PHOTO: Thomas Vanhaute
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Bruno
Putzeys an IEEE member, takes a break
at Galaxy Studios in Belgium.
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At the 2006 Audio Electronics Society conference in
San Francisco, came face-to-face with the odd cult
of celebrity that surrounds a select few audio amplifier
designers.
“A guy came up to me, talking about me without
realizing I was me,” he laughs.
“Then he saw my name tag, and he said, ‘Oh, awesome
meeting you.’ He shook my hand, and then he hurried
off!”
Putzeys is one of the world's top designers of a type
of audio amplifier known as class-D. These
ultraefficient models are already dominant in
multichannel sound systems, portable media players,
cellphones, car stereos, and computers. Lately they've
made inroads into the ostentatious world of high-end
audio, where a component can cost tens of thousands of
dollars. Their success there is due mostly to Putzeys.
In 2001, while working at Philips Applied Technologies
in Leuven, Belgium, Putzeys designed a compact,
versatile class-D amplifier module that he called UcD,
for “Universal class-D.” Over the past few years, dozens
of amplifier models, with prices ranging from US $500 to
$8500, have been built around Putzeys's modules, which
are now manufactured by Hypex Electronics of Groningen,
Netherlands. The amps have received mostly ecstatic reviews.
For Putzeys, the success of the UcD boards has
conferred professional freedom that's pretty rare for a
34-year-old EE. In May 2005, he followed his modules to
Hypex, where he is now the chief tech guru. He lives and
works in a two-story building in a picturesque suburb of
Leuven. The first floor is his laboratory; upstairs are
his bedroom, a small kitchen, and a spacious living room
with his main audio setup dominating one wall.
Putzeys's love of audio electronics began when he was
16. A friend of his father's stopped by the Putzeys home
in Herent, Belgium, with an amplifier built around two
pairs of EL84 vacuum tubes in push-pull configuration.
Its sound bowled over the youngster: “I thought, This
thing can give me a sense of the music that the other
amps can't.” He taught himself how to design electronic
circuits with tubes, a really odd activity for a
teenager in the late 1980s.
After high school, he enrolled at the National Radio
and Film Technical Institute in Brussels, from which his
father had graduated in 1963 (the school has since been
merged into the De Nayer Instituut). While there, he
became intrigued by class-D audio and did his thesis on
it. After he graduated in 1995 with a bachelor's degree
in electrical engineering, Philips, the Dutch
electronics giant, which had sponsored his thesis work,
offered him a job.
Within a few years, he'd succeeded in “annoying all
the managers” until one of them agreed to let him take
charge of the testing of a class‑D audio IC being
designed elsewhere in the company for a television set.
He didn't think much of the chip. “If you give me one
month,” he told his bosses, “I will make something out
of discrete parts that will be much better.” He made
good on his promise. In three weeks, he built a 25-watt
class-D amp with better performance than that of the IC
amplifier a four-man team had labored over for two years.
In 2001, Philips executive George Aerts secured some
research money so that Putzeys could further refine his
class-D design. The goal was an amp module that would be
versatile and easy to manufacture. It had to be compact
and have the same output impedance and power-supply
requirements as a conventional amp. And it had to be
cheaper and sound better. “The idea was that there would
be no excuse for not using it,” Putzeys recalls.
This time, it took him eight months. He went through
four generations of circuit boards without listening to
any of them. Instead, he connected each board to an
audio analyzer and then rejected it because the results
weren't what he wanted. The fifth iteration, though,
looked good. Just before Christmas 2001, he brought a
pair of the amps home and connected them to the speakers
in his living room. He put on a CD of Spanish classical
music and selected a song by the 18th-century composer
Juan Francés de Iribarren, “Viendo que Jil, Hizo Raya.”
He settled back in a chair and listened. It took him
just a few seconds to reach a conclusion: “Straight in
the bull's-eye.”
At a visitor's request, he re-creates the event, with
the very same CD and stereo components. The music begins
to flow from the speakers, and Putzeys's eyes seem to
unfocus, like he's lost in thought. There's a little
grin on his face. The sound is extremely transparent,
neutral, and precise, with a lovely warmth and force in
the vocals.
In an engineer's universe, Philips would have embraced
Putzeys's UcD module, incorporating it into countless
products. In the actual universe, the module basically
fell through the cracks. But in April 2003, a young
entrepreneur named Jan-Peter van Amerongen visited
Putzeys at Philips. Some years before, van Amerongen had
started Hypex Electronics, to supply amplifiers and
other gear to makers of active speakers and to recording
studios. He had heard great things about the UcD.
Ironically, the one thing he didn't want to hear, at
least initially, was music amplified by the module
itself. Much like Putzeys when he was designing the
modules, van Amerongen wanted to look at the amplifier's
output waveform. “The only thing he wanted to see was
the output signal on an oscilloscope,” Putzeys recalls.
“He looked at it, and in about one minute he said,
‘Okay, I want to buy a license.' He had seen so many
dreadful outputs, full of RF hash. He could tell from
the signal whether it was well designed.”
Not long after, Putzeys left Philips for Hypex, where
he has pretty much free rein to explore the boundaries
of class‑D. Just “for fun,” he recently designed an
audio amplifier with 0.0003 percent total harmonic
distortion, at full power, amplifying a 20-kilohertz
signal. That figure is more than 1000 times better than
some very good solid-state amps. In fact, it's an
improvement that no human ear could detect. But that
figure is also about 30 000 times better than that of
some tube amps—a difference that's not beyond the
ability of human ears to detect.
Besides his gig at Hypex, Putzeys is also one-fourth
of a Netherlands-based start-up called Grimm Audio, in
Utrecht. It specializes in high-end components for
recording studios.
Outside of work, he finds time to maintain a very
long-distance relationship with a woman who lives in
Rwanda. He lectures at conferences around the world. And
when he can, he listens to his own stereo setup, a
unique assemblage of components he built himself,
heavily tweaked, or received as prototypes. The system
is marvelous, if ungainly. And it exemplifies Putzeys's
credo about hi-fi.
“Stereo replay never actually reproduces a musical
event,” he says. “The only thing you can hope for is a
credible illusion. But it can be a very nice illusion.”