0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 15920 times.
Nice setup, Phil. Do you know what mods were done to your amp?
Link was posted earlier - http://tweakaudio.com/EVS-2/Voyager_amp_mods.html Ric was originally going to charge $450 vs. $500 (for the mod)
I've had Ric mod a few things in the past."The stock feet are not great (soft rubbery sounding). Please upgrade the feet to spring things or other better feet. I love the best Mad Scientist feet ($300 a set plus shipping). However, people are getting good results from these cheap spring thangs"I just noticed this. Great minds must think alike b/c I did settle on one of those "cheap spring thangs" for the GaN amp, albeit I currently use only one spring per foot. (old photo below shows 3 springs per foot). 1221211728_HDR by drjlo2, on Flickr
One thing I did work out is that the Peachtree Gan400 does have a different power supply board from the LSA Voyager 350. That would account for the differences in specs between the two units.
You have a link concerning the discussion on the different power supplies? All I see on ASR is guys saying the LSA and the mini GAN not meeting published specs.
They really seem to hate these amps over on ASR, especially the LSA! Wow!
The ASR people seem to really love the Hypex based amps. Probably because they measure incredibly well. But here's the thing that I feel like they don't give enough consideration to - the amount of feedback needed to get those great measurements. Most solid state output devices are not linear. So they need help (feedback) to make them acceptably linear. SS amps require a fair bit, while a lot of the class D amps require a ton of feedback. IME, the more feedback you use, the less open and more closed off the amp ends up sounding. So you end up with an amp that has amazing grip on the speaker (and incredible measurements), but an overall sound that is percussive but airless. Almost constipated sounding. Which is why so many people prefer tubes - they are much more linear devices, and require much less (or zero) feedback to measure acceptably. You end up with worse measurements and less grip on the speaker, but an overall more natural and less constipated sound.