Re: Amp Modeling -- HOW is it Really Done?
well, i'll tell ya what i know .. i have no idea what your educational background is, so i'll just shoot straight and you can ask follow up questions
any electrical circuit, be it an amp, an effects pedal, etc is made up of fixed and variable components that react to various input signals ... the values of the fixed components can be measured and the range of values for the variable components can be measured when an input signal is present ... these values can be put into a computer program that models the way the components interact ... the output of the original circuit can be measured too and this info can be fed into the model as well ... if you consider the circuit as a black box that takes an input signal, then does 'something' to that signal to change it, then produces the that changed signal as the output signal, then the model from the computer program is the 'something' that gets done ... a technical term for this is the 'transform' function ... it transforms the input signal into the output signal that corresponds to having gone through the 'equivalent' or 'approximation' (model) of the actual circuit that is desired ... there is a similar set of steps for modeling the speakers/cabinets used to make the sound ... cabinets have a certain response that can be measured and recreated ...
now, it isnt as simple as that oversimplified description makes it sound ... first of all, is the quality of the components that turn the analog signal into a digital signal and then turn the ouput signal from digital back to analog ... you need enough details (bits and sampling rate) to get as close to the real thing as possible ... .then you need a computer model that is very sophisticated .. the more, the better .... instead of modeling the components by themselves, more information can be measured to include the interaction of the components among themselves to capture more realism ... the more sophisticated the model, the more realistic the results ... further, the output measurements can be made over a wider range of input signal types (e.g. broad band input vs single tone input) ... the more powerful models lead to a need for the most powerful processors and max memory available ...
some folks believe / experience that absolutely complete modelling of even one actual amp has not yet been done ... in fact, some believe that it will be impossible to do so because there are too many interworking parts of the 'system' to completely model all of it (you cant digitize mojo) ... some say that the very act of digitizing destroys the relationship between phase and amplitude of the signal that can never be reconstructed ...
and that's all i have to say about that
t4d