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Author Topic: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.  (Read 25546 times)

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ultrabike

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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements
« Reply #30 on: October 13, 2013, 09:56:46 PM »

Valhalla+HD558 combo (from above thread for reference):

This seems to have some more significant FR differences in the midrange. But since it is an older measurement, if the headphone/microphone positioning is not exactly the same (in other words, if the acoustic test rig was touched between the amp measurements), the difference could be simply the result of that.

These measurements were done using a plate type coupling allowing for somewhat repeatable results. This is somewhat similar to what some folks at Philips do (8th picture down, though I use foam and sponges to approach anechoic conditions as much as possible, otherwise the bass overshoots).

You can compare the HD558 measurements here to the ones at the HD558 thread. They were taken at very different points in time.

As far as the amp goes, non-linear distortion might be more a function of the headphone load/sensitivity (current/voltage) demands and what the amp can deliver, than the amp output impedance in these cases... maybe some small contribution is due to the amp's impedance, but not sure about the magnitude.

A high output impedance does add some non-linear distortion, basically due to the amp not being able to "damp" the distortion of the driver (which is fed back to the amp output through back EMF) as well. The magnitude of this effect varies, but about a tenth of the acoustic distortion on a sufficiently high impedance amplifier output - with a damping factor of ~2 or less - may be a "typical" level. Perhaps it is roughly comparable in magnitude to the FR effect.

Is the back current not linearly related to the transducer input? I'm not a transducer expert, and may have to read a bit on that.

Maybe I can try a lower impedance amp to see if there are differences. Note however, that I think Marv and perhaps Tyll use lower impedance amps and their measurements of the HD558/598 exhibit similar non-linear distortion results.

It's not pointless if we are comparing amps with a specific headphone - which is what we are doing here. We've already established with HD558: Focusrite vs. Vali (too close to call objectively, subjectively maybe Vali more detailed, punchier, wider-stage?) and vs. Vahalla (really different - both subjectively and objectively.)

I am of the rather simplistic opinion that a peak level measurement (these plots all are) won't show what's been added by the amp while our hearing evaluates on MORE than just a single aspect (peak levels of certain harmonics) so yes... pointless after all except when the distortion levels are higher than that of the headphone, the amps that do might not sound that good though, or perhaps they do when it is quite euphonic.

The subjective assets you speak of cannot be caught in a few plots nor say anything of how it behave with dynamic music which isn't just 80dB and 90dB (and or 100dB) especially with valve amps in case they do not have overall feedback.

It's just another way of looking at things. One could make a counterargument that measuring amps by themselves is pointless or misleading because most of the amp's distortion on the analyzer will of little consequence because it will be masked by the transducer's distortion.

I agree that it is another way of looking at things.
One could make that argument you just made but would be discarding how the brain and ears work.
For instance if I drown a single tone in level below a white noise you would see zilch with most measurements, yet with the right techniques, or ears, you can still make the tone out because of certain correlations it has that won't show in the measurements, thereby nullifying the counter argument.

The earlier measurements you made (O2 vs Magni I believe) showed NO differences at all yet the subjective differences were claimed otherwise.
That would have been the perfect moment to conclude that a simple FR/distortion measurement using a headphone+rig won't disclose how an amp sounds.

The fact that you have shown there are differences between O2 and Vali tells me the Vali performs differently from the O2 which is quite logical and obvious.
Fact remains that the distortion plots show it measures 'worse' than the O2 which is contradictory to the subjective impressions which are favourable for the Vali.
THIS I do not doubt for a moment by the way.

Too bad there are no plots of what the actual amp does, which would be more revealing to me personally but seem to stand alone in this.
After all it is a VERY intriguing amplifier being discussed here for a GREAT price and with a support and name that is very hard to rival yet the measurements shown are of a few headphones not every one has.

I agree these measurements don't paint the whole picture. Otherwise what would be the point of all other sets of measurements or even amp measurements themselves? Subjective evaluations don't always fully agree with even a larger set of measurements either...

I can try and do some measurements of the amps themselves at levels where they drive a particular can to 90 dB tonite...

Below are some measurements I took of the Focusrite some time ago (line-out to line-in loopback), but they are somewhat not too meaningful because I didn't record the output levels.

Ultra, can you do a 500Hz square wave? Sometimes easier to see the effects of damping with that.

I'll give that a try tonite too :)
« Last Edit: October 13, 2013, 11:36:35 PM by ultrabike »
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ultrabike

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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #31 on: October 13, 2013, 10:04:44 PM »

Below a second measurement I did of the Focusrite some time ago but using DirectSound instead and with better results across the board.

Anyhow... The Focusrite is no Audio Precision, it has it's obvious limitations. But I feel it is reasonable for headphone measurements, and/or to find if something is way wrong...

EDIT: BTW, I don't think anybody is saying that the measurements I presented paint the whole picture or are flawless. I'm sure there are quite a few things that could be improved (any suggestions are more than welcomed). However, I wouldn't call them pointless. There is a lot of talk about coloration due to output impedance and distortion levels way off charts for certain types of amplifiers. Some of these claims might be true, some might be just blowing things out of proportion. These measurements might give a sense of just how much coloration are we talking about... certainly not the whole picture though, as pointed out.
« Last Edit: October 13, 2013, 11:32:18 PM by ultrabike »
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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #32 on: October 14, 2013, 05:55:04 AM »

OK. So I downloaded the latest RMAA deal with support for ASIO now it seems. I set line out to maximum level which according to the Focusrite spec is 10 dBu balanced (2.449 Vrms). I used unbalanced out and measured 1.144 Vrms. The tests in all cases where under no-load conditions.

On loopback I adjusted the line input levels so that RMAA reported -1 dB recorded level, and this is what I got:

Loopback
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB+0.01, -0.03Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -101.2Excellent
Dynamic range, dB (A)101.2Excellent
THD, %   0.0010Excellent
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -92.4Very good
IMD + Noise, %   0.0027Excellent
Stereo crosstalk, dB-92.1Excellent
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.0027Excellent
General performance Excellent

For the 2i2 headphone out I maxed out the volume and with the line-in levels set to where they were with the loop back, and could only get -7 dB recorded level. Below are the results:

Focusrite headphone out -7 dB recorded level
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.07, +0.03Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -96.2Excellent
Dynamic range, dB (A)   96.1Excellent
THD, %   0.017Good
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -73.1Average
IMD + Noise, %   0.018Very good
Stereo crosstalk, dB   -89.6Excellent
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.015Very good
General performance    Very good

For the Vali I was able to set the gain for both -7 and -1 dB recorded levels. Below are the results.

Vali at -7 dB recorded level
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.02, -0.04Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -86.7Good
Dynamic range, dB (A)86.6Good
THD, %   0.350Poor
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -46.8Poor
IMD + Noise, %   0.329Average
Stereo crosstalk, dB-81.9Very good
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.301Average
General performance    Good

Vali at -1 dB recorded level
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.03, -0.05Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -91.7Very good
Dynamic range, dB (A)91.6Very good
THD, %   0.676Poor
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -41.1Very poor
IMD + Noise, %   0.636Poor
Stereo crosstalk, dB-81.1Very good
IMD at 10 kHz, %0.584Poor
General performance    Goo d

The Vali, in these not-so-reference and likely flawed tests, show a bit of noise floor which was audible with several different cans. Again, these are no Audio Precision or dScope measurements.

As far as subjective evaluation, the noise floor was not a big deal for me, and I did not feel there were FR aberrations with the headphones I used (which would load the amps). I actually quite enjoy the smallish Vali amp and like the dynamics and soundstage it provides.
« Last Edit: October 15, 2013, 04:50:07 AM by ultrabike »
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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #33 on: October 14, 2013, 06:43:33 AM »

These results are as expected for a low voltage non overall feedback triode hybrid design.
The distortion levels are just under the ones of the tested headphones and thus masked by the measurents but audible none the less as masking is only true for the peak levels that are detected.

Though the numbers appear to be bad they aren't in reality as they are quite euphonic and quite similar to those of actual instruments/voices in real recordings adding a sense of realism.
It shows that distortion levels above the 0.1% are not necesarily degrading but can be quite pleasant depending on several factors.

The output power of the Focusrite is extremely low (I thought just several mW) where the Vali will reach much more and explains the -7dB max input, I figure around 1V output voltage with an impedance between 5 and 10 Ohm based on the HD558 measurement. The Vali will be below 5 Ohm and possibly around 1 Ohm.

The distortion figures of the Vali will be even 'worse' at higher output levels running in several percent.
The -1dB is possibly around 2V and an attenuator would be needed to reach these higher voltages/dist levels.
For myself I made a simple but very effective test rig so (headphone amps) can be tested to max output levels without overloading the input of the soundcard and can switch in capacitive and inductive loads combined with various 'standard' resistive loads (so you don't have to blow up headphones while testing)

For those who MAY be put off by these rather high distortion levels I would like to stress that this is actually WANTED and not a negative point.
It's responsible for the sound it has which, without having heard it, is good and may be perceived as 'better' than SS while bing worse in the department of 'truthful to the original signal'.

It's why most manufacturers of these amps do not post THD numbers as sales would decline.
DON'T be put off by these numbers... instead focus on what 'golden ears' have to say about it.
Also the price it is going for is extremely competetive and comes in a nice enclosure as well.
It has a very GOOD reason for existence NEXT to the Magni as both have a different 'flavour'.
I say ... buy them BOTH and while spending that low amount of cash add the Loki to the Modi.  :)p6

IMD and HD go hand in hand and might be illustrative that IMD isn't as bad as people make it out to be when it doesn't involve lots of higher harmonics of these products (just a hunch).
It would be very difficult to create euphonic distortion without IMD nor to only produce IMD without  harmonic distortion in the analog domain.
This would be essential to determine what is degrading and what is not.

a lower noise floor with tubes should be possible but as tubes cannot be swapped it might be an asset of the used tube.

Thanks for the measurements b.t.w. without even seeing the plots they are pretty conclusive and more or less as expected.
« Last Edit: October 14, 2013, 07:32:52 AM by Solderdude »
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Marvey

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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #34 on: October 14, 2013, 07:37:33 AM »

I don't know if you can make the argument that such high levels of distortion is euphonic. Ultra was driving these amps far higher than they actually would be driven in the real world with real headphones.

The high levels of D2 with the Vahalla (compared to the Focusrite or Vali) at more reasonable, but high volume, is not exactly what I would call euphonic. The Vahalla sounds softer, less clear, less precise, more blurry.

With headphone measurements, I've never heard any kind of distortion, even order, or otherwise as euphonic.
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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #35 on: October 14, 2013, 08:14:56 AM »

Euphonic distortion levels indeed usually should remain below 1% when they are mainly 2nd and much lower level 3rd harmonic.

When driving HE-6 for instance it is quite easy to reach those output/distortion levels.
For these types of headphones a minimal amount of feedback would be preferred.
Fostex T50's derivatives and HE400/500 are relatively sensitive headphones and will not reach those levels under normal circumstances as can be seen by the headphone included measurements.

The fun part of this types of amps is the distortion for small signals remains quite good (<0.01%) where the loud signals only experience these euphonic levels.
This makes these amps very clean sounding when it comes to details and nuances.
« Last Edit: October 14, 2013, 08:21:06 AM by Solderdude »
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ultrabike

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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #36 on: October 14, 2013, 08:42:38 AM »

Yup, the output levels were quite high. I maxed the 2i2 headphone out level, and that is mess-my-ears loud. I measured about 1.6 Vrms @ 1 kHz output (headphone amps output) for the -7 dB level.

At what I think is 1 Vrms @ 1 kHz (which is probably still quite high for most cans also) I get about 0.2% THD, and about 0.22% IMD. These numbers are sort of what Schiit has for the Valhalla (crosstalk numbers are better for the Vali). However, based on Schiit's numbers, the Vali is able to supply way more power to 32 ohms than the Valhalla, and has much lower output impedance. The Dynamic Range (SNR perhaps) in this case is about 85 dB which may explain the noise floor.

I felt that the Valhalla was a great match for the HD600, but fell short with the HD558. I feel this is like the Valhalla for the lower impedance cans... except I think it sounds a little better and cheaper too!...
« Last Edit: October 14, 2013, 09:24:01 AM by ultrabike »
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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #37 on: October 14, 2013, 02:27:41 PM »

I don't think there's such a thing as euphonic distortion during reproduction.

Also, high amounts* of 2nd order harmonic distortion will produce more IMD than low amounts of 2nd, 3rd, 4th, ... and IMD is generally agreed to be the worst kind of distortion.

*) 2nd order harmonic distortion never exists in isolation

Rod Elliott writes:
Quote (selected)
There is nothing nice about IMD, unless it is part of the player's sound in the case of musical instrument amplifiers (guitar, bass, keyboards, etc.). In any reproduction system such as a home hi-fi, IMD adds components to the sound that were not in the recording. While a small amount of IMD will often be difficult to hear, it has always been desirable to reduce it to the absolute minimum.
[...]
When a complex musical passage is the source, the IMD products can be quite extraordinary. The result is serious aural confusion of the signal, where what used to be an orchestra with different instruments becomes a 'wall of sound'.

That's why we have feedback (and possibly lots of it for a more linear operation) in the first place.

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ultrabike

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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #38 on: October 15, 2013, 06:45:27 AM »

I've been switching back and forth between the Vali and the Focusrite (which aside from the 1.144 Vrms cap measures better), and  the Vali tends to be more involving, has better perceived bass (not muddy at all!), and is somehow more perceived resolution of bad/good recordings. Crazy, dunno...

xnor, for $100 something bucks you should give it a shot. The tube microphonics (they die out after a few seconds) and noise floor are obvious and may put you off at first, but if you get past that it gets kind of interesting... By classic amp measurements, it is definitively not the last word in hi-fidelity, but somehow it pulls through. It is not screechy or farty, and it's not a FR roller-coaster... it's just different.

Also, some comments about the RMAA measurements above:

1) The nice Focusrite Loopback results above were done balanced. Unbalanced the results are closer to the headphone output results.

2) Focusrite claims 2.449 Vrms maximum balanced output. I measured 2.288/1.144 Vrms balanced/unbalanced from the line-outs. Furthermore, 1.144 Vrms is also the maximum output voltage from the headphone out.

3) With this in mind I get the following Vali results using RMAA and the above setup:

1.0 Vrms @ 1 kHz unbalanced unloaded:
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.02, -0.04Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -86.6Good
Dynamic range, dB (A)   86.6Good
THD, %   0.320Poor
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -47.6Poor
IMD + Noise, %   0.302Average
Stereo crosstalk, dB   -84.0Very good
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.276Average
General performance    Good

0.5 Vrms @ 1 kHz unbalanced unloaded:
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.02, -0.04Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -80.4Good
Dynamic range, dB (A)80.6Good
THD, %   0.162Average
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -53.5Poor
IMD + Noise, %   0.158Average
Stereo crosstalk, dB-79.3Very good
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.141Average
General performance    Good

0.141 Vrms @ 1 kHz unbalanced unloaded (about the level I usually set the volume at - depends on music):
Frequency response (from 40 Hz to 15 kHz), dB   +0.02, -0.04Excellent
Noise level, dB (A)   -68.8Average
Dynamic range, dB (A)   69.0Average
THD, %   0.046Good
THD + Noise, dB (A)   -60.5Poor
IMD + Noise, %   0.095Good
Stereo crosstalk, dB   -63.3Average
IMD at 10 kHz, %   0.090Good
General performance    Good

4) The maximum output voltage of the Vali I measured was 5.11 Vrms.

5) Take all these measurements with a grain of salt.
« Last Edit: October 15, 2013, 07:13:45 AM by ultrabike »
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Re: SCHIIT VALI - measurements.
« Reply #39 on: October 15, 2013, 07:05:11 AM »


2) Focusrite claims 2.449 Vrms maximum balanced output. I measured 2.288/1.144 Vrms balanced/unbalanced from the line-outs. Furthermore, 1.144 Vrms is also the maximum output voltage from the headphone out.


assuming R out of the Focusrite is around 10 Ohm this means the headphone out will give max 1.2V in a 50 Ohm load = 29mW (Focusrite specs 30mW)


4) The maximum output voltage of the Vali I measured was 5.11 Vrms.


Thanks, I was wondering about the output power (and other specs such as R-out which is eay to deduct).
Asssuming the endstage doesn't have a current limiter and has a low output R the Vali will put out 500mW into the same 50 Ohm load, that is 12dB more headroom !)
For 300 Ohm HP's the output is about 80mW (6mW for the focusrite)

The increase in distortion is typical for a triode design without any feedback.

Given the noise level I would not recommend the Vali to those using IEMs or other high efficiency headphones.
In the old analog days I could live with some background hiss but don't think I have to put up with it any more in these days, except for hiss in recordings themselves which cannot be avoided unless music is all electronic or noise gates have been used.
« Last Edit: October 15, 2013, 07:10:59 AM by Solderdude »
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