You mean stuff like convergence problems with iterative solutions? I think Meffy was referring to some other issues: coders get fainthearted when they see all those exp's in ladder VCF equations. And then, if you use Gummel-Poon model instead of basic BJT equations you go up by order of magnitude or two in evil transcendental functions. And then again, FET stuff, J or MOS, is even more evil: transistor geometry becomes very important factor and you can throw out the window any textbook equations if you want accurate models. So, for description of single transistor you quickly pile up big and ugly equations with bucketloads of transcendental functions*. And that is taxing on CPU cycles.stratum wrote:Limiting factor seems to be numerical stability.My understanding is that CPU power is the limiting factor.
Stability of numerical solvers is another set of problems on top of that.
* - off course, you don't need all that stuff all the time for audio modeling. But then again, you might need some stuff that is not well defined even with very complex models. For instance, by very nature of ladder and OTA filters you some time (when you turn cutoff down) operate them in low current region, below lets say 50uA. All bunch of weird stuff start to happen at low collector currents: beta drops through the floor, leakage currents become important, log conformity starts to vanish, stuff like that. And I doubt that any digital model cares for Early effect let alone esoteric stuff.
