This invention relates to the combination of a solid state audio power amplifier and signal processing means for use with an electric guitar amplifier.
It is well known and accepted by the practising electric guitarist, that a guitar amplifier using thermionic valves (also referred to as ‘tubes’) as the primary power amplification devices will be perceived by the user to sound significantly louder than a guitar amplifier of an equivalent power output rating utilising solid state power amplification devices. Additionally, a valve power amplifier will possess desirable frequency response variations, and, when driven to full power output, will produce non-linear amplitude and frequency domain distortions that are also deemed desirable by the practising musician and listener, and which are not produced by current state of the art solid state linear audio power amplifiers.
To overcome the perceived lack of volume, and the lack of both the desirable frequency response characteristics and the desirable amplitude distortion characteristics provided by a valve audio power amplifier when compared to a conventional solid-state power amplifier of the same nominal power rating, one aspect of this invention provides a combination of signal processing means and a solid state audio power amplifier and associated power supply, whose maximum output voltage before limiting is controlled in a frequency dependant manner such that the maximum RMS power delivered to an associated guitar loudspeaker system, is equivalent to that of a conventional valve power amplifier of an equivalent RMS power rating.
It is well known and accepted by the users of guitar amplifiers that utilise thermionic valves (also known as ‘Tubes’) as the means to obtain audio power amplification, that a valve amplifier will produce a higher sound pressure level when used in conjunction with a guitar loudspeaker system than a solid state (transistorised) audio amplifier of an equivalent nominal power output rating.
Over time, various explanations have been suggested for this phenomenon, all tending to be based around the vague notional concept of psycho-acoustics. It has been suggested that the inherent non-linearity in the electrical input/output transfer characteristic of a thermionic valve, and the resultant addition of harmonically related distortion components to the output signal that are not present in the original input signal, has the effect of allowing the user and/or listener of the valve amplifier, when used in conjunction with a guitar loudspeaker system, to perceive the sound pressure level of such an amplifier to be greater than it is in reality.
This is not the case, and the fundamental cause for the increased sound pressure level of the system can be shown by a straightforward engineering analysis of a conventional valve power amplifier driving a typical musical instrument type loudspeaker system.
Some embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic, driven from a voltage source.
FIG. 2:—Impedance of loudspeaker system electrical equivalent schematic model versus frequency response plot of system depicted in
FIG. 3:—Loudspeaker system electrical model schematic terminal voltage frequency response plot of system depicted in
FIG. 4:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic connected to the output of a audio power amplifier with voltage gain ‘Aol’ and output resistance ‘Rout’.
FIG. 5:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic terminal voltage frequency response plot of system in
FIG. 6:—Loudspeaker system electrical equivalent model schematic driven from a audio power amplifier with voltage gain ‘Aol’ and output resistance ‘Rout’, with negative feedback factor ‘Afb’ applied to the power amplifier.
FIG. 7:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic terminal voltage frequency response plot of system in
FIG. 8:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic driven from a audio power amplifier with voltage gain ‘Aol’ and output resistance ‘Rout’, with negative feedback applied to the power amplifier via frequency selective low-pass and high-pass ‘PRESENCE’ and ‘RESONANCE’ controls in the negative feedback loop.
FIG. 9:—Loudspeaker system electrical equivalent model schematic terminal voltage frequency response plot of system in
FIG. 10:—Loudspeaker system electrical model equivalent schematic terminal voltage frequency response plot of system in
FIG. 11:—Shows the general arrangement of a digital signal processing unit according to the invention, arranged to receive and process an audio input signal, with the processed signal output connected to a audio power amplification stage, in turn driving a loudspeaker.
FIG. 12:—Depicts in greater detail the digital signal processing unit of
FIG. 13:—Illustrates the numerical signal process flow for a typical infinite impulse response (IIR) digital filter.
FIG. 14:—Illustrates the numerical signal flow for an amplitude domain, non-linear, harmonic distortion generating, and signal limiting, digital signal processing block.
FIG. 15:—Illustrates the input-output transfer function of the amplitude domain non-linear transfer function depicted in
FIG. 16:—Illustrates the output waveform of the amplitude domain non-linear transfer function depicted in
FIG. 17:—Illustrates a control selector knob for selecting output characteristics corresponding to various types of thermionic valves.
Rvc represents the electrical resistance of the loudspeaker voice coil, and Lvc represents the inductance of the voice coil formed by winding the voice coil around the loudspeaker iron pole-piece. Lcom and Cmas represent respectively the compliance and mass of the loudspeaker cone and the air load enclosed inside the loudspeaker enclosure, whilst RIos represents the combined losses of both the mechanical loudspeaker system and the air enclosed inside the loudspeaker cabinet.
Using the electrical circuit equivalent of a guitar loudspeaker enclosure system, the terminal impedance of the driver and enclosure system can be plotted as a function of frequency, as shown in
Referring again to
Now consider the case where the loudspeaker system is being driven from an amplifier with a voltage gain of ‘Aol’ and with an intrinsic, non-zero, output resistance ‘Rout’, as depicted in
Valve audio power amplifiers almost invariably utilise pentode (five electrode) or tetrode (four electrode) devices as the active power amplification devices. Typical examples of audio power pentodes are types EL34 and EL84, with types KT88, 6550 and 6L6 being examples of typical beam tetrodes. Both types of device are characterised by a transfer function that closely approximates that of a voltage controlled current source, and by direct implication, this infers a characteristic high output resistance to the device. By ensuring that the maximum output current capability of the particular valve type utilised in a power amplifier is not exceeded, the maximum output voltage capability of a valve amplifier is then set by the value of the load resistance that the valve amplifier is connected to. Referring again to
This characteristic rise in maximum, undistorted, peak voltage delivery capability of a valve power amplifier, at the frequency dependant higher values of the loudspeaker system characteristic impedance is the fundamental reason that a valve audio power amplifier will sound louder than a conventional solid state power amplifier of an equivalent stated nominal power rating.
It s also noted that over the range of frequencies where the magnitude of the loudspeaker system impedance rises above the nominal impedance of the loudspeaker system, the power delivered by the amplifier, and dissipated in the loudspeaker load, falls. As a direct consequence, the power input requirement to the amplifier, as supplied by the power supply unit, will also fall.
The use of negative feedback in audio power amplifiers, both valve and solid state, is well known and brings many conventional advantages, including the reduction of harmonic distortion, increased bandwidth, and a lowering in system output impedance. All these advantages are conventionally deemed to be desirable, and it is understood that these advantages are obtained at the expense of total system closed loop gain.
By introducing frequency selective filtering into the negative feedback path of an amplifier, the amplitude response of the amplifier can be made to be frequency dependant. In 1954 Leo Fender(Fender Musical Instruments) introduced a variable cut-off frequency low-pass filter into the feedback path of a valve power amplifier, with the amount of feedback and the frequency at which the low-pass filtering is introduced being adjustable via a front panel control, which he termed ‘Presence’. Many other amplifier designs subsequently copied this feature, and later a similar control named ‘Resonance’, to allow control of the low frequency response of a power amplifier by high-pass filtering of the power amplifier feed-back signal, was introduced on many guitar amplifier designs.
It is to be noted that not all valve guitar amplifier designs utilise the application negative feedback around an audio power amplifier section. The omission of negative feedback in the power amplifier section, and the resultant significant effect on the frequency response when such a power amplifier is connected to a guitar loudspeaker system is deemed desirable by many guitarists. One example of a valve guitar amplifier with no power amplifier stage negative feedback is the VOX AC30, first produced in 1957, and still in production currently.
The signal processing means may be chosen to receive an audio input in analogue form, or in a digital representation of the audio input signal, or in both forms. The form of the applied input signal is not germane to the invention.
Similarly, the signal processing means may be chosen to output an analogue signal corresponding to the processed input signal, or may output a digital representation of the processed signal input signal. The form of the processed output signal is not germane to the invention.
The audio power amplifier may be chosen to be a conventional analogue audio power amplifier, or power amplification may be achieved and implemented by pulse width modulation, duty cycle control of a high frequency carrier signal in order to improve the system power conversion efficiency. The exact means by which audio power amplification is achieved is not germane to this invention.
The power supply source for both the signal processing means, and the audio power amplifier may be derived by a conventional power line frequency laminated mains transformer, rectifier and bulk energy storage capacitors, or alternatively may implemented by high frequency switched mode techniques, offering higher power conversion efficiency, and weight and size reduction, at the expense of circuit complexity. Again, the exact nature of the means of power supply implementation is not germane to this invention.
Also depicted in
The filter structure illustrated in
The techniques for the analysis of analogue filter circuitry and topologies, the conversion of the analogue continuous time domain circuit behaviour to a discrete time domain sampled numerical implementation, and the verification and error analysis of the conversion process between continuous and discrete time systems can be easily and efficiently performed by Computer Aided Design (CAD) tools such as MATLAB and SIMULINK (Mathworks Inc.). Such CAD tools can also directly generate the filter coefficients required for the numerical algorithmic processing implementation of the desired filter responses.
Referring to
The absolute value of the applied system input is obtained using the identity:
For INPUT≧0, OUTPUT=INPUT
For INPUT<0, OUTPUT=−(INPUT)
By scaling the output of the absolute value process by a factor of one-half using multiplier ‘X2’, and subtracting the resultant scaled absolute value representation of the input signal from the maximum permissible full scale range of the system, a gain control coefficient is produced whose output will vary linearly from the system full scale positive value when no signal is applied to the input, to one half of the system full scale positive value when the applied input signal is of a magnitude positive or negative full scale.
By further multiplying the original input signal to the non-linear function generator with the signal resulting from the absolute value, scale and offset process just described, using multiplier ‘X1’, a system input to system output signal transfer function is obtained of the form:
Vout=Vin+(Vin2/2) for −1>Vin<0
Vout=0 for Vin=0
Vout=Vin−(Vin2/2) for 0>Vin<1
For reasons of clarity of explanation, assume the maximum positive input magnitude of the signal Vin applied to this system is bounded to +1, and the maximum negative input magnitude of the signal Vin applied to this system is bounded to −1. This would be the case implicitly for a fixed point, fractional signal processor. For a floating point processing system, the full scale positive and full scale negative input is constrained to the same fractional range by suitable choice of system input and system output scaling.
With the maximum input signal range assumed bounded to −1<Vin<1, the resultant output signal range defined by the processing equalities stated above lies between −0.5≦Vin≦0.5. This implies a system gain of one-half. However, the instantaneous gain of the system is dependent on the instantaneous magnitude of the applied input signal, with maximum system gain occurring at Vin=0. By multiplying the output of the multiplier X1 by a factor of two, the large signal, peak numerical gain of the system is restored to unity, with system gain increasing toward a value of two as the applied input signal magnitude tends towards zero. The dependence of the system incremental gain, and thus the system output, upon the magnitude of the applied input signal directly imparts an inherent non-linearity to the amplitude domain system input/output signal response.
By sequentially connecting together a number, of non-linear, harmonic distortion generating processing blocks as described by
Referring again to
As the system impedance rises at this fundamental system resonance, the current drawn from the audio power amplifier connected to the loudspeaker, and thus the power delivery requirement from the power supply that supplies electrical energy to the said audio power amplifier also reduces, and thus the power dissipated by the loudspeaker drive unit also reduces.
Similarly, as the terminal impedance of a moving coil loudspeaker system rises at higher frequencies, due to the inductive nature of the voice coil, the power consumed by the loudspeaker system, and thus the power required to be delivered by the audio power amplifier and associated power supply source similarly reduces.
This invention exploits this fundamental reduction in the input energy requirement of a moving coil loudspeaker for a given acoustic power output, in the frequency range centred around the fundamental system resonance, and at the higher frequencies where the voice coil inductance becomes a significant part of the total loudspeaker system impedance, by increasing the maximum voltage applied to the moving coil system in a frequency selective and amplitude limited manner.
By increasing the applied terminal voltage to the loudspeaker by these frequency selective, amplitude limited means, the combined system acoustic sound pressure level may be raised, in a manner that accurately models the performance of the same loudspeaker system when connected to a traditional thermionic valve guitar amplifier.
By limiting the applied system signal input, by means of the amplitude domain, non-linear, harmonic generating means depicted in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1113433.5 | Aug 2011 | GB | national |