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Dunno guys I experienced something similar with some large ear-canal headphones....
Love your avatar
Can't believe nobody has asked what speakers you're using. Tonal imbalance with tube amps, first thing I'd think is a speaker with an impedance curve that doesn't mesh with the amp. Tube amps are in general, much more sensitive to impedance swings than solid state. When comparing the amps, do you notice a tonal change between the two?
Tonal imbalance with tube amps...That is a new one to me. Then you indicate that tube amps are less adept at handling impedance swings? Actually they are more adept as they are voltage regulated by nature, whereas SS isn't.
ya nice avatar....my speakers are Dynaudio audience 72se. a discontinued model. the impedence is 4 ohms. I didn't know the "impedance curve" is a method of matching amps to speakers? where would I find that data? what is the comparable data from the amp manufacturer be?
There isn't any as there's more to it than just the output impedance of the amplifier:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Output_impedancewhere you would be looking to keep the "damping factor" above some minimum (let's say 200-300 for starters).Additional factors such as design limits on the max current / voltage that the amp could deliver, thermal behaviour, etc. will practically make it impossible to evaluate based on the "output impedance" alone.So your best bet is to take what they call in the article "rated output impedance" and compare with the speaker's impedance curve, make sure that the speaker has an impedance above the amplifier's "rated" one.Some people say it's ok if the speaker has some impedance dips for a few frequencies ("it won't fry anything"), some others say it's not ("won't fry but it will distort on those frequencies"). Your call on this one.
A few years ago a freind who's a vintage tube specialist and I discovered the magic of 60's small tube amps(notably Scotts). These small EL-34 output tubes had startling low bass,unexpectedly clean and punchy,together with a soaring treble airiness. The bass and treble of the famous big tube amps(EL-34,KT-88's,6550's.ect) sounded soggy by comparison.
From Mark Korda's post: I built a Scott LK-48B integrated tube amp kit in my teens and still have it in storage. I remember it sounded better than any other amps I heard back in the day. I've bought 3 more of that basic design factory built off eBay the past few years and have one almost recapped and with some resistor replacements - need to replace the selenium rectifier with a diode bridge and make following resistor changes to compensate for the higher bridge voltage output. May have to wait for retirement to get all this done, but look forward to the Scott EL-34 sound.