gilscales wrote:Are Tube Amps louder than solid state amps of the same power?
Yes and no. If you put a power meter on the output of a tube amplifier and a solid state amplifier that have been matched for total output power, then the meter will read almost exactly the same power for equivalent drive conditions - so in this sense, the answer is no, they are not louder.
However, if you LISTEN to the two amps, you'll find that the tube amp does indeed sound louder to your ears, in opposition to what the meter is telling you. Why?
It's tied up in the sensing instrument - that is, your ear. The way the human ear works is that it is very sensitive to the harmonic content of a sound. A tube amp is less linear (that is, has more distortion) at signal levels below clipping than a solid state amplifier.
The distortion will increase slowly, and then more rapidly as the amp starts to clip. In fact, the distortion increases so gradually and is of such a benign nature that the onset of audible distortion has no easily defined threshold. The solid state amplifier on the other hand has no such gradualism. It is almost perfectly non-distorting right up to the point that it clips, and then it clips HARD. It's easy to hear the threshold.
This sudden onset of distortion is also composed of relatively harsh sounding distortion, not like the subtle second and third harmonics of the tube amp. The human ear hears the sudden harsh distortion as clipping and harshness. It interprets the low order distortion of the tube amp as a louder sound, not as distortion. In effect, the tube amp fools the ear into thinking that its early distortion is more loudness. They therefore sound louder or more powerful than the actual measurements show are really there.
Great explanation from the guy with what looks like a KT88? in his avatar..thanks gilscales.
I'd also say that tubes emphasize even order harmonics while transistors emphasize odd order
harmonics. The result is a smoother, more hi-fidelity sound. The ear
is much more sensitive to odd order harmonic distortion than even.
Also, tube amps way back would drive lower impedance loads than ss
as they had autoformers at the output.
I think it's safe to say that they also normally had much larger capacitors.. If the amp was driven to close to full power, while the power supply was trying to catch up on
those low notes, the caps can help supply the necessary power for transients.
I'm fortunate to have some great tube amps, Antique Sound Labs Monsoon 100watt monoblocks, driven by a Cary Audio slp98 f1
http://www.upscaleaudio.com/updates/slp98.htm. They push A. Gallo Ref 3.1 in my office system ( I spend a bit of time in there..; ).