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sts, I have have been mistaken but here is the quote from Absolute Sound "This UNRIVALED class-D amplifier is a hands down winner; and no, not just in the "for the money" category. It may well be the best sounding amplifier I've ever heard! No foolin'." But who knows I'm looking to see if there are any other contenders that I should be looking at.
Gary, I have a tube pre and tube DAC so I wanted see if I could get more resolution from a class D amp but still have the tubes to buffer the sterile sound so to speak. It sounds good on paper but have to try it in my system to see if this is a good idea.
I have owned or heard almost all of the major "digital" amps (Rowland, NuForce, CI Audio, Bel Canto, Audio Research, H20, Spectron, etc...) and NONE of them sounding like a SET amp!!! NOT EVEN CLOSE!!!Whether any of the above would be preferred over a SET amp or a more conventional amp (ss or tube) is a whole different subject.George
Well said George. I think digital amps provide a hell of a lot of performance for the money. You are hard pressed to find a better amp anywhere close to the $ spent (for reasonably priced ones that is). However, are they the ultimate? I'd say not, but much depends on what you consider the ultimate (synergy, tastes, etc, etc). I like the UcD amps a lot, but I have preferred other amps in my system more, typically those cost a lot more. I know Channel Island does some things to the front end beyond the stock UcD implementation. I haven't heard theirs, so it could perform a bit above ones I have heard....I don't know.I have many ideas still up my sleeve for playing with the UcD modules since they offer so much for so little. I even have napkin sketches of a differential amp stage with voltage gain to replace the dual opamp in the front end of the UcD. It will be tube based of course. I'm researching whether the output stage in the UcD can have its gain lowered practically. The applications notes mention this as a possible improvement (if only theoretical). In which case it will become a Class D power buffer and all the voltage gain will come from the tube stage, which tubes are born to do. The idea is simply enough, but the devil is in the details.
Well said George. I think digital amps provide a hell of a lot of performance for the money. You are hard pressed to find a better amp anywhere close to the $ spent (for reasonably priced ones that is). However, are they the ultimate? I'd say not, but much depends on what you consider the ultimate (synergy, tastes, etc, etc). I like the UcD amps a lot, but I have preferred other amps in my system more, typically those cost a lot more.
Quote from: JoshK on 30 Nov 2006, 12:24 amWell said George. I think digital amps provide a hell of a lot of performance for the money. You are hard pressed to find a better amp anywhere close to the $ spent (for reasonably priced ones that is). However, are they the ultimate? I'd say not, but much depends on what you consider the ultimate (synergy, tastes, etc, etc). I like the UcD amps a lot, but I have preferred other amps in my system more, typically those cost a lot more. I know Channel Island does some things to the front end beyond the stock UcD implementation. I haven't heard theirs, so it could perform a bit above ones I have heard....I don't know.I have many ideas still up my sleeve for playing with the UcD modules since they offer so much for so little. I even have napkin sketches of a differential amp stage with voltage gain to replace the dual opamp in the front end of the UcD. It will be tube based of course. I'm researching whether the output stage in the UcD can have its gain lowered practically. The applications notes mention this as a possible improvement (if only theoretical). In which case it will become a Class D power buffer and all the voltage gain will come from the tube stage, which tubes are born to do. The idea is simply enough, but the devil is in the details. FWIW, my favorite out of all the amps I listed in my previous post was the CI Audio D-200's.Why?They simply did the best job out of the lot in producing music and making me want to sit and listen without picking things apart. It probably helped that there were no digital nasties, sterile sound, or unbalanced presentation to muck things up and distract me.George