William Sommerwerck said:
I'm sorry, Mark, but this has been known for decades, and was not
established by audiophile reviewers -- the reduction of the overall
distortion level is accompanied by an increase in higher-order harmonics.
I apologize for not having a reference.
Something to do with reality intruding on fantasy. Normally, a reduction of
the overall
distortion level is accompanied by a similar but possibly smaller decrease
in higher-order harmonics. A decrease in all forms of distortion is the
primary effect. The shift towards larger percentages (but not larger
amounts) of higher order distortion is a secondary effect.
One possible exception was described by Don - relating to marginal
stability.
Another common situation is where the open-loop gain of the amplifier inside
the loop simply falls with increasing frequency. Very common, particularly
with op amps. The higher harmonics are still reduced, but they may be
reduced by a smaller amount than the lower harmonics. This leads to the
higher harmonics being a bigger slice of a significantly smaller pie. The
smaller pie is the stronger effect, so the size of all harmonics is still
reduced.
When the pie is as sour-tasting as nonlinear distortion is in reproduction
equipment, I'm always in favor of significantly smaller pies!
The source of this myth is the mistaken idea that negative feedback
regenerates the audio signal, and the nonlinearity of the amplifier leads to
higher order products of the regenerated harmonics and the nonlinearity of
the amp. This ignores the fact that the regenerated signal is brought back
in out-of-phase, and has the primary result of reducing the high order
harmonics.