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Posted

Sorry if this subject has been done to death in the past. 

I have been using Class-D amps for quite a while now, and like them a lot.  But they don't really seem to appreciate being driven close to their limits.  So I've started looking at a few tube power stage amps, and a lot of the marketing blurb seems to say that they are 'more powerful' per given RMS wattage. 

 

I had a training in electronics (quite a looooong time ago) so I get that in a physical/electrical sense this has to be untrue, except for amplifiers where the manufacturers tell all sorts of fibs about the power output, and use terms like 'peak power', or 'music power', and avoid quoting an actual RMS or AES power rating.   But I was wondering if players had found that in the real world it does actually turn out to be the case that a tube output stage gives you more apparent loudness per specified RMS watt?  In particular, I was looking at this text from the Mesa-Boogie site.

"NOTE: Tube Amps sound as loud as Solid State Amps rated at several time their power (wattage) rating. Choose from 8 tubes producing 465 Tube-Watts (sounds like in excess of 900)"

It's a bold claim to make if it's just plain untrue.  So are they talking about the 'warmth' or harmonics, or saturation, or the soft clipping of the tubes at high power?  Or the fact that you can run the tubes much closer to their supply rails?

 

Posted
50 minutes ago, mattpbass said:

It’s certainly true that a valve amp of a quoted wattage will sound significantly louder than the equivalent solid state amp of the same quoted wattage. 

 

Thanks Matt.   Good to know.  But I wonder what the reason is, if it isn't actually the electrical power in watts. 

  • Like 1
Posted

The reason is compression. The natural compression of valves reduces the level of transient peaks that cause high level distortion when the amp is at or near full power. It can be approximated with SS using a compressor. It can be very closely approximated with SS using a compressor plus DSP emulation.

  • Like 3
Posted (edited)

Ah. Ok. That does make sense. Thanks Bill.  But so in that case if you drive the valve front-end of a hybrid amp quite hard, and get all that soft clipping and compression, is the class-D power stage ok?  Why would you need a valve power stage too?

Edited by Paddy Morris
Posted

With a valve power stage the compression takes place within it, which gives a different result than when it takes before it. There's also a contribution made by the output section power supply, which doesn't happen with SS. For that matter the most sought after valve amps have valve rectification in the power supply, which gives a softer transition into clipping than SS rectification. The addition of SS diodes in place of a 5Y3 or 5U4 valve in Fender amps was one of the reasons why it was said that CBS ruined them, although in truth Fender started using them in some models before the CBS takeover.

  • Like 2
Posted

Thanks. Sorry if this feels like valve amp principles 101, but I disappeared down a rabbit hole when I saw Mesa stating that valve power stages are 'more powerful' rather than just subjectively louder.

Posted

One aspect may be that RMS ratings must be given over undistorted signal, and most tube amps that are built for bass and especially guitar amplification are run way beyond clean.

  • Like 1
Posted

I don't know if this helps. As Bill has said it's all about the natural compression valve amps give you. The peaks aren't any bigger but you can bring the average level up and the overloaded peaks sound OK. Clipping of the waveform in most solid state amps is pretty unpleasant. Other factors are that a lot of the power claims are basically untrue. There is also the importance of a decent power supply to consider, a lot of switch mode amps also have switch mode power supplies which are specced for fairly low duty cycles. I'd expect Mesa valve amps to have a pretty decent power supply.

 

 

  • Like 2
Posted
On 12/04/2025 at 13:31, Paddy Morris said:

Sorry if this subject has been done to death in the past. 

I have been using Class-D amps for quite a while now, and like them a lot.  But they don't really seem to appreciate being driven close to their limits.  So I've started looking at a few tube power stage amps, and a lot of the marketing blurb seems to say that they are 'more powerful' per given RMS wattage. 

 

I had a training in electronics (quite a looooong time ago) so I get that in a physical/electrical sense this has to be untrue, except for amplifiers where the manufacturers tell all sorts of fibs about the power output, and use terms like 'peak power', or 'music power', and avoid quoting an actual RMS or AES power rating.   But I was wondering if players had found that in the real world it does actually turn out to be the case that a tube output stage gives you more apparent loudness per specified RMS watt?  In particular, I was looking at this text from the Mesa-Boogie site.

"NOTE: Tube Amps sound as loud as Solid State Amps rated at several time their power (wattage) rating. Choose from 8 tubes producing 465 Tube-Watts (sounds like in excess of 900)"

It's a bold claim to make if it's just plain untrue.  So are they talking about the 'warmth' or harmonics, or saturation, or the soft clipping of the tubes at high power?  Or the fact that you can run the tubes much closer to their supply rails?

 

I am no electronics expert but take a look at Gallien Krueger amps from the 80/90's. Class A/B (I think?) with power transformers and loudness well beyond their specs. Bob Gallien specifically engineered his RB solid state amps to run at the limit without the issues you get when driving hard - he terms it "riding the (power) rails" - there is a youtube video of him explaining it.

My solid state 400rb has no business with its rated 280w being as loud as it is, I run a 4x10 and 1x15 stack in our practice rooms and it simply cannot be turned up much as it completely drowns out the drums. It almost shouts at me "turn me up I love it!".....

I can't get enough o the sound of it tbh.

Posted

Watts and loudness are only indirectly related. There are a half dozen factors that have far more effect on loudness than watts, a fact that neither amp nor speaker manufacturers mention in their advertising, because watts drive sales.

  • Like 2
Posted
On 12/04/2025 at 11:47, Bill Fitzmaurice said:

I'd be surprised to see Mesa saying that. Subjectively sounding louder yes, but not more powerful. A watt is still a watt.

 

Part of the reason for Randy's statement is because the burst power was significantly higher than the continuous power. The power supply is not typical, there is an awful lot of energy storage which holds the supply voltage higher than is typical. While it's a little harder on the tubes, the clean (or undistorted) dynamic power increase is few dB over the continuous power rating which, along with the voicing choices, contributes to a loud, dynamic sounding amp.

 

While the continuous power is around 350-400 watts RMS, the dynamic (also called burst but rather than 20mSec, it's closer to 100mSec) power is closer to 600-800 watts RMS. This is on  the 400+ with capable tubes.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 12/04/2025 at 23:56, Bolo said:

One aspect may be that RMS ratings must be given over undistorted signal, and most tube amps that are built for bass and especially guitar amplification are run way beyond clean.

This is an important aspect of both perception and actual power. When a typical tube amp is driven hard by players looking for that kind of tone/texture, they are often driving the amp well beyond 10% THD which represents both an increase in power as well as an increase in volume due to the harmonics falling into a region where the ear is more sensitive. In fact, this is one reason for the popularity of some Darkglass models (using solid state power amps plus drive algorithms).

 

The native voicing of an amp will also come into play, as well as the increase in average power (a form of compression) when these amps are driven hard. The same thing can be done (with varying degrees of success) with solid state power amps and suitable engineering, but it comes fairly naturally with many (not all) tube power amps.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 13/04/2025 at 00:00, Phil Starr said:

I don't know if this helps. As Bill has said it's all about the natural compression valve amps give you. The peaks aren't any bigger but you can bring the average level up and the overloaded peaks sound OK. Clipping of the waveform in most solid state amps is pretty unpleasant. Other factors are that a lot of the power claims are basically untrue. There is also the importance of a decent power supply to consider, a lot of switch mode amps also have switch mode power supplies which are specced for fairly low duty cycles. I'd expect Mesa valve amps to have a pretty decent power supply.

 

Both this PLUS the dynamic (burst) power factor and voicing into the perception of loudness.

 

There are switchmode power supplies that are far more stout than line frequency supplies, and have very high duty cycles as well. 

 

Like everything in life, there are good and bad examples of both line frequency and switchmode power supplies.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 12/04/2025 at 09:16, Bill Fitzmaurice said:

With a valve power stage the compression takes place within it, which gives a different result than when it takes before it. There's also a contribution made by the output section power supply, which doesn't happen with SS. For that matter the most sought after valve amps have valve rectification in the power supply, which gives a softer transition into clipping than SS rectification. The addition of SS diodes in place of a 5Y3 or 5U4 valve in Fender amps was one of the reasons why it was said that CBS ruined them, although in truth Fender started using them in some models before the CBS takeover.

This really only applies to guitar amp designs. 

 

We never made a production amp with tube rectifiers, not did our competitors in their higher powered amps... Ampeg SVT and V4, Fender PS-300/400, Bassman 300, Bassman 135, Trace V series, for example. It turns out that what sounds good on guitar (and maybe on lower powered bass) doesn't sound all that great on higher powered designs.

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