Spatialking - It is not so bad with transformer radiated noise - toroid should solve it. It has 10x less radiated noise than standard transformer and my Benchmark DAC1 has measured 140dB S/N with power supply toroid next to circuitry and without any shielding. I was talking about current spikes coming thru power cord of linear supply.
Just opposite to good SMPS that switches at zero voltage - zero current, linear power supply switches at maximum voltage.
As I said before linear power supply is in reality 120Hz SMPS where width of current spikes from mains depends on the load.
Yes, linear power supply can be filtered out with pi filters as well as regulation can be added but they don't do it. Pi filter costs and inductor would have to be huge while regulation will add enormous amount of the heat (and therefore heatsinks) since it needs to cover typical 90-132V range. I don't know of any audio amps that have regulated linear power supply - but also I don't have a lot of experience in audio gear.
Jeff Rowland used SMPS in his CAPRI preamp not because of lower cost but because of lower noise. Linear power supply - even regulated would be very inexpensive for the power needed by preamp - SMPS would not give him any savings.
Noise from SMPS is, as you stated, usually around 100kHz (but can be even 1MHz for lower efficiency/lower power demand). This frequency is non-audible and its harmonics would be perfectly filtered-out before we get to your FM radio frequency range. I agree that SMPS is often used to save cost with undersized transformer and poor filtering (computers) but it doesn't have to be. Everything is in the hands of designer.
My computer, monitor, TV, amplifier, DVD player, electric shaver, cordless phone, Cell phone, cell phone charger and who knows what else in my home - ALL have SMPS power supplies. I'm not worrying about noise produced by my class D amp because it is well below FCC requirements.
Just opposite to good SMPS that switches at zero voltage - zero current, linear power supply switches at maximum voltage.
As I said before linear power supply is in reality 120Hz SMPS where width of current spikes from mains depends on the load.
Yes, linear power supply can be filtered out with pi filters as well as regulation can be added but they don't do it. Pi filter costs and inductor would have to be huge while regulation will add enormous amount of the heat (and therefore heatsinks) since it needs to cover typical 90-132V range. I don't know of any audio amps that have regulated linear power supply - but also I don't have a lot of experience in audio gear.
Jeff Rowland used SMPS in his CAPRI preamp not because of lower cost but because of lower noise. Linear power supply - even regulated would be very inexpensive for the power needed by preamp - SMPS would not give him any savings.
Noise from SMPS is, as you stated, usually around 100kHz (but can be even 1MHz for lower efficiency/lower power demand). This frequency is non-audible and its harmonics would be perfectly filtered-out before we get to your FM radio frequency range. I agree that SMPS is often used to save cost with undersized transformer and poor filtering (computers) but it doesn't have to be. Everything is in the hands of designer.
My computer, monitor, TV, amplifier, DVD player, electric shaver, cordless phone, Cell phone, cell phone charger and who knows what else in my home - ALL have SMPS power supplies. I'm not worrying about noise produced by my class D amp because it is well below FCC requirements.

