Nango
Major Contributor
When the musicians do not distort enough while playing this unit can make it so the guitar riffs sound way more authentic. Hard rock and similar genres will sound like celestial on these amps.
I used a fairly cheap tube pre-amp for a couple of years, it made everything sound like it was recorded in the same studio in 1969. I eventually got tired of that.I made the plunge into tubes in the mid-late 80s in a smaller way, buying a CJ MV 50 to power my LS3/5as at the time. For a while I enjoyed it, but I began to notice it overlaid everything with a kind of honey like glaze while blurring details. In short, it made everything sound homogenized and sweeter than live which to me is the very definition of a colored component.
Yes, it is a niche, but the main market is probably not HiFi. It is the market for guitar amplification. Most electric guitar players still prefer tube-amps. I think HiFi tube amps are possible only because the need for tubes in the music industry. It will be interesting to se what happens now to the supply because of the war in Ukraine. Russian made tubes will not be exported anymore i guess.Tubes are a "limitation". Most tubes are single transistor, anode-cathode stuff. Kinda hard to build advanced circuits with feedback and correction based on tubes, solid state allows you to print a zillion transistors and advanced logic and what not. Tubes also operate at much higher voltages than transistors - makes them easier to be a heat and even fire hazard. Tubes' longevity is also so-so (think incandescent bulbs and how happy many of your are with LED bulbs), hence plan on keeping spares... And tubes also have quite significant manufacturing inconsistencies (manual stuff going on, really), making matching key... which often manifests itself in channel measurement inconsistencies. And your need to keep spares that match.
I am not saying the limitation is an unsolvable problem for enjoyable audio experiences. There have been some great tube designs, but engineers with that core expertise have long retired. Personally I don't trust tube designs these days, it's build on the "vinyl and tubes are a match made in heaven" mystique without the infrastructure to back it up: tube manufacturing is a niche, tube design practices weren't even taught in engineering school when I studied in the 80s, so who really has access to know how or top manufacturing?
When people bring up tube designs that measure "well" (which is always merely OKish at best), it's some vintage gear that probably doubles as a fire hazzard in your home.
That said - I have a friend with a tube amp that I thoroughly enjoy listening to with certain types of music. :-D
As I understand it, the VTA clone is for DIY? Is it not possible that the individual variations are quite large? Both in terms of home-built VTAs and old vintage Dynacos?This is exactly where this forum has issues. Everyone who has heard both or upgraded their ST to VTA knows the VTA sounds better. Its much faster, cleaner, and has better bass response. However, on the measurements it fails. There has got to be some sort of pulling the subjective side more heavily into this, with blind A/B work.
I am not saying the data is wrong, but there is clearly much more to the picture. The VTA amp sounds significantly better than many of these amps that rank higher on the list. IMO, there needs to be some effort in distinguishing what are (and why) the subjective elements people prefer.
Hi, i’m a newbie on ASR, although I’ve read hundreds of threads on here, and follow Amir‘s YouTube channel. I’m not able to fully read the graphs done in the testing, although I’m better than I used to be, and learning. This being said I just introduced a new DAC into my set up yesterday, highly touted on ASR as being transparent, and wow did it sound good. I actually thought it sounded better than my other transparently measuring DAC’s and over the weekend I’m going to dispel that notion, and put them all on a transparent XLR switcher.This is exactly where this forum has issues. Everyone who has heard both or upgraded their ST to VTA knows the VTA sounds better. Its much faster, cleaner, and has better bass response. However, on the measurements it fails. There has got to be some sort of pulling the subjective side more heavily into this, with blind A/B work.
I am not saying the data is wrong, but there is clearly much more to the picture. The VTA amp sounds significantly better than many of these amps that rank higher on the list. IMO, there needs to be some effort in distinguishing what are (and why) the subjective elements people prefer.
It depends how far 'down the path' you are really. You often start as I did, working up to a high end sound rig which makes everything the same, as all the added 'character' basically overwhelms differences in recordings and production with a wonderful golden 'halo' around every music performance you play. In the end and in my case, I upped my exposure to live music, especially small scale 'pub' jazz (not 'my' genre but the company was good and I was able to hear brass and drums close up) and I had something of an epiphany moment. That led me to ATC but of course now, there are many other top monitor brands at lower prices which I'm sure would do the same (or better) as ATC did for me back then. My 'HiFi Journey' stopped once I went this way and it was marriage a few years later and squeezing two small homes together into one which brought my audio nirvana crashing down, never to recover to that level if truth be told...Hi, thanks for the background. Very interesting, especially today when state of the art amplifiers are affordable and distortion generators costs many thousands of €/$…
may I ask you two questions?
1) are you suggesting that’s better to take the BLU pill = “wonderful sonic character” of the fake sound instead of the RED pill and get the “leaner and less depth” transparent sound as the artist intended to be?
2)why “the audiophile“ must be always the guy of “do you listen to it” ?
I do my best to behave as an audiophile, looking for transparency from recording studio to my ears… and honestly I really don’t have time to waste to listen to poor and fake sound such the higly distorted one produced by low SINAD amplifiers, life is too short… who do really have?
looking forward
my best
L.
@amirm ... a strange question. Seeing that there are no listening impressions and this amp can actually change the sound (probably not for the better) is it possible to record some music played through this amp (into a dummy load) and the original and post that. A short excerpt may be all that is required.
Not many people get the chance to listen to such 'amplifier effect devices' and could be interested to hear what it does to the sound and or AB it.
I doubt that any amp could do that, but thanks for the amusing thought.Should be about the same. All these high power pentode tube amps were meant to be distortion generators so as to give them mellow character while being able to power most speaker loads. This is the classic kind of amp TAS reviewers (esp HP) went gaga over. The names roll off the tongue: VTL, CJ, Audio Research, Jadis, Line Magnetics, Mesa Boogie, Cary, Carver, Manley, and Convergent Audio Technology. Anything putting out over 200 WPC into 8 ohms and costing less than $10k was considered a bargain. I sincerely doubt even one of them could attain a SINAD over 60 which is something even my $160 Behringer A500 can handily surpass.
I made the plunge into tubes in the mid-late 80s in a smaller way, buying a CJ MV 50 to power my LS3/5as at the time. For a while I enjoyed it, but I began to notice it overlaid everything with a kind of honey like glaze while blurring details. In short, it made everything sound homogenized and sweeter than live which to me is the very definition of a colored component. I found my Hafler DH 200 was actually far more transparent. So eventually I traded in the CJ and haven't looked back since. Generally, I think, people who want their music to sound a certain way (and I literally mean all their music) might find a tube amp appealing. So if you're the kind of guy who wants Johnny Rotten to sound like Tony Bennett, Keith Richards to sound like Chet Atkins, Stravinsky to sound like Brahms, and Wendy O Williams to sound like Linda Ronstadt, then tubes may just be for you.
Your test amp is a good 15dB 'worse' in 2nd distortion and 20dB 'better' in 3rd though.Please feel free to try almost the same test you are asking for that I already posted at ASR in December 2020:
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ABX distortion test on a real-world tube preamplifier, about 2.7% THD
After a short rest, I have a new listening test. Now, the original file is tested against the file that was played and recorded through the real tube preamplifier and of course there was a DAC/ADC path to record the file. The link to test files is...www.audiosciencereview.com
What was the output source impedance of this amp, Amirm? I did not see it in your tests. This is an important spec for tube amps as it will determine the magnitude of Ohms-law frequency response variations when driving speakers due to their impedance which changes as a function of frequency.
I suspect that this amp would have a rather high output source impedance, which is part of what creates that "tube sound" that some love so well.
Yup, you've got it. I wouldn't buy this amp, but not because it would sound terrible.It cuts both ways - what you suggest is that one could spend $250 on a Crown amplifier and get indistinguishable sound against this $3500 product in DBT. So yes, this is why DBT is so anathema to audiophiles with more money than sense. I'm very much willing to pay more for the little conveniences and comforts of design, UI, good remote, more I/O options, room correction, tactile controls, energy efficiency, etc. and know that other than room correction, I'm paying for the little luxuries unrelated to "better" sound.
That's why it's named Audio Science Review and I mentally separate the technical review from the comment section. The forum members can quibble about it how it sounds and the subjective elements people prefer.This is exactly where this forum has issues. Everyone who has heard both or upgraded their ST to VTA knows the VTA sounds better. Its much faster, cleaner, and has better bass response. However, on the measurements it fails. There has got to be some sort of pulling the subjective side more heavily into this, with blind A/B work.
I am not saying the data is wrong, but there is clearly much more to the picture. The VTA amp sounds significantly better than many of these amps that rank higher on the list. IMO, there needs to be some effort in distinguishing what are (and why) the subjective elements people prefer.
IMO this is just another money grab off of Bob Carver's name, and nothing more. The 275 was aimed at the "lower end" of the audiophile market and this unit is aimed at the "higher tier" of folks who have more money to spend on boutique looking products. I'm sure two of these look cool in a doctor's/lawyer's/CEO's audio rack in the recreation room with an expensive pool table and other odds and ends of things to look at and play with.
Your test amp is a good 15dB 'worse' in 2nd distortion and 20dB 'better' in 3rd though.
4th harmonic is at an almost ? audible -60dB in this amp and good as inaudible -72dB
There is an OP transformer in place and 0.5ohm output R which can interact with speakers which is not entirely the same as a pre-amp.
So the Carver is worse and better at the same time.
Still your file may well be interesting for some readers for sure.
I can understand Amir lacking the time to set it up and making an attenuator (his backlog must be huge).
We seem to have more time and resources available to do such tests and tinkering.
I can set things up with various G1217 designs but would not be the same so never went through the trouble. Besides... people will complain about chosen music pieces anyway.
It would be great to have a standard, highly revealing reference track where there is consensus this is the best track for testing. Not even mentioning playback chains...
In 1958. But time travel backward is entirely in your cabeza. If you can time travel, why not back to harness and reins?Unless you are physically incapable of using a manual transmission (or it is an EV), a stick shift is *always* the right answer.
Definitely it is impossible with almost any natural music signal. And do not forget speakers.To be honest it’s nearly impossible to tell distortion with most instruments because they’re so inherently distorted on their own. You need crisp vocals or maybe some loud subbass with a lot of high order harmonics.