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Hugh, I have listened to quite a lot of vinyl this weekend, and am convinced that this amp favours CD/DVD, unlike the 55N+ which favoured vinyl. I have a lot of listening to do before I can honestly say that vinyl sounds better. I am not convinced that the LF55 is run in yet, and I have a lot of AKSonic adjustments to make before I get the preferred position and settings. The sound is natural and extremely detailed, more so than the 55N+. The lows are more involved with extra grunt, so to speak. There is definitely more separation from left to right and center stage is just lovely. I have brought forward my sitting position slightly and this does help to surround me with or pull me into the sound. It is a totally new listening experience and different to the 55N+, which is still in my memory, so I am comparing all the time. At this stage I think the 55N+ is slightly warmer and valve like. As I said the LF55 does need more time to settle in.The LF55 is a classy amp and a totally new listening experience for me. There is a lot of power there and detail at low volume is very impressive. Quite seriously I don't think, at this stage, that anyone would need to consider bi or even tri-amping with the LF55. In a nutshell, I think the LF55 is just great and satisfies all my hifi dreams, but I would never speak negatively about the 55N+.
The LF resolution is so fine that the notion of warmth is probably not relevant, given that in most 'warm' amps (read 'tube') there is usually an attendant loss of detail, however slight.....The more I get into this technology, the more I think the amp should be utterly transparent and the preamp an analogue music processor, adding a little color to 'humanise' the sound. By 'humanise' I mean somehow work on the music so that it grabs your heart - brings out the tingling spine and the tear to the cheek. Of course, this cannot be measured, but you'll know it when you hear it...... I realise this is not purist, and many object, seeking the holy grail of low measured distortion. But in a global feedback amp the distortions introduced are not musical as they are high order, massively objectionable the higher you go, and inevitable because of intermodulation through the feedback network. So, the designer must either mask them with a smidgin of H2/H3, or banish them altogether from the power amp and add the 'organic' sound in the preamp - which is zero feedback, all Class A circuitry where distortions created are low order and benign musically.I'm sure there are those who would disagree vehemently, let 'em eat cake I say, these are just my conclusions and I'm into what works, not religious argument!!
Else use a Lifeforce to get that detail/energy/immediacy/image and tailor the sound in the preamp (GK-1 or other).This is certainly the most cost effective method to get to the sound you want.
It just seems to effortlessly do exactly a little better than I expected. With the 55N+ there are places in many parts of the tracks I like where I would sort of hold my breath because the amp gave they impression it just might not quite make it (I am talking big dynamic transitions, or vocals like Jeff Buckley). The LF55 is just effortless over these parts, it never hints it might struggle. I find this adds immensly to my enjoyment of my music, I just know when I play the album it is going to be great! It renders instruments and voice with an uncanny accuracy but is never harsh or tiring, to the contrary it is a pleasure to listen to entire albums. Violins sound organic and alive with emotion as they do in real life, voices have edge and emotion. The LF55 has a quality which I find hard to put into words and I have rarely heard on many other amps, something alive that allows the music to flow.
With 750 albums on Random Mix I've never had so much audio fun. Random Mix makes much better choices than I do.Cheers,