CFA Topology Audio Amplifiers

although to keep with the nomenclature pedantry "error correction" is ambiguous - Cordell/Hawksford output stage local feedback is not equivalent to feedforward error correction schemes

the Sziklai/CFP pair is a local negative feedback circuit usually nested in other feedback loop(s)


since Marsh seem to be enthusiastic for both, fundamentally different, types of “error correction” there is a danger of even more sloppy thinking in this thread

lets not conflate the 2 "error correction" ideas - spell out which scheme - have the intellectual honesty to recognize negative feedback and call it that - no weaseling about local feedback loops being somehow different - unless you can show that in the terms that feedback theory is taught today
 
My first choice would be for error 'cancellation' techniques. For example by using complimentary topologies, distortion caused by non-linear device capacitance could be cancelled. A lot of cancellation work is going on (patents etc) in low voltage, high Freq circuits because they cannot use cascode techniques anymore -- drops too much voltage which isnt available.

But is that any harder than local feedback loops for audio? Its just different thinking... reduction vs cancellation.


THx-RNMarsh
 
Last edited:
I don't mind feedback, but I am a firm believer that the loop must be closed around as few devices as possible.

I am also a great fan of driven cascodes, as to limit the influence of device capacitances.

OPS problems could also be targeted around non switching schemes. This area must surely be worth a "hell" of a lot of investigation.
 
besides the THd number --- BenchMark... if you have followed their digital designs (ADC/DAC).... I have both DAC -- first gen and newest gen.... they have also focused on clipping in their digital designs.... the second generation DAC has more headroom to prevent clipping. Power amp has clipping indicators and gain adjust... again they see a clipping issue. Also offer more power to help avoid clipping (assuming high enough Z min). A lot of fuss about clipping - they must be seeing it often and have reintroduced the clipping indicator lights as part of their marketing story. A 21 century (re) discovery.

Just an observation.

[I have a couple more weeks to get ready until I leave the country; but thought it was interesting because I brought up clipping also recently]

What can you do along those patent lines with OPS .... SIM first?

THx-RNMarsh

Hi Richard,

I actually met and talked with the Benchmark guy at RMAF 2013. He gave me the patent numbers for the circuit and they are still on my list of things to look up. He said the patents were by THX. Very interesting story, but I don't know much more. Nice that they had the stones to include a clipping indicator. Yeah!!

Cheers,
Bob
 
although to keep with the nomenclature pedantry "error correction" is ambiguous - Cordell/Hawksford output stage local feedback is not equivalent to feedforward error correction schemes

the Sziklai/CFP pair is a local negative feedback circuit usually nested in other feedback loop(s)


since Marsh seem to be enthusiastic for both, fundamentally different, types of “error correction” there is a danger of even more sloppy thinking in this thread

lets not conflate the 2 "error correction" ideas - spell out which scheme - have the intellectual honesty to recognize negative feedback and call it that - no weaseling about local feedback loops being somehow different - unless you can show that in the terms that feedback theory is taught today

This is a good explanation. CFP is not a form of error correction in the generally-used sense. Also, HEC is not feedforward error correction. It is a very neat and highly effective technique, but it is a technique that can be seen as a form of negative feedback. HEC behaves like error correction, and is very cost-effective in reducing distortion, but it is not feedforward error correction.

True feedforward error correction is quite difficult to implement effectively in a power amplifier over a wide range of frequencies, the least of which problem is the accurate phase matching required to achieve distortion cancellation.

BTW, my personal view is that the Quad current dumping technique was not a very good example of error correction, and in fact I think its effectiveness in achieving very low distortion was actually questionable. Of course, now half of the readers will get mad at me 🙂. Have I just questioned a sacred cow?

Cheers,
Bob
 
Everything is a sacred cow, but we have to think out of the box we live in.

If we want audio to evolve into the next stage, we need to stop designing the same circuit over and over again because that is what we do.

When we start to make new designs we should couple it with our knowledge in design techniques for production. It does not help a lot if we design a circuit in theory but not able to reproduce it in production.
 
This is a good explanation. CFP is not a form of error correction in the generally-used sense.

CFP (or Sziklai pair) can be seen as a circuit having an auxiliary transistor providing current in place and under the control of an input transistor.

BTW, my personal view is that the Quad current dumping technique was not a very good example of error correction, and in fact I think its effectiveness in achieving very low distortion was actually questionable.
Quad current dumping achieves low distortion from an output stage having a dead zone in signal transmission. That is a real achievement.

Here is an example of the technique used to get an even less distortion from a design having already very few of it :

MJR9

Regards.
 
Last edited:
You are wrong in your assumptions, And No I can't enlighten you, as it's not in any way my circuit to disclose.

But I do have a non switching gain of 1. OPS that does around 5 ppm at 20 Khz/50V into 4 ohms. Where the feedback is closed around a single device.
 

Attachments

  • distortion.GIF
    distortion.GIF
    82.6 KB · Views: 246
Last edited:
Hi Guys

Sonnya said:
"If we want audio to evolve into the next stage, we need to stop designing the same circuit over and over again because that is what we do."

That is simply one approach to attaining new levels of performance: throw out the old and begin with a new slate.

However, there is nothing entirely new, so we end up building upon the foundation of the past, hopefully using only the better elements if we can. But we must also look at what the past mistakes were and understand what makes them mistakes. Just as early TIM-focused designers misinterpreted many of their observations, people still do that today with both old and new ideas. I believe the purpose of this thread was to investigate the nature of amplification with a preference for what might be CFA methods.

Many top end designs - ones that measure well beyond what an APsys2 can completely resolve - are designs some here would consider "old". Yet the builders of these designs knew the capability of their circuit right from the start, and they also knew that refinement would be slow and steady and in many cases be limited by available devices. Verifying the refinements was and is limited by test equipment of the day. - and that is still the major impediment to verification for new designs.

As Bob said, feedback falls within a continuum where it looks like VFA or CFA depending on frequency and probably on the circuit loading (and likely other parameters).

Have fun
Kevin O'Connor
 
You are wrong in your assumptions, And No I can't enlighten you, as it's not in any way my circuit to disclose.

But I do have a non switching gain of 1. OPS that does around 5 ppm at 20 Khz/50V into 4 ohms. Where the feedback is closed around a single device.


The usual excuse 😀.

But then I was asking why you think
I am a firm believer that the loop must be closed around as few devices as possible.
not how you implement such. No schematic is required, just the rationale behind your statement.