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I've always wondered what it takes for a component to have tube
characteristics. Is it sort of like the "one drop" theory of racial
identity; that if you have so much as one drop of african-american
blood in your veins then you're black? Does even one tube somewhere
in the signal path make a component "tubed?"
I ask, because I saw a web page advertising an amplifier that could be
bought as solid state or tubed. The tubed version was identical to
the solid state version, except there was a cathode follower in front
of the solid state amp. This cathode follower was the only tube in
the circuit, and it wasn't even in the feedback loop. It was
certainly a quick way to bring a tube amplifier onto the market!
Norm Strong
I've always wondered what it takes for a component to have tube
characteristics. Is it sort of like the "one drop" theory of racial
identity; that if you have so much as one drop of african-american
blood in your veins then you're black? Does even one tube somewhere
in the signal path make a component "tubed?"
I ask, because I saw a web page advertising an amplifier that could be
bought as solid state or tubed. The tubed version was identical to
the solid state version, except there was a cathode follower in front
of the solid state amp. This cathode follower was the only tube in
the circuit, and it wasn't even in the feedback loop. It was
certainly a quick way to bring a tube amplifier onto the market!
Norm Strong