Why not many PWM amplification(all digital) projects around here ?

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While I was searching for more info on "all digital" or "Digital class D" amplifiers, I didn't find very many diy projects.
I am looking for projects only on PCm->PWM->Analog audio amplification, and not Analog->PWM->Analog.

Why is that so ? Are there any limitations like availibility, cost, etc ? Or there are just not any favourable opinions from people who have built them ?

I was specifically trying find out more about projects based on TI Equibit. And TAcT and also PowerDAc.
 
but what do they know about dacs 😉 - ok just kidding :clown: .

I mean I posted it in the digital forum on purpose because I was specifically interested in comparison with 'conventional' (for the lack of a better term) means of digital to analog conversion.
For example, if anyone built and/or listened to both a diy nos dac and a pcm->pwm->audio amplifier then I'd like to hear about it.
I will try searching in the class d forum again but its mostly analog input class d amps that fly over there.
 
Ummm.

All DAC manufacturers embraced the new religion of 1-bit sigma delta when it came out, not because it was better, but because it was cheaper. Next thing you know, they all wake up with a major hangover because the sound really sucked so bad (remember CD63 from Marantz ?), and all switch to multibit sigma delta running at higher frequencies.

IMHO full-digital amplifiers would just repeat the same errors from the past...
 
Comparing TI Equibit in Panasonic receivers to UCD180AD kit... I prefer the UCD by a fairly large margin.

The TI Equibit receivers seemed to be at their best when fed 24/96 source material digitally. Otherwise, they average sounding, but unspectacular. How well I liked them seemed very dependent on speaker load they were hooked to.
 
Why do you want to do the PCM to PWM conversion in the digital domain? As Bruno Putzeys and others have pointed out many times, this is a foolish way of making a PCM-input power amplifier. D2A audio have a solution that costs many times more than a UCD amplifer + low-level D/A, but has significantly poorer performance.
 
well, had I looked at how really the pcm->pwm conversion is done I would have never posted this question.
For some reason I thought the chopping of the input signal with triangular/sawtooth carrier wasn't required for pcm data. I can see the problem now...

thanks all for your inputs on the subject.

(now you see why I posted it in the digital forum 😉 ? )

{edit: this paper helped so I thought I'd link it here - http://www.mathworks.com/applications/dsp_comm/pdfs/hbreschpadgett.pdf }
 
The main problems of the "digital amplifier" are IMHO :

1- feedback from the analog output !!!!! (output coil impedance vs speaker impedance) this is the major gotcha, since the amp essentially works open loop, so the sound will depend a lot on the speaker's (mis)behaviour

2- time-discrete output waveform, versus analog-time for analog class D like UcD (UcD has a on/off output like all class D, but since the switching times are analog, it has an infinite number of pulse widths to choose from, versus a pulse width that must be a multiple of the clock period for a digital amp)

3- you only get 1 bit, well maybe 1.5 bits if both halves of the H-bridge are independent

4- switching frequency can never be as high as a low-power MOS DAC, therefore some mix of sigma-delta and PWM is required, and sigma-delta needs to compensate the low-bit samples with a really high frequency to work well
 
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