Thanks again ! well the design goals are quite clear To provide 2Vrms on lets say a 1kohm/200pF load with low THD
The test load should cover almost all power amps around
To be honest i have never fully understood why such a big part of the gain has been charged of the power amps really
I have seen measurements of line stages and they are able to provide up to 20V with very low THD and noise even on 600 ohm loads
I would love to see a 10Vrms for a power amp sensitivity Like what is called a power buffer
Maybe there are reasons i am missing
The test load should cover almost all power amps around
To be honest i have never fully understood why such a big part of the gain has been charged of the power amps really
I have seen measurements of line stages and they are able to provide up to 20V with very low THD and noise even on 600 ohm loads
I would love to see a 10Vrms for a power amp sensitivity Like what is called a power buffer
Maybe there are reasons i am missing
well the design goals are quite clear To provide 2Vrms on lets say a 1kohm/200pF load with low THD
Good start. You now have to decide what the input range is going to be. If it is a line input from a CD player for example then be aware that some discs can be mastered at at quite a low level (I have a few like that) and you sometimes need a bit of gain.
1k/200pF is a good target range 👍
To be honest i have never fully understood why such a big part of the gain has been charged of the power amps really
You need the gain somewhere in the chain and there is a subjective point of view that lower feedback designs for power amps can actually sound better than designs with lots of feedback. More feedback usually means lower voltage gain.
Easily done but as a commercial product it would have very limited appeal.I would love to see a 10Vrms for a power amp sensitivity Like what is called a power buffer
Have a look at the ACA amp on these forums. This is a bjt version I put together using common transistors and it has a very low voltage gain but it sounds terrific.