BASH and expired patents


FYI, everyone, the BASH patent is basically expired and that is where ’new’ amplification will very very likely...begin to shift into. Don’t know the exact dates but this is what it looks like is happening..

Just a prediction in potentials, is all...

Basically.....BASH is a class AB or C-ish output stage, combined with a pulsed power supply, where the rail voltages dynamically shift in level, in conjunction with the signal.

This is what class D was trying to side step, one might say -- the BASH patent. The BASH/Indigo patent was considered (by me) the better way but it blocked the path forward.

Now that path is again open and it will very probably be the new thing.

The whole idea is to gain efficiency, but have a non switching output. The BASH patent was the best compromise of quality and efficiency.

For the purposes of high end audio, the ending of the BASH patent will probably spell the end of high quality audio oriented class D amplifier development.

That was a 20 year delay....

The trick about Class D, is to remember or cognate the why of it in the first place. The pulse modulated output is not ideal, the filters can only do so much and create huge complications (The pulsed output and filter as a combination).

BASH sidesteps the worst intractable problems of Class D amplifier design and execution... and gives us the best that a high efficiency compact system can do. The problem of development in that area, was that the BASH patent blocked that entire spectrum of design pathways.

Now that path is open.

I speak a little on it (preliminary realization and musing) over here.
teo_audio

Showing 1 response by mulveling

When I was a 12-14 year old kiddie (early 1990s) with the seed of audiophilia inside of me - though not to be realized for another several years - I still cared about audio reproduction enough to realize some things sounded better than others. E.g. CDs dubbed to those Maxell high bias cassettes sounded relatively wonderful. And the Panasonic boomboxes with BASH label on them sounded a hell of a lot better than any other comparable boxes at the time ;)

As far as voltage rails following the signal, I thought that’s what the Sunfire amps did to achieve their massive power ratings without equally massive heat sinking? Now ironically, the Sunfire Signature II 600 amp I had some 13 years ago still stands as the worst sounding amp I’ve ever owned (I think the old Panasonic BASH boombox was better).