Each of us has been a beginner in DIY audio some day. I am sure there are many others who wish to learn more, but don't know where to begin. This page will be for them. On this page, I will list some reading material which I feel the beginner should study. I use the word study deliberately, because the word "read" these days no longer convey the concentration I refer to. People use "read" to mean "surf online", where they rarely read more than three paragraphs at a stretch. This is good for reference material lookup or problem solving, but is useless for absorbing new subjects.
DIYers face a problem which engineering students do not. There are many books on electronics, physics, acoustics, mechanical engineering, etc., all of which cover subjects relevant for building amps and speakers. But they treat the subject at conceptual and mathematical levels, not at the level of a builder and practitioner. A book can tell you all about analysing the tensile strength of a material, but will not tell you anything about material available to the DIY builder and the difficulties of working with those materials.
This is also one of the key reasons why mechanical engineers from most colleges will not have any ability to build anything useful (in the mechanical area) when they leave college. A doctor will be able to treat patients the day he leaves college, because most medical courses have long periods of internship at real hospitals with real patients. An engineer hardly gets to see how real workmen build real objects, and gets almost no opportunity to design and build anything himself. By the time he finishes college, he acquires no intuitive feel for the equations, laws and materials he is supposed to have studied --- he has only cerebral knowledge of those things. Give a metallurgy student a piece of metal and ask him what it is, and he may not even know whether it is steel or aluminium. I kid thee not. An electrical engineer, fresh out of college and in his new job, looks at a circuit breaker in a power supply substation, and asks "Is this a CT or PT?" (Current transformer or power transformer). He has never seen a circuit breaker. These are all real-life incidents, and keep repeating themselves the world over.
Therefore, the reading list for the DIY beginner must focus first on reading matter which has been written for the DIY constructor. Conceptual reading is invaluable, but it must accompany DIY-focused study, not replace it.
Amplifiers and speaker crossover circuits are about electricity and electronic circuits. The following books come to mind as beginner's guides to electronics:
Forrest Mims III (Wikipedia page, his own Website) is one of the most well-known and admired writers who teach electronics to beginners. Like all great electronics teachers and writers, he has a strong DIY streak. In fact, he does not have any degree in engineering at all.
His mini-notebook series is famous. This Website covers his electronics related publications, and this page lists out his mini-notebooks.
Randy Slone is another well-known and well-loved author who writes for the electronics hobbyist and student. His book, TAB Electronics Guide to Understanding Electronics and Electricity, is a very good book for the beginner.
One of the nice things about Randy Slone is that he is a teacher at heart. He likes to answer questions from individual readers, patiently, over email.
Then there's the ultimate electronics practitioner's bible, which no electronics hobbyist can ignore. This book may not be an ideal first book for the electronics DIY beginner, but will become invaluable somewhere down the way. This is The Art of Electronics by Horowitz and Hill. A paperback reprint is now available in India for Rs.600 or so. When I bought my copy, I paid $63 to an American bookshop. It is worth every penny/cent/paisa. Unlike a lot of fat textbooks, this one focuses on the practitioner, not on the theoretical student.
Electronics is an active area of exploration by amateurs, hence there are plenty of good books. The books I have listed are very appealing to me, but other sets may be the right set for other beginners, because of differences in backgrounds. I have an engineering college background, and I am at least somewhat comfortable with mathematics. I have at one point in time had to wrestle with differential equations. These may be totally alien to someone from an arts background. But that should not stop you. Forrest Mims majored in Government (yes, a subject called "government") with minors in English and history. These things do not stop the beginner in electronics.
Of all the books that I have encountered for DIY amplifier construction, the two that I feel are the best for starters are both by Randy Slone:
There are many other books which talk about amplifier design and construction, but none that I have encountered which covers the DIY beginner's dilemmas as well as these books do. One is dedicated to power amplifiers, and the other covers all sorts of audio circuits, including preamps, tone controls, microphone preamps, headphone amps, active filters, stepped attenuators, and so on.
Once you have covered these two books, then (and in my opinion, only then) you can move on to two more books which add enormous value:
Why do I believe that Ben Duncan and Doug Self are best read after Randy Slone? This is because Ben Duncan and Doug Self assume that you know how to construct electronic circuits. They assume that you know what an unregulated power supply is like, and why unregulated power supplies are typically used for Class B power amps but regulated power supplies are a must for preamps. Randy Slone devotes pages to explain these. Therefore, Randy Slone's explanations form a foundation on which the DIY beginner can build when he encounters the more subtle, varied, and difficult concepts that Duncan and Self present. In this matter, many DIY builders differ from me: they feel that the beginner should start with Douglas Self. I feel that this is only applicable for those who have some knowledge of electronics engineering and some experience in electronic circuit design and construction.
I have never found any beginner text which explains the basic concepts of an audio power amplifier's design the way Randy Slone's HPAACM does. All other texts talk about the concepts (e.g. single pole and two-pole compensation), but do not explain the underlying issues. If you stop reading after Randy Slone, it's a bit sad because you will never realise what Slone leaves out. But if you start with Duncan or Self, you may have to really struggle with the basics.
There is yet another reason to start with Slone. For the DIY beginner, amplifiers are not just power amplifiers. He is faced with lots of much more basic issues like balanced versus unbalanced interconnects and the controversies over potentiometers for level controls. If the DIY beginner begins to read posts on places like diyaudio, then he will be doubly confused about these things, and may actually begin to plonk down hundreds of dollars of hard-earned money on gold-plated platinum-encrusted diamond-studded stepped attenuators, believing that this is the only way to build a preamp. At such times, Duncan or Self will not help him, since they choose to confine themselves to the technically interesting (to them) area of power amps alone. But Slone's APS is a great beginner's text to get these basics sorted out. As the reader matures, he may begin to disagree with some of Slone's opinions, but at least he will have a firm foundation from which to deviate.
Later, there's another great collection of writings to read:
Since I have no exposure to valve electronics design and construction, I will not be able to provide any pointers. Any reader of this page may please fill the gap.
Some of the books I have heard about, but not read, are:
One Amazon reviewer made this remark about the author's approach:
There is one book which is an essential bible for loudspeaker design and construction, even if does not cover some of the major issues that a modern DIY loudspeaker builder faces. This book is
I have read an older edition, and that edition covered analog active crossovers in one or two pages, and speaker design and computer based crossover optimisation techniques at a superficial level. It also covered T/S parameter based enclosure design using the old method of numerical tables and bass alignments (e.g. SBB4, QB3, etc.), whereas today computers can do box modelling and give you an alignment-free simulation of low-frequency behaviour (e.g. using software like Unibox). Therefore the LSDC is not really the last word in this department. However, it's very difficult for a DIY beginner to get a firm foundation on speaker design and construction without reading this book.
This is no cookbook. There are no cookbook designs which the DIY beginner can blindly build. In that sense, the title is a total misnomer.
There are other books too, including "Introduction to Loudspeaker Design" by John Murphy. I have not read Murphy's book and hence cannot comment. There is a highly regarded book on a separate topic: Joe D'Appolito's "Testing Loudspeakers." This book should be a very important book for the DIY enthusiast who has moved beyond the beginner stage.