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Poultrygeist
04-23-2012, 01:41 PM
Audio Note is in there, RGA.

SET Amplifiers and Speakers (http://www.enjoythemusic.com/magazine/viewpoint/1099/setamplifiers.htm)

E-Stat
04-23-2012, 02:31 PM
Audio Note is in there, RGA.Currently thanks to radar developments, here is an interesting SET cousin possessing very similar transfer curves found with the tube flavor.

First Watt SIT 1 (http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/firstwatt14/1.html)

Poultrygeist
04-23-2012, 02:45 PM
With only one transistor it's gotta sound good, right?

E-Stat
04-23-2012, 03:03 PM
With only one transistor it's gotta sound good, right?
The SIT is not just any transistor. Nor is it configured just like any transistor amp.

You really should read the entire article if that's your take away.. Here's (http://firstwatt.com/sit1.html) some more info.

LeRoy
04-23-2012, 04:03 PM
@Poultrygeist, thanks for the article/link.

@E-Stat, I might be able to listen to one of these SIT amps fairly soon. My local audio buddy and former audio dealer is good buds with a professional audio reviewer who as I understand...just got one of these amps. IF I am able to get a good listen to the amp then I'll post my impressions...

E-Stat
04-23-2012, 05:36 PM
IF I am able to get a good listen to the amp then I'll post my impressions...
Pretty cool! Keep us posted.

RGA
04-23-2012, 06:49 PM
Let's not forget the SET solid state amps already out there like Sugden's A21a.

It's not that SS sounds bad it just always seems to cost so much more than a SET tube to sound as good. I audition SS amps I like like Technical Brain, Pass Labs, Sugden Master Class, and I see Sticker price of $10k to $70k and I think does it sound better than the SETs I've heard for around $3k and the answer comes back no. So I don't see the point in spending many more times the price. But that is a value judgment more than a quality of sound judgment and each person attaches their own value to such things. But that is now.

I can't see why anyone into SET would dump on Pass or Sugden - anytime a company owner has EARS and knows that SET sounds best and tries to achieve that sound to me is a company to follow.

Of course the only problem with comparing a SS amp that is designed to sound like a SET is that SETS hardly sound like eachother - from brand to brand or tube type to tube type - or from the same tube type but different tube manufacturer.

The key issue is which amp sounds best with a specific set of speakers and source. I have preferred the Sugden A21a over many many more expensive tube amplifiers and virtually all SS high feedback amplifiers. Strangely some class D amps which claim zero feedback have sounded surprisingly off - after auditioning the Bel Canto many years ago and recently here in Hong Kong the on paper blather should make them sound good. They just don't. Really something strangely off about them but I can't quite figure out what it is. Maybe if I had them at home for a long period I could get into what it is that's wrong.

LeRoy
04-23-2012, 07:03 PM
The key issue is which amp sounds best with a specific set of speakers and source. .. Strangely some class D amps which claim zero feedback have sounded surprisingly off - after auditioning the Bel Canto many years ago and recently here in Hong Kong the on paper blather should make them sound good. They just don't. Really something strangely off about them but I can't quite figure out what it is. Maybe if I had them at home for a long period I could get into what it is that's wrong.

RGA, my audio buddy and former audio dealer used to carry the Bel Canto lineup and I never, ever, could figure out what was so great about their gear. Never did sound right to me no matter what speaker or source was configured with the Bel Canto including other Bel Canto. The only three things I liked about Bel Canto was their name and they look cool too.

E-Stat
04-23-2012, 07:24 PM
Let's not forget the SET solid state amps already out there like Sugden's A21a.
Let's not forget that the bipolar outputs on the 60's design era Sugdens amplifiers do not share the same triode transfer curves as do the current SITs.

Poultrygeist
04-24-2012, 02:46 AM
Just joking with my transistor comment. I'm a huge fan of the First Watt F1 particularly with BL horns. It's vise like grip wrings even drop of bass out of the little 4 inch Fostex making a sub unnecessary. A SET can't do that so well with BL horns.

I'm happy to see that Mr Pass is into OB's these days.

E-Stat
04-24-2012, 05:57 AM
Just joking with my transistor comment. I'm a huge fan of the First Watt F1 particularly with BL horns.
While the F1 (along with other First Watt models) has a single stage, it still uses a pair of MOSFET output devices. Consequently, its character does not closely mimic triodes like the SIT.

The Sugdens are less similar to the SIT models. They use pairs of conventional bipolar output devices, contain multiple cascaded stages and employ current feedback. Not even close to single stage, no feedback, single device triode behavior.

Feanor
04-24-2012, 06:56 AM
...
The key issue is which amp sounds best with a specific set of speakers and source. I have preferred the Sugden A21a over many many more expensive tube amplifiers and virtually all SS high feedback amplifiers. Strangely some class D amps which claim zero feedback have sounded surprisingly off - after auditioning the Bel Canto many years ago and recently here in Hong Kong the on paper blather should make them sound good. They just don't. Really something strangely off about them but I can't quite figure out what it is. Maybe if I had them at home for a long period I could get into what it is that's wrong.
Do you recall which class D amps claimed to be zero feedback? Bel Canto isn't one of them as far as I can see. I'm curious to know which do: typically class D uses feedback though apparently there are different feedback approaches used by different technologies.

Feanor
04-24-2012, 07:09 AM
RGA, my audio buddy and former audio dealer used to carry the Bel Canto lineup and I never, ever, could figure out what was so great about their gear. Never did sound right to me no matter what speaker or source was configured with the Bel Canto including other Bel Canto. The only three things I liked about Bel Canto was their name and they look cool too.
I've never heard any of the newer, ICEpower-based Bel Cantos. I did own a Tripath-based, Bel Canto eVo2i amp which had its downside.

The eVo2i was very transparent and highly resolved, however it was also a tad bright and mid-range sounded lean or "grey" as some people described it.

My current Class D Audio, IRS2092-based, SDS-258 amp sounds better. It's as highly resolved & transparent but the mid-range is a bit more full-bodied -- however I doubt anybody would mistake it for a SET or even a push-pull EL34 or KT88.

As for class D sounding "off", various reviewers including RGA have said this. I don't know what they're talking about, but then I haven't the established preference for tube sound that they have.

RGA
04-24-2012, 04:34 PM
Do you recall which class D amps claimed to be zero feedback? Bel Canto isn't one of them as far as I can see. I'm curious to know which do: typically class D uses feedback though apparently there are different feedback approaches used by different technologies.

Ahh that may be what it was then - might also explain the other Class D amps - I just thought their claim to fame was zero-feedback.

Feanor
04-24-2012, 04:52 PM
Ahh that may be what it was then - might also explain the other Class D amps - I just thought their claim to fame was zero-feedback.
Not the case.

LeRoy
04-24-2012, 07:14 PM
mid-range sounded lean or "grey" as some people described it.

My current Class D Audio, IRS2092-based, SDS-258 amp sounds better.

As for class D sounding "off", various reviewers including RGA have said this. I don't know what they're talking about, but then I haven't the established preference for tube sound that they have.

Yes, I agree with your assessment of the B.C. sounding "grey". I used to have a T-amp (original version) and the BC sounded to me like a T-amp with more power. As best as I can recall the newer version of B.C. has more warmth to it overall but still lacks an "organic vibrancy/life" to it. I am just not drawn into the B.C. sound.

Very astute of you to point out some listeners prefer tube sound,,,,which I was already evolving toward when I heard the BC...and now I am totally in the tube camp.

Good to know your new amp sounds better than the B.C. I've thought about what direction I might go if for some reason I get tired of the whole tube experience I just can't (at the moment) justify going back to SS but that would only leave digital amps as an option. Now I wonder if there will ever be a marriage of digital amps with tubes?

RGA
04-25-2012, 12:28 AM
Like most designs it comes down to whether they design with their ears involved in the process or do design from a text book - or the right text books.

SS I suppose is technically superior to tubes. Yet as Colloms noted In Stereophile that the best SS designers in the industry when listening under blind level matched conditions chose a no feedback tube amplifier for $100 over their $3,000 SS models. Not one - but ALL of them said the tube sounded more like actual music. It's also no great surprise that the article noted many of these designers have been reducing feedback in a major way - trying to sound like that $100 tube amp. Probably because they can't very well chuck it in the bin with too many owners they told had the best - they're too involved in SS to admit they were wrong.

But to me I never understand why people want to buy SS that tries to sound like SET/Tubes - If you want the sound of a SET/tube - then umm buy a SET/tube amp. The SS that tries fails - they all fail - some may sound "tubish" as in the stereotypical tubish sound but that to me usually winds up being a SS amp that sounds veiled.

My Sugden A48b was noted as being "Valve-like" - yes it sounds way more like a Stereotypical tube amp than the A21a or for that matter most tube amps.

I certainly respect SS makers who want to try to sound like a SET - they know what the best sound is - so it's admirable and illustrates that they can hear.

Perhaps they want to get that sound but in a package more people can live with (ie not having to change tubes or deal with the things) - that is reasonable to me - that's why I like the Sugden A21a (The circa 1990 versions seem to be favored over the older ones and the newer ones). I know Halcro works hard on Feedback - their amps have it but they at least know that feedback sucks. But it's been 10 years since I've really auditioned a Halcro - personally they're too expensive but they at least seemed to make sense.

One of the reasons I am leaning towards Line Magnetic amplifiers is due to the variety of tubes you can use in one machine.

I mean really why not have a few different amplifiers - we don't have to choose just one solution for all occasions. I have a High damping factor SS amp, I have a surround sound receiver, they serve purposes.

E-Stat
04-25-2012, 08:04 AM
Yet as Colloms noted In Stereophile that the best SS designers in the industry when listening under blind level matched conditions chose a no feedback tube amplifier for $100 over their $3,000 SS models.
I love it the way stories get considerably embellished over the years. :)

The eight tubes used in the KT88 based Michaelson and Austin TVA-1 (which was likely NOT a zero feedback design) alone were worth $100! I think you'll find the amp sold for just over $1000 in 1978 (!) when this test occurred.

The "pricey" SS amp used in the test was a NAIM NAP-250 along with a Quad 405. These were representative of the best SS designers in the industry? Too funny.

The Real Story (http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/705awsi)

Feanor
04-25-2012, 08:55 AM
...
But to me I never understand why people want to buy SS that tries to sound like SET/Tubes - If you want the sound of a SET/tube - then umm buy a SET/tube amp. The SS that tries fails - they all fail - some may sound "tubish" as in the stereotypical tubish sound but that to me usually winds up being a SS amp that sounds veiled.
....
Funny you should mention that -- my own experience inclines me to agree.

My previous s/s amp, the Monarchy SM-70 Pro is acclaimed by some pundits, (notably Morricab at AA), as sounding much more tube-like than most s/s and therefore preferable to them. The SM-70 Pro is a high-bias, zero global feedback design.

The SM-70 Pro is a pretty nice nice amp and certainly beat the likes of NAD C270 or Adcom GFP 555II in every respect. I also preferred it to my preceding Bel Canto eVo2i on about 70% of my recordings. But the odd thing was that 30% of recordings that sounded better on the Bel Canto were the better recordings.

Finally I concluded that the SM-70 Pro was a bit veiled; it lack both ultimate resolution and the ability to convey full instrument timbres. That's what prompted me to try another class D design, (my funds precluding the likes of a Pass Labs model.)

When I got my current Class D Audio SDS-258 what I decided was that I prefer it to the Monarchys for about 70% of recordings, (a magic number?). But in this instance the 70% including all the best recordings.

Further, now that I have very clean source, my latest cheap DAC, the percentage I prefer with the Class D Audio is nearer 100%. All this inclines me to speculate that the principle advantage of tube circuits is their ability to hide grunge rather than actually deliver a purer signal.

bobsticks
04-25-2012, 09:38 AM
I love it the way stories get considerably embellished over the years. :)

The eight tubes used in the KT88 based Michaelson and Austin TVA-1 (which was likely NOT a zero feedback design) alone were worth $100! I think you'll find the amp sold for just over $1000 in 1978 (!) when this test occurred.

The "pricey" SS amp used in the test was a NAIM NAP-250 along with a Quad 405. These were representative of the best SS designers in the industry? Too funny.

The Real Story (http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/705awsi)

How dare you try to interject a note of truth into some perflectly good historical revisionism. :biggrin5:

RGA
04-29-2012, 01:12 AM
I love it the way stories get considerably embellished over the years. :)

The eight tubes used in the KT88 based Michaelson and Austin TVA-1 (which was likely NOT a zero feedback design) alone were worth $100! I think you'll find the amp sold for just over $1000 in 1978 (!) when this test occurred.

The "pricey" SS amp used in the test was a NAIM NAP-250 along with a Quad 405. These were representative of the best SS designers in the industry? Too funny.

The Real Story (http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/705awsi)


The first three letter of ASSUME boys - maybe ask before you jump all over every post

Actually the real story was that it was a 25WPC Radford amplifier

A Future Without Feedback? | Stereophile.com (http://www.stereophile.com/reference/70/)

Poultrygeist
04-29-2012, 03:11 AM
I love this quote from the article which sums up my feelings toward single ended triodes:

"More precisely the SE units' sound over the broad mid-range - in point of fact, over most of the significantly audible frequency range - reaches a level of purity and intrinsic musicality that inspires near religious fervor"

RGA
04-29-2012, 06:18 AM
I love this quote from the article which sums up my feelings toward single ended triodes:

"More precisely the SE units' sound over the broad mid-range - in point of fact, over most of the significantly audible frequency range - reaches a level of purity and intrinsic musicality that inspires near religious fervor"

Well he's right - I'm not religious but something is going on when as I said somewhere on one of these forums when a $650 2 way box hooked to 211 tubes in SET can move me profoundly emotionally listening to a given CD (yes even CD) and using the exact same CD in a system with $20k pro studio monitors and a PP tube amp leaves me listening to notes and audiophile pseudo language - the ultimate experience is disconnected and has me trying to focus on several things at the same time rather than have it wash over the ears in a "real way."

I read the Zu site and they seemed to indicate that SET was what it was made for as well. So the next time I go back I will try a SET. Fortunately the store has all the Line Magnetic SETs and Melody SETs including their Ongaku copy called the Aoxdin (or something) that is basically a lower powered scaled down version 16 watts.

I like the idea of trying all the Line Magnetic variations and Melody and Rogue and Almarro amps (that is what they carry) as well as a few others but I forgot the names.

I found their complete line-up. I must say that the 3 watt 218mini integrated is somewhat appealing - it's mainly a headphone amp but also apparently easily drives the ZU Audio speakers. He claims it drives the ATC quite well but not too loud. I'd have to heard that myself. Trying to build that budget system so I will at least try it out.

I am also debating whether the 216 and 211 PP integrated amps they sell would be close if running them in triode mode as they have the options. I have never had an amp that had this feature. From my reading on the net everyone seems to always prefer the Triode mode.

http://www.lmaudio.net/cp_l.aspx?dyiji=10

Also as a DIYer I would like to know what in the hell you do with this tube powered field coil woofer - Line Magnetic TA-4151 Field coil woofer with built in power supply (http://www.toneimports.com/lmaudio/4151.html)

It look neat.

Edit: Well it seems others are on board - perhaps the Line Magnetic gear really is as good as I thought it was when I heard it. Some of the boys at Audiokarma put their money out for it

Line Magnetic Audio 216AI integrated amplifier - AudioKarma.org Home Audio Stereo Discussion Forums (http://www.audiokarma.org/forums/showthread.php?p=5551260)

E-Stat
04-29-2012, 10:10 AM
The first three letter of ASSUME boys - maybe ask before you jump all over every post
Mea culpa. You pointed out a comparative report by Collums in Stereophile. I found a similar one.


Yet as Colloms noted In Stereophile that the best SS designers in the industry...

First of all, the Radford is not a zero feedback design. Of the list of "industry leaders" who participated in the 1975 test, only two designed SS electronics (Naim and Meridian). They were the "best SS designers in the industry"? That's certainly not what Collum claimed. I can remember hearing a few exceptional SS amps from 1975 not designed in the UK such as the Levinson ML-2, Stax DA80 and Yamaha B-1.

Understand that fundamentally, I agree with your position. I've used tube gear of one sort or another in my system for over thirty years. Your penchant for fabricating details , however, doesn't help your position.

Poultrygeist
04-29-2012, 10:43 AM
Here's a link to 2a3 SETs which are a great match for Zu's. Don Garber's Fi X 2a3 is beyond unique and loved by every reviewer. The Almarro EL84 SE not shown in the link I covet deeply.

It takes a pair to tell your audio buds you've upgraded to 3 watts!:biggrin5:

http://home.earthlink.net/~jeremyepstein/pdf/sp15_2a3.pdf

Feanor
04-29-2012, 10:44 AM
...
The good news is that both the designs and technology have changed in the past forty years. My '81 Stasis uses no global feedback between input and output stages. Devices have improved greatly allowing for lower amounts - or zero feedback found in models by a number of manufacturers like Ayre, Pass Labs, etc.
Nelson Pass has always been a big advocate for zero feedback -- or as close to it a possible, and you can't argue with his results. Boy, oh, boy, I'd love to try his latest, over-the-top amps, the Xs series monoblocks --each "monoblock" is actually two blocks: see pic.

I think this Xs 300 is $85k, (don't recall whether that's each or per pair) ...

https://passlabs.com/images/uploads/Product_images/115/xs_color__large.jpg

On the other hand I recently read Rod Elliott's treatise on the subject of negative feedback, (here (http://sound.westhost.com/articles/distortion+fb.htm)). I didn't understand everything he said, but I do believe he made the following assertions:



= Negative feedback is better that the distortion that would otherwise be present; (he was referring principally to s/s amps).
= Global feedback is more effective than, and preferable to, local feedback, (not to be confused with "degenerations" which I don't entirely understand). The result is lower distortion overall.
= Contrary to audiophile myth, feedback is an instantaneous phenomenon, not as series of iterations. The propagation time through the feedback loop is a few microseconds at worst and too short to allow iterations in the audio bandwidth.
= Contrary to audiophile myth, feedback doesn't cause higher order distortion, it them to be more easily measured.
= Square waves are not relevant to measuring audio distortion in general since the relevant high-order harmonics are far outside the audible range.

E-Stat
04-29-2012, 11:15 AM
Nelson Pass has always been a big advocate for zero feedback -- or as close to it a possible, and you can't argue with his results.
Agreed. As opposed to guys with disproven theories like...


On the other hand I recently read Rod Elliott's treatise on the subject of negative feedback...

Contrary to audiophile myth, feedback is an instantaneous phenomenon, not as series of iterations. The propagation time through the feedback loop is a few microseconds at worst and too short to allow iterations in the audio bandwidth.

Not in the audio bandwidth? Have you read his cable comparison methodology? Connect two sets of interconnects via Y adapters between a source and preamp and switch between the two inputs using the tape monitor. You have now effectively combined the LCR characteristics of both cables together. and end up comparing - both to both. (edit: since I have a capacitance meter, I just hooked up a Y adapter to an IC and measured the value at the Y. Then added another cable. The value increased by the amount of the second cable.) How can you take someone like that seriously?

One one of my trips to Sea Cliff a few years back, I noticed a pair of the big Halcro monoblocks sitting aside. How do they sound? HP never reviewed them because he felt they were unnaturally sterile and clinical sounding. They didn't stay in the system for long. If you recall, they were high feedback designs. The latest company touting high amounts of feedback is Soulution. I haven't heard them, but I suspect they would strike me the same way. The error correction ends up throwing some of the baby out with the wash.

Feanor
04-29-2012, 02:21 PM
Agreed. As opposed to guys with disproven theories like ... Rod Elliott: Distortion & Feedback (http://sound.westhost.com/articles/distortion+fb.htm)
....
In fairness to Elliott, his article isn't just a series of assertions. It's fairly long 28 pages wherein he argues from theory, simulation modelling, and constructed test examples. I would be interested to hear his arguments addressed with some degree of rigour.


...
Not in the audio bandwidth? Have you read his cable comparison methodology? Connect two sets of interconnects via Y adapters between a source and preamp and switch between the two inputs using the tape monitor. You have now effectively combined the LCR characteristics of both cables together. and end up comparing - both to both. (edit: since I have a capacitance meter, I just hooked up a Y adapter to an IC and measured the value at the Y. Then added another cable. The value increased by the amount of the second cable.) How can you take someone like that seriously...
I'm not sure I follow you; are you talking about the capacitance in the cables? If so, there would be a difference of course.

This is what Elliott actually said; (did I misunderstand?) ...

6.0 - Amplification Circuit Delay:
It is obvious that nothing in life is instantaneous. When a signal is applied to the input of an amplifier, there is a delay before the amplifier can react to the change, and this is determined by the speed of the devices used. Logic circuits typically have nanosecond delays from input to output, and this is also the order of delay one can expect before an amplifier as shown in Figure 9 will react to a change of input. According to the simulator, it takes about 5ns for the amp to respond to the fact that the input has changed - this is still using the very fast squarewave as an input. The output then swings in the appropriate direction at its maximum slew rate until the voltage at the inverting input again equals that at the non-inverting input. Once the voltages are equal, it takes about 220ns for the output to stabilise, settling so that the two input voltages are exactly the same. These times are very short - it takes the output 1.3us to change from +11V to -11V, so the 'reaction' time is close to negligible. It would be pointless to try to reproduce all the waveforms, so I suggest that you download the simulations. The files are in SIMetrix format, and are ready to run.

Note that any delay has nothing to do with electrons 'slowing down' - there is typically nothing in an amplifier circuit that does any such thing. The delays are simply the result of the devices taking a finite time to conduct (or switch off) after a signal has been applied or removed, an issue that affects all amplifying devices. While painstaking engineering is needed to minimise these delays (especially for very high speed switching), it is generally not needed for audio - not because audio is slow (although it is very slow compared to the logic in a fast micro-processor), but because analogue amplifiers are not switching, so are normally inherently fast. We actually have to slow them down deliberately with a capacitor (the Miller or dominant pole cap) to prevent oscillation.

However, the above test was all done with a signal that is much faster than the amplifier can handle (and much faster than any signal it is expected to handle for music reproduction), and it is more useful to examine what happens when the input slew rate is limited to something sensible. By adding a filter to the squarewave signal, the rise time can be limited to a somewhat more realistic value. A 32kHz, 24dB/octave filter was used, and this limits the output signal from the amplifier to 1.85V/us - well within its range, but still a great deal faster than any real music signal will create. Everything is now within the linear capability of the amplifier. The output is delayed by 46ns compared to the input, but this is inconsequential. Of more importance is how the amplifier reacts to the combined sine and square wave signal. It is not immediately apparent from the output, but in fact the sinewave is almost completely unaffected - the portion that would otherwise be cut off due to slew rate limiting now simply 'rides' the slope of the squarewave - if compared (after correcting for the level difference), the input and output are virtually identical - there is no evidence whatsoever of anything that could be classified as transient distortion - even with a 100kHz signal.

E-Stat
04-29-2012, 04:06 PM
In fairness to Elliott, his article isn't just a series of assertions. It's fairly long 28 pages wherein he argues from theory, simulation modelling, and constructed test examples.
Mostly theory and computer simulations evaluating numbers. Not listening to real products reproducing real music. Which is where I find that real designers have a decided edge. Let's look at another one of Elliott's "assertions":

"Contrary to audiophile myth, feedback doesn't cause higher order distortion, it them to be more easily measured."

Pass would just smile since he has proven otherwise. While I don't believe for a minute he's the only guy out there doing good stuff, I think he is the best communicator of the concepts. Read his document on distortion and in particular the story of a real world amplifier he built using variable amounts of NFB which empirically counters Elliott's speculations. As did my two minute test measuring the results of connecting two cables via a Y adapter.

Pass on the complex world of distortion (https://passlabs.com/articles/audio-distortion-and-feedback)


I'm not sure I follow you; are you talking about the capacitance in the cables? If so, there would be a difference of course.
He is asserting that his test can determine whether or not you can hear the difference between two different cables possessing different characteristics.

The test fails to work miserably, however, because the methodology ends up blending the metrics of the two cables such that you are not comparing one cable by itself to another by itself. You hear the combined results in input A and you hear the same combined results in input B. In reality, you're not comparing anything. You're hearing the same result in either input. It is not at all like connecting one set of cables - then disconnecting them and connecting the other set of cables. He doesn't even bother to validate his theory with the simple test I performed. No wonder he thinks all "well designed cables" sound the same. He's not comparing anything!

ABX testing using a box fails for the same reasons. In order to avoid horrible switching transients, you must necessary share the grounds. So you are blending cable characteristics or even feedback loops between separate amplifiers. It was Frank Van Alstine that first made me aware of the fallacy behind the use of ABX boxes.

Do you remember Skeptic/Soundmind? He had a similar "shunt test" whereby he contends you can determine whether or not a cable is absolutely perfect by switching it in or out of a tape monitor loop. He has no comprehension of the logical fallacies involved with his set of assumptions.

Too many guys with good intentions arrive at false conclusions due to the set of unproven assumptions they make with their test methodology. Which is why seasoned ears prefer simpler circuits like SETs to complex switching designs that measure far better.

Feanor
04-29-2012, 05:07 PM
Mostly theory and computer simulations evaluating numbers. Not listening to real products reproducing real music. Which is where I find that real designers have a decided edge. ...
Elliott claims to have done both. He is hands-on experimenter like Pass. Personally I can't judge the validity of the work of either since I have no electrical engineering background.



...
Let's look at another one of Elliott's "assertions":

"Contrary to audiophile myth, feedback doesn't cause higher order distortion, it them to be more easily measured." ...
That quote was my paraphrase, though it is my understanding of what he said.



Pass would just smile since he has proven otherwise. While I don't believe for a minute he's the only guy out there doing good stuff, I think he is the best communicator of the concepts. Read his document on distortion and in particular the story of a real world amplifier he built using variable amounts of NFB which empirically counters Elliott's speculations. As did my two minute test measuring the results of connecting two cables via a Y adapter.

Pass on the complex world of distortion (https://passlabs.com/articles/audio-distortion-and-feedback)
...
I believe I have read the article before, but will do so again -- not tonight, though, because my eyes are shot.

E-Stat
04-29-2012, 05:46 PM
Elliott claims to have done both.
The other guys, by contrast, have graphically demonstrated their point. What is Elliott's amplifier reference? Eval system? Given his complete misunderstanding of cable interaction, I suspect he would fall into one of Skeptic/Soundmind's favorite fallacies. The following is how he evaluates whether or not a line stage is audibly perfect:

1. Start with a mediocre preamp in today's world such as a H-K Citation 11. I owned and enjoyed one from 1974 to 1976 until the Frank Van Alstine modified FET-5 outperformed that classic. Not bad, just not particularly spectacular as compared with what is available today.

2. Pipe another linestage's output through one of the unity gain (usually buffered) tape monitor loops through two more set of high capacitance red and white patch cords.

3. Play music and switch between tape monitor in and out. If you cannot tell any difference, then the DUT is audibly perfect. Understandably, he found quite a few preamps which met that criteria.



He is hands-on experimenter like Pass. Personally I can't judge the validity of the work of either since I have no electrical engineering background.
Wouldn't it be fun to compare a line stage using Eliott's $18 OPA2134 based preamp board vs a Pass Labs XP-30? Or his MOSFET amplifier board based amp to an XA-200.5.?



I believe I have read the article before, but will do so again -- not tonight, though, because my eyes are shot.
By all means wait since it is a really good read.

Feanor
04-30-2012, 04:06 AM
The other guys, by contrast, have graphically demonstrated their point. What is Elliott's amplifier reference? Eval system? Given his complete misunderstanding of cable interaction, I suspect he would fall into one of Skeptic/Soundmind's favorite fallacies...
On the issue of cables, I still don't understand: which Elliott article are you referring to?

I'm certainly not arguing that preamps sound the same, and neither would Elliott.



Wouldn't it be fun to compare a line stage using Eliott's $18 OPA2134 based preamp board vs a Pass Labs XP-30? Or his MOSFET amplifier board based amp to an XA-200.5.? ...
It would certainly be interesting to compare. Will you supply the XP-? I'll supply the $18 board.


...
By all means wait since it is a really good read.
Which I did, so it might seem that the basic disagreement is whether feedback causes high-order HD -- but note that Elliott doesn't deny it exists.

Pass refers to purported experimental evidence that feedback does cause HOHD. He show a graph that shows the corresponding relationship between amount of feedback and amount of distortion -- note that the relation ship is inverse: beyond a point, more feedback does reduce distortion. The point of maximum HOHD is about 15dB, a very small amount of negative feedback in practice.

https://passlabs.com/penta/images/uploads/tinybrowser/fig_10_distortion_spectrum_vs_feedback.png

Pass the proceeds with a graph the shows amount of HOHD at various levels of feedback, the highest being 15dB, the highest point of HOHD distortion according to the above. WTF? What would be the result with significantly higher feedback? Pass doesn't provide that info because it doesn't suit his argument.

https://passlabs.com/penta/images/uploads/tinybrowser/fig_11_distortion_spectrum_vs_loop_feedback.png

From what I read, Pass' only real argument against a lot of feedback is that it might require more stages of amplification to provide the high non-feedback, ("open loop"), gain to accommodate the high feedback.

Elliott, on the other hand, would consider only 15dB feedback bad design. As I mentioned earlier, he also strongly believes in global, i.e. multi-stage spanning, feedback because it corrects distortion at all stages. Of course if you accept Pass' argument that any feedback is bad, then you are constrained to his approach of minimizing the number of amplification stages.

Apparently there isn't universal agreement among designers that high-feedback is bad, e.g. Halcro, Boulder, and others. Some reviews like these amps a lot, though others like Harry Pearson, (the hi-fi God??), do not.

E-Stat
04-30-2012, 05:21 AM
On the issue of cables, I still don't understand: which Elliott article are you referring to?

Cable articles (http://sound.westhost.com/articles.htm)

Anytime you find an article about cables that starts with "The Truth"... you know that's from a labcoat who doesn't understand simple concepts. I just have to smile about this comment:

"On the other hand, many subjectivists claim that anything other than a listening test is invalid, and commonly and even vigorously eschew ABX testing ..This is very confronting, and to have one's beliefs shattered is not a pleasant experience."

Yeah, I'd love to see his face when someone points out the obvious fault with his pathetically inept "test"! Do you understand how incredibly stupid that is?


I'm certainly not arguing that preamps sound the same, and neither would Elliott.
What he claims is that the byproducts of NFB lie outside the audible band. Right! His op amp based preamp uses copious amounts of NFB. I'm convinced he *believes* that it would sound as good as a superbly engineered discrete design with little feedback.



Which I did, so it might seem that the basic disagreement is whether feedback causes high-order HD -- but note that Elliott doesn't deny it exists.
He remains clueless.


maximum[/I] HOHD is about 15dB, a very small amount of negative feedback in practice.
15 db is actually a relatively modest amount. That's what is used with my VTL amps. The newest Pass amps use about 10 db. 70s era amps used 40-50 db. Op amps require even more. Note that 40 db is a thousand times more than 10 db.


What would be the result with significantly higher feedback? Pass doesn't provide that info because it doesn't suit his argument.
Sure it does! Don't you see the huge higher order spikes that are non-existent at lower levels? Read the commentary!

"Paradoxically, you can visualize instances of feedback pyramid schemes, in which more gain stages are added to generate more feedback to partially correct for the distortions generated by the additional gain stage...

The resulting complexity creates distortion which is unlike the simple harmonics associated with musical instruments, and we see that these complex waves can gather to create the occasional tsunami of distortion, peaking at values far above those imagined by the distortion specifications."


From what I read, Pass' only real argument against a lot of feedback is that it might require more stages of amplification to provide the high non-feedback, ("open loop"), gain to accommodate the high feedback.

Then you missed reading critical parts of the article along with the conclusion.


Elliott, on the other hand, would consider only 15dB feedback bad design. As I mentioned earlier, he also strongly believes in global, i.e. multi-stage spanning, feedback because it corrects distortion at all stages.

Obviously. That's what poor designers do. Finding and working with the most linear discrete devices requires more effort and ability.


Of course if you accept Pass' argument that any feedback is bad, then you are constrained to his approach of minimizing the number of amplification stages.
And? Yes! That's certainly true. My VTL amps are two stage. Unless of course, you prefer the harshness of a Crown or the sterility of a Halcro.


Apparently there isn't universal agreement among designers that high-feedback is bad, e.g. Halcro, Boulder, and others. Some reviews like these amps a lot, though others like Harry Pearson, (the hi-fi God??), do not.

I don't base my opinions on how many reviewers like that approach vs those who do not. I prefer to listen to the results myself.

Feanor
04-30-2012, 07:11 AM
Cable articles (http://sound.westhost.com/articles.htm)...
Thank you, I'll read it sometime. Meanwhile I've no comment.


...
What he claims is that the byproducts of NFB lie outside the audible band. Right! His op amp based preamp uses copious amounts of NFB. I'm convinced he *believes* that it would sound as good as a superbly engineered discrete design with little feedback. ...
I haven't heard Rod's preamp: have you?

BTW, Rod Elliott allows that opamps don't all sound the same but he does like the OPA2134's. I recently install a pair of these (replacing 5532's) plus an OPA2604 (replacing as I recall an OP275) in my latest DAC and the sound is extremely transparent and grain free.

In any case the internal feedback propagation of an opamp is measured in nano or even picoseconds which is effectively instantaneous being an order of magnitude above the audio spectrum.


...
15 db is actually a relatively modest amount. That's what is used with my VTL amps. The newest Pass amps use about 10 db. 70s era amps used 40-50 db. Op amps require even more. Note that 40 db is a thousand times more than 10 db. ...
Or maybe you're missing the point. Yes, 15dB is a modest amount of feedback ... but note, according to the graph Pass provides, it produces the highest level of HOHD -- even more feedback produces less HD of all orders.


...
"Paradoxically, you can visualize instances of feedback pyramid schemes, in which more gain stages are added to generate more feedback to partially correct for the distortions generated by the additional gain stage...

The resulting complexity creates distortion which is unlike the simple harmonics associated with musical instruments, and we see that these complex waves can gather to create the occasional tsunami of distortion, peaking at values far above those imagined by the distortion specifications."
...
Sure, each stage of amplification adds its own distortion. Elliott argues that sufficient global feedback will minimize all of them. Again, global feedback propagation (according to Rod) is <2 uS which corresponds to a frequency of 500kHz and is hence effectively instantaneous in the audio spectrum.

In a perfect world amplification devices would be inherently totally linear. Who would argue with that?


...
Then you missed reading critical parts of the article along with the conclusion. ...
Or maybe I'm just questioning them.


...
And? Yes! That's certainly true. My VTL amps are two stage. Unless of course, you prefer the harshness of a Crown or the sterility of a Halcro. ...
The very worst amp I've heard in the last decade was my old Phase Linear 400, so I'm not arguing the high feedback is an panacea. How I lived with that for 20 years I'll never understand (unless it degraded a lot towards the end). I haven't heard the Halcro. My current class D amp is the best amp I've heard on the last decade; it's the most transparent and grain-free that I personally have ever heard, (at least in my own system). I would not describe it as "warm", "tonally rich", "organic", or whatever the opposite of "sterile" is, but it reproduces instrument sounds more accurately than the low-feedback Monarchys that I was using 'till recently.

In the end I feel two points are to be made. (1) There are multiple amp design philosophies; either might work depending on the design & implementation. (2) There are different tastes in sound reproduction that will bias a person towards one or another actual product.

E-Stat
04-30-2012, 07:43 AM
I haven't heard Rod's preamp: have you?
Effectively, yes. The output stage of my GamuT CD-1 uses an OPA2134 followed by an AD712. Nice, but better exists. I've had that player for ten years now.


In any case the internal feedback propagation of an opamp is measured in nano or even picoseconds which is effectively instantaneous being an order of magnitude above the audio spectrum.
Back to theory and assuming that is the only factor which causes audible differences. Like his pathetic cable test.



Or maybe you're missing the point. ]even more[/I] feedback produces less HD of all orders.
While the overall level reduces, the complexity of the distortion continues to increase. That is the problem.


Sure, each stage of amplification adds its own distortion. Elliott argues that sufficient global feedback will minimize all of them.
He can speculate all he pleases. Real designers test their hypotheses in the real world. The overall level drops a bit, but the complexity increases.


AIn a perfect world amplification devices would be inherently totally linear. Who would argue with that?
Which is why the very best gear I've heard, both SS and tube alike uses simple circuits with the most inherently linear devices that don't require severe crutches.


(2) There are different tastes in sound reproduction that will bias a person towards one or another actual product.
Fair enough. The clueless guys like Elliott can speculate all they please while the high fidelity industry quietly ignores them.

Feanor
04-30-2012, 12:05 PM
...
While the overall level reduces, the complexity of the distortion continues to increase. That is the problem.
...
He can speculate all he pleases. Real designers test their hypotheses in the real world. The overall level drops a bit, but the complexity increases.
...
The complexity is irrelevant if it's inaudible -- but I won't convince you of that.

I think we've beaten this subject to death for the time being. :smile5:

E-Stat
04-30-2012, 12:15 PM
I think we've beaten this subject to death for the time being. :smile5:
Sorry. My long term experience is unaffected by his speculation.

I still can't get over his cable test. Too funny!

RGA
05-01-2012, 05:03 PM
Atma-Sphere on TAS and SETs

Atma-Sphere music systems, inc.» Blog Archive » Thoughts about the new TAS Buyer’s Guide…. (http://www.atma-sphere.com/Blog/2011/10/thoughts-about-the-new-tas-buyers-guide/)

Feanor
05-01-2012, 06:55 PM
Atma-Sphere on TAS and SETs

Atma-Sphere music systems, inc.» Blog Archive » Thoughts about the new TAS Buyer’s Guide…. (http://www.atma-sphere.com/Blog/2011/10/thoughts-about-the-new-tas-buyers-guide/)
Same old, same old.

RGA
05-02-2012, 12:16 AM
Feanor

Maybe you or someone can explain to me why so many people spend thousands of hours researching articles - reading white papers, and thousands more posting on forums and in virtually every single case none of them have ever spent 1 hour auditioning the amplifiers they are blasting away at.

I mean it can't be hard to make a list of known high end SET amplifiers and say right - I will give the technology a fair shake by listening to four of them. Just four to say "right I have sampled the technology fairly. It doesn't require a lot of time or money or effort.

Make a list -

Cary, Sugden's A21a, Audio Note, Shindo, Line Magnetic, Antique Sound Labs, Wavac, Almarro. Wyetech Labs, Fi 2a3, Yamamoto, Melody, Sound Master, Grant Fidelity.

Sampling different tube outputs and across brands and price points. Why is this so hard? Sure maybe a few are not located in reasonable driving distance but unless you're completely in the sticks somebody is selling SET somewhere in every major city.

Line Magnetic and Shindo are in Oregon, Audio Note has several dealers in California, San Francisco, New York, Florida, MA, PA, Virginia, Michigan, Colorado. 4 more in Canada.

Or better yet CES in Vegas. The Rooms that sounded jaw dropping brilliant with SE amplifiers - gee they rarely whine about rooms and treatments using that as a crutch every single year year in and year out no matter what the room.

Why do people distrust their ears so much? I'm sick and tired of talking about this garbage with a bunch of wankers who read some graph or some report from some engineer (they pick and choose whichever engineer they agree with). That would be fine if they actually heard the products fairly - and decide to trust the engineers their ears agree with. I can at least see the rationale.

Poultrygeist
05-02-2012, 03:03 AM
FWIW, I live in the largest city in S.C. yet there is no opportunity to audition a SET here. I also do not know of any audio stores in Charlotte, N.C. that carry SETs. I bought two of mine on ebay and one on C.L.

I believe the reason many high end audio stores are reluctant to carry SETs is it forces them to also carry HE speakers ( often single driver FR ) which have less market appeal and can not command the higher price tags.

I read so many articles extolling the virtues of single ended triodes, buying one was only a slight leap of faith.

Feanor
05-02-2012, 04:35 AM
The Atma-Sphere blurb is the standard anti-solid state cant. E-Stat and I were just finished grinding through all that stuff, which is why I might have sounded dismissive.

Why don't people don't people just believe and get baptised in the SET/HE faith? Why are there so many religious people? Beats me.

Well, except you say "believe your ears". My ears are telling me I'm getting great sound right now with my ripped CDs, s/s DAC, and class D amp. Could there be better sound? Likely, but I just don't have any incentive to change.

BTW, I'm not complacent: I'll switch when I feel the need. I changed from my low feedback, "tonally rich", more tube-like Monarchy amps because I felt I was missing maximal resolution, transparency, and most accurate instrument timbres. My current amp is better -- I'm believing my ears.

E-Stat
05-02-2012, 06:53 AM
Why don't people don't people just believe and get baptised in the SET/HE faith?
You're mixing messages. Ralph Karsten doesn't make single ended triode amps. Triode, yes. Just like my VTLs which are switchable.

Only SETs limit your choice of speakers.


I changed from my low feedback, "tonally rich", more tube-like Monarchy amps because...
You will never understand until you have a really good tube amp in your system for a while. There are many which do well with Magneplanars.

Feanor
05-02-2012, 07:51 AM
You're mixing messages. Ralph Karsten doesn't make single ended triode amps. Triode, yes. Just like my VTLs which are switchable.

Only SETs limit your choice of speakers. ...
Yep, I just don't see how 2-8 watts/ch is going to work for me. HE speakers are a whole other matter, and I'm not going to restrict myself to horn or single driver just so I can check out SET.


...
You will never understand until you have a really good tube amp in your system for a while. There are many which do well with Magneplanars.
Some fine day I will try a tube amp. The problem is it won't be the likes of your VTL. Even so, I will try some sort of push-pull that will do 50+ wpc. 30 wpc would probably work well enough for my chamber music listening but I think I'd be making big compromises in case of orchestral. Possibly I could bi-amp with an s/s tube combo (?).

Meanwhile I'm remarkably satisfied with my current setup

Poultrygeist
05-02-2012, 12:23 PM
If you can not reach a listening level with that first watt you miss all of what's happening there. The first watt is where the magic lies. It contains 10 times the dynamic range of the next watt. SET/HE owners are fortunate enough to hear what they're getting in that all important first watt. Megga watt amps driving 83 db multi-driver speakers just can't go there.

No amp can resolve detail at low levels like a single ended triode driving HE speakers and that's probably the main reason folks who eventually land there seldom find anything they like better.

I was remarkably satisfied with my Classe and Aerials until I heard a SET driving HE FR speakers.

E-Stat
05-02-2012, 01:04 PM
If you can not reach a listening level with that first watt you miss all of what's happening there.
I don't know of any systems where that is not possible. A 256 watt amp has 24 db more output than a one watt system. Many recordings achieve better than 60 db of usable dynamic range.

edit: I am currently listening to the double New Advents in the garage at approximately the two watt level (-30db). Which for the Stasis means that the class A voltage amp is totally driving the speakers.


The first watt is where the magic lies. It contains 10 times the dynamic range of the next watt.
I concur that the treasure lies at the micro dynamic level, but don't agree with your math. Doubling power represent only a 3db change. A 10 db change requires ten times the power. And dynamic range is relative to the noise level of the system.


No amp can resolve detail at low levels like a single ended triode driving HE speakers.
So, what is your point of reference for the best system in your experience that is not SET/horn based - on which your opinion is based? I'd be curious as to what you are comparing.

Poultrygeist
05-02-2012, 04:19 PM
A pair of 96 db speakers playing with 1 watt against the average noise floor in one's listening room has 40 dbs of dynamic range but adding a second watt only increases the dynamic range by 3 dbs. For every additional 3 dbs you would need to double the power. It's all about the resolution in hearing the inner detail of that first watt. High efficiency full range drivers have very low mass and are faster and more accurate than inefficient drivers using heavier parts. The ultra thin banana paper cones of my Fostex and Tang Band drivers are like butterfly wings.

I recently auditioned a pair of $32k Aerial 10T powered by a high end solid state CJ amp. In no way did I hear the low level inner detail I'm accustomed to with my homespun SET/FR OB's. I found myself turning up the volume to hear more but I never heard more. With my home system I find myself turning the volume down to hear more.

A few years ago I purchased my first SET, a $240 Miniwatt. I was so bowled over I sold my Classe CAP-150 on ebay within a matter of days. The liquid warmth of the Miniwatt and great detail far surpassed the sterile sounding $3000 Classe. The $300 FR Tektons I bought at the same time replaced my $2500 Aerial Model 5's. It was an epiphany for me.

My son-in-law has some $30k powered Meridians ( once belonged to Emmitt Smith ) but they can't produce the holographic imaging and stunning clarity I get from my Bottlehead 2a3/OBs. The bloom and decay with sonic naturalness is what I get with SETs and I just don't hear this with the better solid state amps.

Since the single ended triode is the simplest of all amp circuits and uses the least number of parts perhaps there's just less to get in the way of the music.

RGA
05-02-2012, 04:33 PM
Feanor

You don't strike me as a headbanger.

In a modest size room say 13 X 18 X 9 my 4 watt (undistorted) Audio Note OTO with the notoriously wimpy EL 84 output tubes had no trouble playing the AN K louder than I am comfortable listening.

The AN K is 90db (perhaps less given how AN is deemed to over spec their sensitivity ratings.

This is hardly a super efficient speaker - it's a little above average if their spec is correct. So you don't need a horn and you don't need a single driver.

I am currently reviewing the Class T amps from Trends - I've tried them on three loudspeakers including their own 88dB speakers. It also has not trouble driving any of the speakers to loud levels without me cranking the volume - again far louder than I would ever listen - (including classical).

The T amps are rated 15 watts but looking at the numbers more carefully it's only 6 watts into 8ohms with acceptable distortion - 10 watts into 8 ohms with 10% THD. 15 watts into 4ohms with 10% THD.

As the watts drop the distortion drops dramatically - similar to SET.

Again Monarchy isn't a SET. It's another SS amp trying to sound like a SET. ie; veiled - I only heard them once and maybe it was the speakers - but I'm not surprised you found better.

E-Stat
05-02-2012, 04:42 PM
... but adding a second watt only increases the dynamic range by 3 dbs.
I'm glad we got that issue solved.


For every additional 3 dbs you would need to double the power.
I'm delighted you agree with me about that.


It's all about the resolution in hearing the inner detail of that first watt.
You have created a religion around the first watt. Admittedly, Nelson Pass would smile at your concept.



High efficiency full range drivers have very low mass and are faster and more accurate than inefficient drivers using heavier parts.
On that topic we are in complete agreement. Since a full range driver possess one coil of wire in addition to the cone itself, the mass is relatively low as compared with other cone speakers. The mass of thirty square feet of the U-1's diaphragm, however, is less than the air around it. I really do understand.


I recently auditioned a pair of $32k Aerial 10T powered by a high end solid state CJ amp. In no way did I hear the low level inner detail I'm accustomed to with my homespun SET/FR OB's. I found myself turning up the volume to hear more but I never heard more. With my home system I find myself turning the volume down to hear more.
Would you care to complete the description of the system?


A few years ago I purchased my first SET, a $240 Miniwatt. I was so bowled over I sold my Classe CAP-150 on ebay within a matter of days. The liquid warmth of the Miniwatt and great detail far surpassed the sterile sounding $3000 Classe. The $300 FR Tektons I bought at the same time replaced my $2500 Aerial Model 5's. It was an epiphany for me. I looked to see what I could find about ithe Classe and located a schematic. It uses ten op amps in the front end and has but a 34 joule power supply. Your description of its sound makes sense to me.



My son-in-law has some $30k powered Meridians ( once belonged to Emmitt Smith ) but they can't produce the holographic imaging and stunning clarity I get from my Bottlehead 2a3/OBs. The bloom and decay with sonic naturalness is what I get with SETs and I just don't hear this with the better solid state amps.
I confess that I've never really favored powered speakers either. I had some active Braun speakers back in the mid 70s.



Since the single ended triode is the simplest of all amp circuits and uses the least number of parts perhaps there's just less to get in the way of the music.
Yes, the power amp is but one of about eight factors in the system.

Feanor
05-02-2012, 05:23 PM
Feanor

You don't strike me as a headbanger. ...
Right: I'm not. But if I'm going to spring bucks (of which I have too few), I don't want to waste it on an under powered amp. I know 50 watts would do for the Maggies but I'm not so sure about fewer.



...
The T amps are rated 15 watts but looking at the numbers more carefully it's only 6 watts into 8ohms with acceptable distortion - 10 watts into 8 ohms with 10% THD. 15 watts into 4ohms with 10% THD.

As the watts drop the distortion drops dramatically - similar to SET. ...
Humm ... well class D/T amps are significantly different than AB amps.


...
Again Monarchy isn't a SET. It's another SS amp trying to sound like a SET. ie; veiled - I only heard them once and maybe it was the speakers - but I'm not surprised you found better.
It's a somewhat of an understatement to say the Monarchys are "veiled", but there better out there -- and not only SET.

RGA
05-02-2012, 06:14 PM
Feanor

Yes but it sounds veiled coming from a SET guy. That might make you think. The Sugden A48b solid state amp I had sounded veiled as well - mind you in a good way because it's very nice to lesser recordings and not so veiled to ruin excellent recordings. Nevertheless, it could be bettered.

If you're ever in Victoria BC for a holiday (and it is one of the world's great vacation spots) spend a day (just not Sunday or Monday) and listen to your 1.6 or the new 1.7 on an AN amp - then against any SS or digital amp they sell - they sell Meridian, Sim Audio, Bryston, Classe, Ayre.

There is a reason they waste the added electricity and tube life demoing the speakers on a much more costly to run tube amp of sub 20 watts.

And because people will write it off as AN love fest, a similar result with Wyetech Labs running B&W N801 speakers. The N801s are harder to drive that the Magnepans for SET amps but taking high volume listening off the table the actual sound quality was quite excellent. Never heard the speaker sound so good.

Feanor
05-03-2012, 04:23 AM
Feanor

Yes but it sounds veiled coming from a SET guy. That might make you think. The Sugden A48b solid state amp I had sounded veiled as well - mind you in a good way because it's very nice to lesser recordings and not so veiled to ruin excellent recordings. Nevertheless, it could be bettered. ...
So you've heard the Monarchy? Which model? The Sugden reputation of sounding veiled goes way back, yet you loved the A21/A21a for a long time. Yeah, like the Sugden, I quess, the Monarchys were favourable to less-good recordings.

I'll repeat my story: The Monarchys beat my previous Bel Canto on 70% of recordings -- but they were all my worst recordings. My current CDA amp is better than the Monarchy on 70+% of recordings including all my best recordings.


...
If you're ever in Victoria BC for a holiday (and it is one of the world's great vacation spots) spend a day (just not Sunday or Monday) and listen to your 1.6 or the new 1.7 on an AN amp - then against any SS or digital amp they sell - they sell Meridian, Sim Audio, Bryston, Classe, Ayre. ...
Have they got Class D Audio amps?


...
There is a reason they waste the added electricity and tube life demoing the speakers on a much more costly to run tube amp of sub 20 watts.

And because people will write it off as AN love fest, a similar result with Wyetech Labs running B&W N801 speakers. The N801s are harder to drive that the Magnepans for SET amps but taking high volume listening off the table the actual sound quality was quite excellent. Never heard the speaker sound so good.
The Wyetech (http://www.wyetechlabs.com/index.html) have quite a reputation among connoisseurs; I love to hear them.

http://www.wyetechlabs.com/images/sapphire/sapphire_7422_72.jpg

RGA
05-03-2012, 05:03 AM
Soundhounds sells Wyetech Labs. They prefer Audio Note so if you like Wyetech you can probably get it cheap cause they want to get rid of them.

They send a salesman to CES and a few other shows yearly - if they like something they may pick it up - if they don't sell Class D there is a reason. Although I am sure there are class D in some of the subs they sell.

Their website has a list of most of some the brands they sell - I say some because there is a lot not up there yet.

Products (http://www.soundhounds.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&layout=blog&id=1&Itemid=2)

Maybe there is Class D.

I don't recall the Monarchy model - this was a long time back when there was a craze for the Bel Canto and Panasonic amps - Monarchy and another brand. I don't comment on the Monarchy too much because it was just a power amp - and to me the preamp makes more of a difference - and the preamp wasn't from Monarchy. I don't recall the number except that it had a big power switch on the front and handles - circa 2004.

Bel Canto I didn't like and that was an integrated so it's easier to talk about it. I compared it against a second hand the SS YBA Integra DT which killed it on PMC and Martin Logan speakers.

At that time I was considering the YBA Integra DT cause the used priced was nice. FWIW the amp I liked the least in my sessions were from Copland - a respected tube maker but it sounded too much like stereotypical tubes.

The Sugden A48b which I had was a class A/B 70 watt amp and it sounds far more like a tube amp than the A21a.

I think it comes down to what you are listening for in music - the instruments themselves or the spatial cues. I compared the A48b to a brute force SS amp from Musical FIdelity. The latter was something like 150watts per channel and had tremendous "air" and a larger left to right stage. Although I feel such amps that have a lot of "air' have no actual reality to anything I've heard live. The Sugden had more weight and depth on basses and piano and cello and more tone and decay and seemed beefier and more solid. The MF was easy peezy breezy and and again had a pronounced larger stage. I don;t know but I got the uneasy feeling as if it was "stretching" the stage to make it artificially big - like a television that stretches a pan and scan seen to make it fit the rectangular dimensions thus making people fatter.

The thing is there is a taste factor - the guy who traded in the A48b traded it in for the Musical Fidelity (I believe the A300). One sales guy like the MF better the others in the room liked the A48b better.

On piano to me there is no comparison but on some of the opera's where there is a big stage you could visualize them moving across the stage - the Sugden did it too but it wasn't as grand. On the other hand when you had a bass line - you could rally feel it and it had physical weight. The Bryston amps are just the same as the MF amps - thin and brittle sounding but airy and big sounding for stage affects. Which is probably why they get mated to Magnepan which IMO is their greatest strength (staging). The A21a is between those two based on my audition of the circa 1992 model - not the newer ones which seem to have more complaints.

I'm not opposed to class D - perhaps I will run across one I like. I like the cheap and cheerful Class T amps I've been reviewing. Although to be honest that's a 2 for 2 result for me.

tube fan
05-14-2012, 08:25 PM
Three of my 4 favorite rooms at the CAS 2010 and 2011 shows were powered by SET amps: The Audio Note, the Teresonic, and the Sonist. My absolute favorite was the Sonist, but then they were playing analogue tapes as the source!