Success Stories - TUBE AMPS /TUBE INTERGRATED AMPS/ PREAMPS - NX STUDIO MONITORS

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Tyson

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I have a pair of Dennis Had Inspire MB12 monoblocks in my downstairs system, hooked up to my GR Research Super 7 speakers.  Even though I have a bunch of additional amps that are incredibly good, the MB12's never get kicked out of the system, not even temporarily.  They are THAT good.  I'm running mine with Tung Sol 7N7 driver tubes (with adapters), Mullard fat base 5AR4 and Psvane PH-EL34 tubes.  I have a ton of pentodes that I've tried in these amps, but found the Psvane tubes to really be a perfect match for my tastes.

NXSTUDIO-DRUMMER

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I have a pair of Dennis Had Inspire MB12 monoblocks in my downstairs system, hooked up to my GR Research Super 7 speakers.  Even though I have a bunch of additional amps that are incredibly good, the MB12's never get kicked out of the system, not even temporarily.  They are THAT good.  I'm running mine with Tung Sol 7N7 driver tubes (with adapters), Mullard fat base 5AR4 and Psvane PH-EL34 tubes.  I have a ton of pentodes that I've tried in these amps, but found the Psvane tubes to really be a perfect match for my tastes.

This amp here has piqued my interest. Although I'm not so sure, if the tube rolling flavors of sound will be as extensive as your MB12. Although it sounds promising, especially as a 25 watt SE amp, that would certainly drive the Studio's with no problem, along side with sealed or OB Subs, depending on room size.





Dragon Inspire QMB-25 Mono Block Amplifiers are a Single-ended, Class A, parallel quad connected design by the legendary, Dennis Had.
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25 watt design featuring the 6V6 Beam Power Vacuum Tube Mono Amplifiers. Inspired by music of the 6V6 vacuum tube amplifier of Dennis's youth, this design might be the best he has heard in 57 years since listening to his father's string quartet practice on Friday nights. Can you just imagine the sweetness of one of the world famous 6V6 vacuum tube in a quad set producing 25 watts? Just about any home listening room loudspeaker can be driven with ease with the QMB-25 mono-blocks. This is certainly an impressive statement for Dennis to make, considering he makes a legendary sounding 300B 805 amp!

BUILT BY HAND
Each amplifier is hand-built with point to point wiring by Dennis Had himself. Each amplifier is hand signed by him on the botom plate. Dennis considers this his form of art. Each amp is like a newly sculpted masterpiece. He personally listens to each amplifier, both in the shop listening room and his home listening room, before it is shipped out.  This is a passion he has held for over 59 years now ever since he built his first single-ended 6V6G hi-fi amplifier for the 7th grade science fair. He never dreamed that retirement was going to be so much fun!

The QMB-25 utilizes 4x 6V6 per amp. The 6V6 is a tube that can be operated well beyond it's published specifications. It works effortlessly in this design but with authority and control. Granted it is not going to be able to drive a huge pair of low-efficiency electrostatic speakers to peak demands. With regular to efficient sensitivity speakers, it will provide an amazing musical and warm sound. It is more on the neutral to warm side rather than laid-back lush sounding. Most of Dennis's designs over the years have had this tonality. The amplifier runs in Class A configuration. Class A offers a shorter simpler circuit to provide less signal deterioration. No Tube biassing is required.

The driver tube is a 6SN7. A very reliable and well regarded tube. It is arguably the best general purpose triode tube around. What we like to call a fun tube. Lots of choices (manufacturers) to tube role with providing a different tonality. Drew's personal favorite is the Sylvania Green Label 1950's 6SN7 GTB with a chrome dome.

The amplifier utilizes a 5AR4 for tube rectification. This tube essentially changes AC to DC for the power tubes to do their business. Like the 6SN7 this tube can have a good bit of difference in the tonality of the amplifier even though it is not in the signal path. Essentially it controls internal impedances when there are peak demands. It helps the amp clamp down on the speaker driver and provides the control of the sound. It affects attack, compression, dynamics and the sensitivity of the amp. It is an often a forgotten about piece of the puzzle. All tubes in the circuit essentially lend to the end result. The better the tubes the better the sound.

A NEW REVISION
Dennis Had recently developed a new circuit to prevent power supply distortions caused by the output tubes pushed into high and even higher non-linear levels of output power. These distortions show up as parasitic modulation products even on the smallest forms of the power supply. The actual sonic audible indications are sharp high-frequency lisps on vocals and instruments becoming strident and for a better word ear piercing. Dennis normally lets his ear be the design chain but in this case, he went to the test equipment spectrum displays for analysis of the power supply waveform along with the output waveform and harmonic content. His goal was to limit odd order products in the output signal and in turn, discovered the source of many overload distortions. He discovered that when an output device, in this case a vacuum tube, became non-linear it produced various spurious distortion products back fed into the power supply. In the case of a basic power supply supplying both the output devices, along with the driving front gain sections, he was able to detect these modulated parasitic products in the driver stage compounding the problem of output distortion of the final product.

He was surprised to find the nasties invading even the regulated power supply circuit used for the input driver tube and output tube screen grids. His thought process, (dangerous!), took time to figure out a high impedance decoupling device for the power supply between the output and input devices with a shared power source. Well, since he has lots of free time these days to think about circuits and not banks and employees … bingo … the lights went on. How about the good ole two-element vacuum rectifier vacuum tube. Yea, like good ole 5U4, 5R4, 5AR4 etc and variants …. use the vacuum between the elements and to transfer the positive DC voltage from the high B+ output tube potential to the lower (+250 VDC) regulated driver and screen grid supply. With some additional parts and old man soldering, it worked well. It can now drive the heck out of a single-ended amplifier and create a listenable signal even in complete overload with the 2nd order harmonic masking the third and fifth order nasties. How does it sound …. smooth, with honey flowing from the loudspeakers. Observing the amplifier operating on the spectrum analyzer with the new power supply circuit shows that no matter how hard we drove the new revised ” Inspire, the second harmonic remained predominate at full clipping. Oh, and the DC bias current did not budge with this new power supply circuit.

FEATURES
NEW Custom designed, hand wound 25 watt SE air gapped output transformers, left and right channel matched pair
Four (4) 6V6 tubes run in a parallel single-ended class A beam power mode
6N7/1635 Dual Medium Mu triode driver
Dual B+ power supplies on each amplifier ... one supply for the output tube anodes and the second B+ supply for the regulated power supply section
Fully shunt regulated, low impedance 6V6 tube screen grid B+ power supply
Fully shunt regulated, low impedance input tube driver, 6SL7 driver B+ power supply
Four (4) individual R/C auto bias circuits .. one for each 6V6 output tube auto bias
Large oil filed regulated power supply section filter cap
Filter choke Pi-Network power supply
Precision non-inductive metal film 3 watt resistors
Paper and oil filed, epoxy encapsulated, coupling and by-pass capacitors
Gold plated copper RCA input jacks
Gold plated copper output speaker posts
EE Teflon silver stranded 19 strand hook up wiring
Pure 99.9% Silver Teflon Insulated internal coax interconnect
100% duty cycle CCS power transformer designed for 120/240 VAC 50/60 Hz primary
.080 (12 ga) aluminum chassis and matching bottom plate
25 + watts per channel output with NOS RCA 5U4GB rectifier tube
Duty cycle of the QMB-25 MONO amplifiers is 24/7 in full operate conditions
Frequency response @ 1 watt 15 Hz to 45 Khz ± 1 dB
Frequency response @ 20 watts 23 Hz to 60 Khz ± 2 dB
61/2" wide by 13" deep and weighs 18 pounds
Clear coat powder coat finish

mkane

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Citation II




NXSTUDIO-DRUMMER

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Citation II


Are you running this classic amp alongside your Studio's?   I know Don Sach's restores these 70lb behemoth's. I've never had a chance to hear one though. I believe they run ultralinear approx. 65 watts per/ch. & triode mode approx. 34.5 watts/ch, with Don's Mod's.
Photo shot displaying his restoration of his point to point wiring of the Citation ll.




If you are using these with your studio's, give us some feeback on your exprerience. Also share what other associated equipment your using as well. All of us would enjoy hearing your shared expereince. I am, especially with the Citation ll Portion.

 I'm trying to arrange an audition with the Inspire Dragon QMB-25 Monoblocks, to see how the match up with my NX-Studio's.

For those who may be curious to learn a little more about this classic amp, I've attached a link below.

https://www.highfidelityreview.com/harman-kardon-citation-ii.html#:~:text=The%20Citation%20II%20is%20a,the%20instruments%20sharp%20and%20clear.
« Last Edit: 18 May 2022, 01:39 am by NXSTUDIO-DRUMMER »

Hobbsmeerkat

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I had some KT120 based monoblocks for a little while and I didnt personally care for how they sounded on the NX-Studios.
I dont really have a way to describe it, but something was just sorta "off" about it.

The X-Statiks, on the other hand, absolutely sang on both the KT120 and 300B monoblocks I tried them out on. That combo was impossible to turn down or off, tbh.

Opus Flatus

I have been using Dennis Had's Inspire Universal Amplifier and his LP 2030 preamplifier with my NX Studios. I love this combination. The LP2030 is an outstanding preamp, that uses 01A series tubes; it is a gem. This combo really makes my Studios sing.


mkane

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Are you running this classic amp alongside your Studio's?   I know Don Sach's restores these 70lb behemoth's. I've never had a chance to hear one though. I believe they run ultralinear approx. 65 watts per/ch. & triode mode approx. 34.5 watts/ch, with Don's Mod's.
Photo shot displaying his restoration of his point to point wiring of the Citation ll.



We use it with Super Minis & Wedgies + H frame subs. You would be hard-pressed to distinguish these apart from our Pass Lab clones, aleph J & Aleph 30 aside from the position of the volume knob. Very accurate amps. We have 2, the second wired triode mode.

Volume is controlled by a Dave Slagle TVC. The Gr's are probably our 10th set of speakers in the last few years. These are not going anywhere.


If you are using these with your studio's, give us some feeback on your exprerience. Also share what other associated equipment your using as well. All of us would enjoy hearing your shared expereince. I am, especially with the Citation ll Portion.

 I'm trying to arrange an audition with the Inspire Dragon QMB-25 Monoblocks, to see how the match up with my NX-Studio's.

For those who may be curious to learn a little more about this classic amp, I've attached a link below.

https://www.highfidelityreview.com/harman-kardon-citation-ii.html#:~:text=The%20Citation%20II%20is%20a,the%20instruments%20sharp%20and%20clear.

mkane

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 I'll add a bit more.We rotate amps in and out quite a bit and have been listening to the Citation II today. The mids are over the top compared to all the other amps we use. Just stellar. Deep, throaty and full of balls. We have a few different choices of amps. If you can get ahold of one highly recommended.

Don Sachs no longer restores these. There not that difficult to work on.

NXSTUDIO-DRUMMER

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Thanks for the update  :thumb:

Frank M

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Greetings Tube Lovers,

I have had tube-based electronics in my Hi-Fi system going back to 1960 or so.  I dabbled in solid state equipment in the 70's when the mantra was "tubes are dead". But, solid state phase didn't last long for me.  I invested some hard earned money in the tube designs of a new company, conrad-johnson.  I had a PV-6 preamp and MV50 power amp combo for many years and used them with a variety of speakers.  For me tubes were the answer.

Today I have a vintage pair of c-j PV-12 preamp and Premier 11A power amp at the heart of my Hi-Fi system.  Though, they are 25 years old, they make my collection of jazz and classical records come alive.  Both units are as-original with the exception of a couple of tube changes over the years.

For the last year I worked on constructing and finishing a pair of NX-Studio speakers.  (I have more on the details of this labor of love elsewhere:  https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=181645.0)  A couple of months ago I connected the completed NX-Studios into my system and was amazed from the start with the listening experience they provided.  They sound better every time I power up the equipment. 

The 70 Watt RMS/channel Premier 11A seems a perfect match for the NX-Studios.  They fill my listening room (11X14X10) with great music when the PV-12 is dialed to the 11or 12 o'clock position.






I'd be glad to answer any questions about my set-up.  Some additional details on what you see in the above photo can be found in this post:
https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=181645.0

Regards,
Frank


Opus Flatus

Nice set up Frank M! Great job on the finishing of NX Studios. What kind of subs are you using?

Frank M

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Nice set up Frank M! Great job on the finishing of NX Studios. What kind of subs are you using?

Thank you!

The two subs are Rythmik F-12G subwoofers (GR Research paper cone driver and 370PEQ amp). Set up and positioned as Rythmik recommended, they have integrated well with the NX-Studios.  I never notice them when listening - which is the best complement I can give a subwoofer.

Some info on other system components can be found in another post:

https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=181645.0

Frank