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I've owned both tube and solid state gear over the years, and my own ears haven't given me any particular reason to prefer tubes over solid state. I've realized that a good component is due to design and build quality, regardless of whether it is tube or SS.
Hi Freo 1,I haven't used a tube amplifier in my home system but I've listened to many at dealers and friends homes. I found that I've had to spend quite a bit of money to obtain really high performance from SS amps which satisfied my listening tastes. I almost bought a tube amplifier whilst I was in Malaysia but I decided not to due to shipping costs etc. I now have 84db speakers and use a 300 watt amplifier to run them so a tube amplifier won't be suitable for my situation.RegardsRodBtw the Dockers were runners up for the 2013 AFL premiership and lost by one 15 points. Inaccurate kicking cost them the match.
Do you think higher voltage tube setups sound best?
However some very inefficient speakers, like electrostats, seem to perform much better with high current SS amps. No, they don't have all of the bloom that a typical tube amp might provide, but they do have control and more slam with SS. Now this really makes no sense with high efficiency horns - quite the opposite is true in fact, and tubes seem to rule here.I think first you have to start with the speakers, then match an amp that works with that speaker style. There is certainly more than one way to skin a cat.
If the stats can make bloom, it's possible to provide the type of amplification that'll do it.
I think you maybe missed the most important: Distortion pattern.