elvis
Well-known member
vick1000 said:Again, that subjective term, "tone".
What is this term to you? You can put a signal through the best audio processors in the world, but once it's converted to ones and zeros, all the original "tone" is gone. Now with some great software and conversion algos, you can get quality output from a digital device.
Interesting that you keep asking about my definition of tone without providing your own. From what I have read, you seem to have the somewhat religious or philosophical idea that tone is a sort of unmeasurable spirit that gets lost is a digital representation. Well, at least until you can find a technical argument, at which point it becomes physics. Having a background in physics and audio engineering, I ask again that you cite your sources. I have had this same debate with people in the audio engineering world for three decades and it always goes the same way: "You can't measure it, but I can hear it." Get an Audio Precision measuring system. They're great. Tone and dynamics actually have accepted, useful definitions. There is no reasonable purpose for calling those definitions into question other than to distract.
vick1000 said:I am not disputing the quality of signal processing in todays devices, such as the Fractal and Kemper devices.
afu said:Vick, digital processing to create distortion wasn't really what we were talking about. I don't think anyone could dispute the difference between tube distortion and a digital simulator of tube distortion. Whether it can faithfully pass the signal in a loop without degradation was kind of the point, I thought.
Thanks afu, well-written. Let's keep the focus on CONVERSION FOR REPRODUCTION, not PROCESSING, for the moment. I own tube amps just like you, and for the same reasons.
vick1000 said:I'll leave it at this. If digital amplification was on par with analog tube amplification, there would be no more market for all tube amps. Even the best digital guitar processors, such as the AxeFX line, and the Kemper profilers, are known to only get close to emulation of full analog tube signals. They are fabulous studio devices, making recording a breeze, allowing you to downsize a stable to practically nothing. But too many musicians know their limitations, and still demand their all tube configurations.
Again I defer to afu. Lack of good math for emulation does not equal "digital is inherently flawed".
vick1000 said:What I am claiming, I don't need proof. It's simple physics, and a result of the conversion itself, not the device.
The statement "I don't need proof" is incompatible with "It's simple physics."
vick1000 said:It's very simple if you know the difference between an analog and digital signal. Even the highest bitrate digital, is still limited to a fixed number of "steps" in any variable. The output is inherently tied to those limitations, meaning you can never get the same signal out that was sent in. This is apparent on an analog scope, and easily comparable.
Your model of digital is the same one that has been thrown around since at least the 1980s. It has been used to teach the basic concepts of digital conversion and mathematical representation to students and the public. It is both incredibly simplistic and completely incorrect with respect to audio converters. I recommend you look at how delta-sigma converters work.
As for the steps, even for early 8-bit simple stepwise DACs, a low-pass filter gets rid of the steps very nicely. You can look at the output of an audio DAC with a scope all you like and you will not find a step. It's impossible due to the filtering. THAT is physics. Now make it 24 bits and the steps are so small that the analog noise is FAR more audible even with no filtering. Not visible on a scope by any means.
Don't take my word for it. Neil Young was one of digital's biggest detractors in the 1990s. But even his argument wasn't that digital was inherently flawed, it was that it wasn't acceptable YET. He claimed that higher sample rates and more bits per sample were needed.
vick1000 said:Even that aside, the dynamics of tubes in an audio circuit, can never be replicated by digital equipment. Tubes react to signal changes much faster than even the fastest transistor, because they are not just a gate opening or closing, then bieng amplified by external devices. A tube IS the amplifier of the circuit, and changes the electron flow on a massive scale. It's very inefficient, but also very dynamic due to those high current levels.
This argument is a bit misleading. Yes, we use certain tubes for RF, but tubes are not magical, and we run some transistors at 10's of GHz. Like transistors, different tubes have different speeds. IIRC, 12AX7 bandwidth in a circuit is a couple 10's of kHz. Your loudspeaker, by comparison, can't move at even 10's of kHz with any efficacy.
EDIT: In rereading, I think you may be referring to latency. The math doesn't happen in real-time, it takes some time, delaying the signal in time. This has nothing to do with the speed of tubes vs. transistors, it is about WHAT they are actually doing. Latency is probably the best argument regarding trouble with processors, but this has nothing to do with 1s and 0s and the physics of conversion. It is also not much of a barrier given the ridiculous speed that processors can run these days.
:?: :?: :?:
OK, so why did I go to this length? I'm actually a decent person and not one to argue needlessly. I certainly don't want to put myself on poor terms with the fine people on this forum, Vick included. I truly hope that this is all taken in the spirit of reasoned debate.
The answer is that while these arguments about "tone" may be interesting philosophically, they are harmful in a practical sense.
Given that in my experience, most people find digital processors to be "good enough", the problems that they have are almost always either pilot error or analog design flaws. I can give simple advice that helps MANY people get their amps working quite well with digital processors. If some of them never get the amp and processor to play well together, or if some find that the processor just can't do the job, fair enough. For the rest, they got what they needed.
How many people are helped by parroting "Digital just can't do audio"? None. And the more people who pass around the "digital tone suck" earworm, the more likely it will be that people simply give up when they might be able to solve their problem or gain the awesome benefits of a good processor easily enough.
I also hate the pseudo-science that comes with audio. It really is all physics and math. If you find yourself unable to support a technical argument, probably you don't understand it well enough. That audio is a crossroads for the technical AND the emotional makes for interesting philosophy, but frustrating debate.