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That amp gave by far the most enjoyable musical presentation (but unfortunately really needed to be at least twice as powerful! ) but IMO this cannot be explained by any measurements of distortion, frequency response etc.
By the way, lest anyone get the idea that I've something against wood chassis, here's a little transformer coupled passive "preamp" I designed and built for Mike LaFevre of MagneQuest.Front and rear panels are made of solid walnut from a tree that was cut down on Mike's property in upstate Pennsylvania. The subpanels the RCAs are mounted on are made of tempered hardboard. Top, side and bottom panels are also made of tempered hardboard, covered on the outside with leather and lined on the inside with cork. The dowels connecting the front and rear panels are made of phenolic impregnated paper tubing and covered with leather. The only metal in the chassis are the brass screws which mount the subpanels to the rear panel and the screws that hold the front and rear panels together. All screws are machine screws which screw into threaded holes which are tapped directly into the walnut.se
Georgeous! (and the gear looks good, too! )
That's a pretty mature looking design for a one-off.
Even the logo looks like it's been through a few iterations.
Nice work.
In terms of your single ended triode, the reason you like it is explainable in terms of standard measurements. It has lots of even order distortion in relation to high order products. I think there is a fair amount of evidence to support that people can enjoy having high levels of even order distortion added. Hell... .I have some 300Bs and I love them for female vocals, stringed instruments and much of what I listen to on a regular basis. If you listen to a full range of music though you will find that they have some warts also. In terms of picking what warts you want to live with, that is a personal choice. I don't hold that against anyone as I like a little second order flavor in my playback system also. Clear as mud?
Very cool looking part Steve.
Steve,This is beautiful work, you are a real artisan!Thanks for sharing....
Quote from: AKSA on 6 Nov 2007, 12:08 amSteve,This is beautiful work, you are a real artisan!Thanks for sharing....You're welcome. And thank you.You know, I've been thinking. We can take this wooden chassis movement to a whole other level beside sonics and aesthetics. It can also be aimed toward environmentalists. We can promote the wooden chassis movement as high end audio's carbon sequestration program. se
You know, I've been thinking. We can take this wooden chassis movement to a whole other level beside sonics and aesthetics. It can also be aimed toward environmentalists. We can promote the wooden chassis movement as high end audio's carbon sequestration program. se
I agree.... I'll make the rest of my loudspeakers out of wood products so that they have a neutral carbon footprint. Of course then someone will come along and say they sound better made out of aluminum.
But I thought greenies were into planting trees ... not cutting them down to make speaker cabinets or amp cases from?
That's changing in light of global warming. Now wood (from renewable, sustainable sources of course) is being looked at more favorably by environmentalists as a building material. You see, you plant the trees, they suck carbon out of the atmosphere, then you cut 'em down and build stuff with 'em, which, unless the stuff you build with them burns up (or down as the case may be), sequesters the carbon from those trees. Then you plant more trees to replace the ones you cut down and they suck up still more carbon and so on.se
In terms of your single ended triode, the reason you like it is explainable in terms of standard measurements. It has lots of even order distortion in relation to high order products. I think there is a fair amount of evidence to support that people can enjoy having high levels of even order distortion added. Hell... .I have some 300Bs and I love them for female vocals, stringed instruments and much of what I listen to on a regular basis. If you listen to a full range of music though you will find that they have some warts also. In terms of picking what warts you want to live with, that is a personal choice. I don't hold that against anyone as I like a little second order flavor in my playback system also.
I remember reading of some experiments with digitally simulating the 'distortions' of valves with DSP. Evidently golden eared audiophiles could not tell the difference between the DSP version going through a transistor amp and a well respected valve amp. DSP seems to have taken off for guitar amps. I suspect, due to the subtleties involved, for Hi Fi, exact reproduction will prove elusive.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valve_sound#Intentional_creation_of_distortion'However, other audible differences in sound have proven difficult to define or measure, and it is difficult to explain these sound differences in words as the vocabulary available to describe sound is rather limited -even though the underlying sonic effects are real. Audiophiles often use words like 'warm', 'liquid', 'smooth' and 'midrange magic' to describe tube amplifiers' sound.'ThanksBill