the sound is getting progressively more distorted.

It is this acoustic trick that can make tube amps sound up to 12db louder than they actually are compared to a perfect, undistorted amplifier. A solid state amplifier of the same power as a tube amp may distort at the same signal level as the tube amp, but the distortions are not subtle, and we hear them as distortion, not as a slightly louder sound. A solid state amplifier of much greater power would remain undistorted at higher levels, and the tube amp would sound comparably loud to the larger solid state amp.

They sound larger than they are. "
from
http://www.geofex.com/tubeampfaq/taffram.htm
note Decibles are logarithmic, so 120 is half of 130, and 130 is half of 140 db in power per unit area... (i think it''s half, I cant remember:()...