0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 11620 times.
My only point here is if you think an extra few watts from the Mini Torri or Rachael are going to provide a good bit more volume, well they don't really.The Mini Torri and Rachael are fine sounding amps, I could be happy with either one. When you hear all three Back to Back to Back in the same room with the same speakers the differences are more than a bit subtle. The Zen UFO has a bit more Speed, Detail and Transparency which I prefer. The Mini Tori and Rachel are a bit warmer with not quite as much fine detail and I'm sure some will prefer the warmer sound. The Mini Torri is a tube roller and tweakers dream if you are into that.
Over the last dozen years, I have owned the Omega Super 3i (narrow cabinet), the 3T, and now the Super 7 MK2. I found that tubes made the biggest difference with the original Super 3i's. The Super 3i's play noticeably louder than the 3T's and tubes could also tame some of the honking I would hear on vocals with the 3i's. The 3T's play smoother than the original Super 3i's, but I thought the 3i's had more energy, whether it was with solid state (Marantz 2240 receiver) or tube (Prima Luna PL 2 integrated) amplification.The Super 7's MK2 offer the best of both worlds ... play smooth, loud, fast and exciting. Using a Rega Brio R integrated as I have added a turntable to the mix.Rich
Are you referring to the SE84UFO2 that is currently on their website? If so, that would probably be my limit as far as pricing goes. Maybe I can find one used. Thanks for the recommendation.
For kicks, I tried a recently acquired SE84UFO (this was a 2013 SE84ZS (Select), before being upgraded with the new UFO transformers by Decware a few months ago) with its whopping 2 wpc. It truly sounded fantastic, and I can see what all the raves and fuss are about, but on my Omega Alnico monitors (in a 20x25+ room), it just isn't enough for me .... I guess I like to play at higher levels, where peaks will come in at 92-95db. I bet 8wpc would be fine, as is my current 18wpc SET amp.I will try the UFO on a pair of Omega 3i (RS5s) in a few weeks, and we'll see how it does there. With a smaller room, more efficient and smaller drivers, and a couple of subwoofers, it might be just fine... Otherwise..... bye, bye...
Hi Rob,Have been posting here as time permits on how I got to tinkering with the LOFOB's:http://www.decware.com/cgi-bin/yabb22/YaBB.pl?num=1454424951
pstrisik wrote:Very interesting DBC. Wiring parallel, your sensitivity goes up 3db or so I believe. That alone would boost gain and dynamics.It is surprising that running both full range ends up with a smooth response (by ear anyway). You would think the overlap in FR would create a mid-bass peak. Given that they are wired together, maybe there is some principle that would explain how the electricity evens out, kinda like water. But that's wild speculation!As you may have seen, I've gone the midbass route (http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=134489.0), more like your original approach with HSU's. I am using separate amps and the crossover for the SAMs is prior to the amp powering it, so one step better than crossovers between amp and speaker anyway...........Peter
I've done literally thousands of test tone & frequency sweep measurements over the years. I've found that with adjustments, tweaks, extra gear etc. I've been able to achieve flat in room response. Unfortunately flat in room response does not by itself necessarily translate into an engaging musical experience. I'm sure there are many speakers with multiple drivers that have a much flatter frequency response compared to the Omega SAM's. Common sense would say flatter is better but once you listen to the single driver Omega it's just not the case. Ultimately the human brain decides if it will accept the illusion as a live performance.
When it comes to Low Frequencies (below 500 hz), Humans have honed this sense over thousands of years. Our ability to avoid predators and locate prey for survival depended on a keen ability to use sound for location purposes. Because of this keen sense of hearing our brains can quickly tell the difference between Live Music and something else. The SAM's are often described as having a cohesion (to act as one) in it's presentation. I think it is the cohesion in the presentation that does a better job of selling the illusion to the brain? All frequencies from top to bottom blend together seamlessly.
I think the difficulty with Sub's is that the brain quickly senses a loss of cohesion. The brain in some cases senses a second sound source (crossover set to high) and can sense a difference in volume between Sub and Monitors around the crossover point (Sub volume set to high). Take a typical application where the Sub crossover is set at 80hz. A Bass gutiar can play from 40hz up to over 1,000hz. Sub crossover & volume have to be set just right to maintain a cohesive transition between Sub and Monitors.
On the other hand, with my LOFOB's running Full Range (40 to 3500 hz) they present a cohesive presentation throughout the entire Bass & Mid Bass Region. My SAM's for reasons I don't understand just blend in perfectly. Nor can I explain why there is not a noticeable Mid-Bass peak (no perceived Mid-Bass shout)? I suspect that because the LOFOB's are Di-Pole (firing forward & rearward) That a lot of the acoustic energy is being dispersed more uniformly into the entire listening space. I would have thought this would create a more defuse sound stage but vocals & instruments seem to have noticeably improved focus? So right now I seem to have more questions than answers but I'm enjoying my music more than ever.
The lower you go for the xo point the less it all matters. Subs tend to have high Mms, high Le, etc... basically they are all wrong for matching to drivers like Omegas but it still works out at very low frequencies as long as the overall design is competent (NOT a given!).
Well, some additional time with this amp and I think I'm all sold on tubes. Love this amp. This has got me thinking: Since I can still return the current amp and only be out about 20 bucks, should I get a different, nicer amp instead of investing in tube rolling?I saw a Dennis Had Inspire power amp for sale under 1k. I could buy a schiit SYS to use as a pre for now, and get a better pre later. Any thoughts? Since he doesn't have a website, what is the best way to figure RMS power for this thing?
The Dennis Had amp will want a preamp to sound its best. For under $1k, here are some excellent alternatives:https://www.audiogon.com/listings/tube-eico-hf-81-completely-restored-2016-02-13-integrateds-97207-portland-orhttp://www.decware.com/newsite/SE84CKC.htmlhttps://www.audiogon.com/listings/tube-decware-zkit1-se84diy-2016-02-15-amplifiers-88081-chaparral-nm
What are you upgrading to Squirrelman?