New amp being touted as among the best ever......


....possibly hyperbole but Hi-Fi News in the UK raving about the Diavlet D-Premier amplifer.

Apparently it has patented a new hybrid of Class A and Class D technology. It sounds very interesting, looks unique and would appear to be a must hear for those who are interested in high quality servers where apparently it excels-although I'd be interested to hear what it can do with any source.

Pretty expensive I believe at £12000 or approx $18000.

It looks very interesting and it's not every review you read where you really want to hear the thing.....

Here's their website, quite a lot of info on there if you browse about.
http://www.devialet.com/
ben_campbell
The fact that an amplifier may or may not 'double down' really says nothing about its sound.
"The fact that an amplifier may or may not 'double down' really says nothing about its sound."

That depends.

It does not define the sound however it can help deliver the best results especially in teh low end in practice with many speakers with difficult loads (more the norm) that are common out there today.

It is not a prime consideration though for those speaker designs that break that mold and present a more balanced load top to bottom and are also inherently more tube amp friendly.
Let's just take a look at that model for a moment- the idea is that the amplifier is a 'voltage source' which is audio engineering shorthand for saying that it can make the same voltage into any load.

This is great if the speaker is designed for that response in an amplifier, and many are. However, the way the human ear hears is a little different from what is on paper. What I mean by that is that the ear perceives amplifier distortion as a tonal coloration.

The reason that is important is thus: In order for an amplifier to double power as impedance is halved (IOW to have a constant voltage characteristic) it has to have transistors in it. Now any transistor has a non-linear capacitive aspect in its junctions (varactor diodes take advantage of this to tune radios). The more current you put through the device the more this is magnified. Usually loop feedback is used to linearize the amplifier, and is enough that this quality of capacitance is taken into account.

The human ear uses the 5th, 7th and 9th harmonics to determine how loud a sound is. When loop feedback is used, these harmonics become artificially enhanced. This causes the amplifier to sound bright and 'shouty'.

Now this is variable with transistor amplifiers; a lot depends on the goal of the designer! But if they focused on making the constant voltage thing work without also paying attention to how our ears work, well then
That depends.
That does depend, I've heard tube amps that sounded amongst other things; "bright and 'shouty'." too.