Praise! said:Incidently, I had a look at the 4th ed today. I have the 3rd ed too. I didn't buy it; the only new materials are Class D amp and DC servo. Only a small sections on DC servo and it's not as detailed and anayltical as other Self's classical writing.
Hope this helps
Is the section on class-D comprehensive?
hmm yes DS's book, whilst doing a great service to distortion mechs., is not very comprehensive in other areas, the updates are far too long coming, and still don't address those, I wonder why it takes him so long?
Whilst a great book, I do get the impression its 'this is the only way to do an amp, my way, and if its not a blameless amp, its rubbish'
no treatise on other methods of stabilisation, nothing on other kinds of distortion: IMD, slewing types, I would like to see it as a complete treatise on amp design, sadly it falls short here.
Whilst a great book, I do get the impression its 'this is the only way to do an amp, my way, and if its not a blameless amp, its rubbish'
no treatise on other methods of stabilisation, nothing on other kinds of distortion: IMD, slewing types, I would like to see it as a complete treatise on amp design, sadly it falls short here.
mikeks said:Is the section on class-D comprehensive?
I have just been browsing a copy: There are 2 new chapters, one on the design of DC servos (12 pages) and another on Class D (9 pages). From my untutored standpoint, the Class D section is by DS's own admission "more of a snapshot of a fast-moving scene", i.e. it's a pretty lightweight overview of the technology - no designs or anything like that, and no detailed maths/analysis.
I'll probably buy it for the corrections etc. to the previous edition, rather than the new content...
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