Congratulations Atmasphere!


I noticed today that Ralph Karsten (whom regular and even occasional participants in this forum will of course recognize as the designer and proprietor of Atma-Sphere Music Systems, as well as a uniquely valuable contributor to the forum) was granted United States patent number 10,469,042 on November 5, 2019. It covers an audio amplification technique he had indicated here that he has been developing, which in simple terms appears to me to basically be a clever combination of an analog-to-pulse train converter (as used in traditional class D amplifiers for example, among other audio-related applications), with an output stage employing circlotron topology (analogous to the topology used in his OTL power amplifiers, but utilizing solid state devices).

Link to the Patent.

Congratulations Ralph!!

Best regards,
--Al


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Showing 3 responses by agriculturist

Hi Ralph:

My congratulations on winning the patent!  Just out of curiosity, at least for now, a question...

For starters I am basically very low-tech in my understanding of your work.  But I am curious if your new amps would be usable for my Linkwitz LX521.4 open baffle speakers?  In case you don't know these speakers, the LX521.4 system involves two monitors with 5 drivers each.  To drive them I now use two very nice sounding Parasound A51 5-way multi-channel amps.

Would it be cost-effective to make a multi-channel amp, say 5-channel, or would that just multiply the cost by 5 (or perhaps 2.5 if the starting point for the comparison is a stereo amp)?  Also is your design energy efficient, in the way that Class D is supposed to be?

Thank you

Hi Ralph

I see you have now introduced your Class D amps.  Just curious whether you currently offer multi-channel versions of your amp?   Or have any plans to do that i the near future?

Thanks