0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 2197 times.
Darren, Ron, David and Phil,Ron, I believe your comments about the ECC189 are absolutely spot on - there is no doubt that the major step up in detail of the LF over the AKSA mandates use of the 189 tube because it adds just a smidgin of warmth. There is absolutely no distortion in the Lifeforce at all; it's incredibly low, around 0.01% at close to full power, at least five times lower than the AKSA.Cheers,Hugh
Andy,Absolutely every TLP and GK1 ever sold came with the 6ES8/ECC189!!Cheers,Hugh
The bass is definitely tighter and more pronounced but I don't think as much as others have noted`- not sure if this is because I have Ellis 1801b monitors or possibly an artifact of running pure silver output wires (anyone want to comment on this? I almost posted this question in the IC discussion, wondering if the two silver wires with cotton sleeving should be twisted- they are not in my setup).cheers alljim
hi andythanks for the response.. Oooops I meant silver wires for the INPUT RCA to the LF board. I thought I had read elsewhere that silver was good for mids and highs but wasn't sure about the bass. And I wasn't sure if the silver could be twisted with the cotton sleeves. jim
Quote from: fajimr on 8 Dec 2006, 04:05 amhi andythanks for the response.. Oooops I meant silver wires for the INPUT RCA to the LF board. I thought I had read elsewhere that silver was good for mids and highs but wasn't sure about the bass. And I wasn't sure if the silver could be twisted with the cotton sleeves. jimHi jim,I hope these silver input wires are "4 or 5 nines" silver and not just "jewellery grade silver" (sterling silver)!! If your silver wires are very thin then twisting them will gain you more bass. Why, you ask! Well, I was able to prove this to my satisfaction, so now all my internal wire pairs (between RCAs and PCBs etc.) are twisted.You see, as well as the phono stage in my GK-1, I have a non-AKSA phono stage. I modded this by replacing the PS with one of Hugh's PSes. But while doing this, I thought I would replace the VdH coax which the mfr had used between the PCB and the output RCAs with 30g wire ... as I thought very thin wire was good, sonically! Then I was able to do a direct comparison between my modded phono stage and a stock one ... yes, it was obvious the new PS made it sound much better but there was a distinct lack of bass! My dealer mate took the top off the case to have a look and proclaimed "There's the culprit ... it's that bloody thin wire you used!". So he removed the 30g wire and put in some fairly average coax and we compared it again against the dealer's stock phono stage.Lo and behold, there was now bass in my phono stage! The reason evidently is that very thin wire does not have enough mass to stop itself being physically moved when the signal goes through it (is this the "triboelectric effect? ) ... and this movement "loses" bass!! Twisting the two wires together will make the pair stiffer and of higher mass than each individual wire ... as a result, no bass is lost! So yes, twist your input wires together.Regards,Andy
Hi Andy,Very interesting bit about wire twisting. What about braiding - does that give the same effect?I'm about to rewire my GK-1R with pure silver wire (yep, lots of nines), and I'm considering braiding the pot wires .....
Quote from: Jens on 8 Dec 2006, 07:25 pmHi Andy,Very interesting bit about wire twisting. What about braiding - does that give the same effect?I'm about to rewire my GK-1R with pure silver wire (yep, lots of nines), and I'm considering braiding the pot wires .....Hi Jens,Yes, braiding would produce a "more massive & stiffer" structure than the wires individually ... but you need at least 3 wires to braid! Do you use 'hot', 'return' & earth from the pot (I forget!)?Regards,Andy