Pass Labs Aleph Question - balanced vs unbalanced?



I have a Pass Labs Aleph 5. I also have a Supratek Chardonnay Pre-Amp with balanced and unbalanced out. Do people think the Pass Amps sound better through balanced vs unbalanced? I understood that they were truly engineered to run balanced for best sound quality, but am not sure.

I am having a problem with balanced operation (that I don't want to mention here so I don't complicate my question), so I'm trying to see if its worth figuring the other problem out or just sticking with unbalanced.
lightminer

Showing 2 responses by wloeb

Pass aleph amps are balanced (differential) I've looked at the schematic. They are single-ended in that they are not push-pull. This is a different use of the single-ended terminology. They do benefit from a balanced connection to the preamp.
Ghostrider45,

I've reviewed the schematic again as well as the service manual for the Pass Aleph2. The input is a differential pair and the output stage is single-ended. This means that the input stage will reject common-mode noise and benefit from a balanced cable. For a single ended input signal the negative input of the differential pair is AC grounded by shorting the negative pin to ground on the XLR input.

Again there are two uses of the term single -ended

1) Single ended vs. Differential (Balanced)
Single ended- There is a positive signal and ground (like an RCA cable)
Differential (Balanced) There are both positive and negative signals as well as the ground. (like an XLR cable)

2) Single-ended vs. Push Pull
Single ended - means that only one type of device is fed the input signal for a stage. (N - type or P-type only)
Push-Pull- means both the N and P device are driven by the signal.

By definition 1) the Aleph amps are Differential (Balanced) inputs and single -ended ouput

By definition 2) the Aleph amps are single -ended only. The input is a PMOS differential pair and the output is an array of NMOS devices.

When talking about XLR vs RCA cables, only definition 1 is meaningful. Since the input stage is a differential pair, a balanced connection will have its common-mode noise rejected.

This is why if you have a differential source, I recommend using the balanced inputs. However some sources and preamps aren't truly differential and use extra circuitry in order to created a differential signal. In this case you would still get the benefit of rejecting noise picked up by the cable. However the extra circuitry in the source may degrade the sound.