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...But, after hearing the Sig 70 for a few hours last night, I now realize that my Clari-T was the weak link in my system. The Sig 70 has by far brought the biggest single leap forward. I will hold off for now on the details (too early??) except to say that Vinnie can forget about me sending my Sig 70 back.
. . . About 70 hours of low-powered play on mine so far. Last night was the first time I've had them draw me in. For me, I can't have "crinkling paper" on cymbals and still be fully engrossed. At first, I heard this and attributed it to my Toshiba DVD player as source. Well, last night it was gone and got even better once I got the Squeezebox running again.My brain must be adapting.
Can someone explain the resistor across the binding posts break-in method? Is that one R for each channel? How big should the resistors be (for a Sig 30)? Thank you in advance.
everyone seems to say laid back and warm. good for jazz, etc... but does it have slam? does the Sig 30 have slam? good for rock?
At t=0 my brain thought the amp was unlistenable, at 30 hours it thought it sounded "okay" and at 70 hours it started to like what it was hearing.
About 70 hours of low-powered play on mine so far.
Not to take anything away from the Clari-T, which is a serious over-acheiver in it's own right, but the Sig amp has brought my system to an entirely different level. It's pure magic, "involving" and "musical" in a way that lets the music draw me into a sort of trancelike state where everything else just kind of drifts away.
He describes a more laid-back, warmer sound than with his chip amps which are "jumpier" - which would correlate with my take on the Sig 30. The rest will be for him to share when the time comes..
But, after hearing the Sig 70 for a few hours last night, I now realize that my Clari-T was the weak link in my system. The Sig 70 has by far brought the biggest single leap forward. I will hold off for now on the details (too early??) except to say that Vinnie can forget about me sending my Sig 70 back.
I'll have to concur with the other posts here - these sound great out of the box, and keep improving. right now, i'm mostly "playing" them for burn-in purposes, as opposed to "listening", but every once in a while i can't help but be drawn into the listening room by some musical phrase that just sounds stunning and demands my attention. these are truly the real deal!
Wow...that is quite a change . I can't say with confidence that everyone will experience such an extreme change from burn-in, but I DO recommend putting on the burn-in hours like you have done. Thanks for sharing the changes that you have heard with regards to this.
Yeah, maybe I'm alone on this but when I first powered the amp up the sound was just really harsh. I'm not sure why, but the highs with my Beyma tweeters were just not tolerable the first day.Gary
What else can I say but that I'm a happy camper, and getting happier by the day.Thanks Vinnie, the 70s coupled to the Revolutions is a really special combination and I'm sure I'm going to be floored when everything is settled in.
Vinnie, you have built what I think is the coolest amps I have seen.
Thanks Vinnie for getting these to me safe & sound. Awesome packaging made sure these were flawless when I opened the boxes.
Well, I got my DAC and preamp back last night and Blammo! - riveting!! The difference was unbelievable. This tells me the amps are very transparent and will show rise to the level of the source.
So to burn-in Signature 30 with resistors, one would use half of that for Sig 70 monoblocks? 8ohm 5W resistor for each speaker output?-JanJ