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TanJust curious - how does your BYOB sound compared to your modified Sun 2A3? Which do you prefer?Best RegardsDennis
I do think you can get very good bass from tubes, but it needs more careful matching with the speaker.
But 8 300Bs? That's a lot of money for the tubes even for JJ, never mind WE!
I was much like Wayner - preferring tube preamp driving SS amps - the 3 dimensional nature was good. But 10 seconds in to hearing a SS pre-amp driving mono tube amps and I was sold on that combo instantly. In my case I went from a Dynaco PAS-4 (tube preamp) happily passing it to Odyssey Khartago Extreme amps to something I've even happier about now. It has nothing to do with Odyssey offerings - which are superb SS amps (the best SS amps that I ever owned)The lowest level signals, especially if you enjoy vinyl (typically, 1/20th to 1/400th or less voltage than CD outputs) beg for as clean a step-up as possible. If you pass that to a capable tube amp(s) (that is, one that is capable of driving your speakers with adequate headroom for peak passages) you have ultra-quiet step-up that can only be achieved with solid state with the purity and 3 dimensionality that tubes bring to your music. SS preamps seem to provide a 'backbone' of sorts to the music that I haven't been able to approximate with tube preamps.....even those that have been solid state regulated.If you have tube amps that are either tube or solid state regulated (not rectified), you achieve considerably more chest-thumping bass 'tightness' that is usually the domain of solid state amps.If you add a powered subwoofer(s) to the mix - you're further relieving your tube amp of the heaviest bass duties and you can achieve some smile-inducing bass heft and 'tightness' back into the sonic realm So, SS preamp and tube amps for me - an unlikely electrical match as tubes typically step-up voltages better and solid state better develops current (all the better to drive most complex speaker loads). The more you simplify your speaker loads, the more tolerant of tube amps your system will be - and you can enjoy the excellent pairing of a SS pre-amp and tube amp(s) more completely If you're into vinyl especially, you might want to turn your Odyssey / Candela up on it's conventional head and try it...I've never been happier My current system:Bell Dual Mono Integrateds (10 watt tube units powering 6.5" mid-woofers and tweeter)Mitubishi DA-C20 working as SS phono preamp and providing AM/FM Gallo TR-1 (100 watt) subwoofer (dedicated below 80hz)Linaeum Tower speakers (80hz and up)CD is run straight into the Bell's....the added liquidity of all tube seems to benefit CD playback.
Gary / lazydays, It's all about the speaker your driving. The Linaums have but an inductor on the woofer and the simplest of simple crossover on the tweeter. Not much current, a significant betterment that a solid state amp brings to the audio 'party', necessary to drive them. Simpler really is an understatement when using tube amps driving speakers successfully. No crossover whatsoever are an even more tempting option in the future John
Solid state amps very little warm-up time/effect compared to tubes.
1.Easier on highs and mid (less fatigue-especially important if ordinary cd is format of choice since cd is almost always lacking in depth and highs are often bright,edgy)
Bob Reynolds wrote:"This is a generalization, but the biggest difference to me between SS and tube amps is the output impedance. Tube amps typically have a much higher output impedance which will have a much larger interaction with the speaker. Thus, finding an amp/speaker pair is much more difficult."For high output impedance amps, we have a case of the tail wagging the dog -- the impedance curve of the speaker determines the frequency response of the amp."This is partially correct, and I can certainly understand how the situation looks this way. It did to me too until I started designing loudspeakers intended to work well with a wide range of amplifiers, and found out things aren't as simple as they seemed. I had assumed that a solid state amp outputs the same power regardless of the impedance curve, overlooking the commonly-known characteristic of solid state amps doubling their rated power out into a 4 ohm load and halving it into a 16 ohm load. You see, most solid state amps approximate a constant voltage source - in other words, the wattage they put out goes up as the impedance of the load goes down. The output power varies inversely with a speaker's impedance swings. Let's look at an example:
Suppose we have a speaker with a 32 ohm peak in the bass region, then the impedance falls to 4 ohms at 200 Hz, then rises to 16 ohms in the 3 kHz crossover region, then remains at about 8 ohms above that. I'd probably call this a "6 ohm" speaker. Let's look at what happens when this speaker is driven by a solid state amp, putting out 2.83 volts (equal to 1 watt into an 8-ohm load):Into that 32-ohm peak in the bass region, the amp is putting out 1/4 watt. Then it's putting out 2 watts at 200 Hz, 1/2 watt at 3 kHz, and 1 watt above that. Assuming the speaker is aimed at solid state amp owners, it's up to the designer to take all of this into account - and this is routinely done, no problem. But, my point is this: Typical solid state amps DO NOT put out the same power regardless of the speaker's impedance! It only seems that way because most speakers are designed to be used with solid state amps.
Tube amps (and transformer-coupled solid state amps) usually approximate a power source - that is, they deliver nearly constant wattage regardless of the speaker's impedance curve (as long as the speaker's impedance stays within the proper range for that amplifier). Such an amplifier would deliver approximately the same power across the roller-coaster impedance curve described above, and probably would not be a good choice with that speaker assuming it was "voiced" for a voltage-source amplifier. However, some speakers are at their best with an amplifier that acts as a power source - including electrostats and many high-efficiency speakers.
A few tube amps (and recent Nelson Pass designs) have very low damping factors (high output impedances) and approximate a current source - that is, their power output increases into a high impedance load and decreases into a low impedance load, but in practice they're usually about halfway between being a power source and a current source. In the real world, we might expect a high output impedance tube amp to deliver 2 watts into that bass impedance peak, 1/2 watt into the lower midrange dip, 1.5 watts into the midrange peak and 1 watt at high frequencies. Note that this is a 4-to-1 difference into the bass impedance peak compared with the solid state amp's output. I have measured this much difference (6 dB) on bass impedance peaks when going from a high damping factor solid state amp to a low damping factor OTL tube amp. This can be either a blessing or a curse, depending on the speaker's design.You may have realized that the foregoing implies the smoother a speaker's impedance curve, the wider variety of amplifiers it will work well with. Such has been my experience.So to recap, the power output of a typical constant-voltage-approximating solid state amp actually changes significantly depending on the speaker's impedance, but most modern speakers are designed with this in mind. Still, some of the most interesting loudspeakers work better with amplifiers that more closely approximate a constant-power source.Duke
Tube amps (and transformer-coupled solid state amps) usually approximate a power source - that is, they deliver nearly constant wattage regardless of the speaker's impedance curve (as long as the speaker's impedance stays within the proper range for that amplifier). Such an amplifier would deliver approximately the same power across the roller-coaster impedance curve described above...
Hmmmmm. Technical differences. It has been years since I was into circuit design, but off the top of my head, I would say one difference is valves have an inherently much higher input impedance than tubes, and if I remember correctly, transistors are basically current amplifiers - valves voltage amplifiers.