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Quote from: Freo-1 on 1 Apr 2008, 01:25 amQuote from: Steve on 1 Apr 2008, 12:47 amGood point, one can get fairly close with measurements, but I am sure we both use the ear as the final determination. That is because although measurements, such as with electronic gear may measure flat, the sound can still be bright, too full, smeary, etched etc. That has been demonstrated many times.Excellent electronics will help one button things down. If the electronics is accurate, and is a foundation, then one has to worry about the speaker, the room and the interface right. The electronics variable is out of the way.Take care.I agree, up to a point. The speaker's impedance curve with respect to the frequency domain has a lot to do with the speaker's perceived voicing. The electronics need to be up to snuff to handle the overall load. It seems most (not all) of the speakers people agree on as top performers are a bit tough on amps. They have some pretty wild swings over the audio spectrum. and often provide a low impedance at key points in the audio spectrum. One of the reasons I think tube amps enjoy support are the output transformers. The ability of transformer to present a steady input to the speaker helps smooth out the sound (especially the 4 ohm nominal speakers). Hi Freo, Yes, the amp and source are variables and cannot be a "foundation" by themselves. The only way to find the best is the old fashioned method normally employed; going zigzag between source, amp, speaker, room treatments. That is about all one can do.As mentioned earlier, only the preamp and ICs can be checked vs wire or "nothing". At least a couple of variables can be eliminated, so fewer components to match, making things easier.Take care.
Quote from: Steve on 1 Apr 2008, 12:47 amGood point, one can get fairly close with measurements, but I am sure we both use the ear as the final determination. That is because although measurements, such as with electronic gear may measure flat, the sound can still be bright, too full, smeary, etched etc. That has been demonstrated many times.Excellent electronics will help one button things down. If the electronics is accurate, and is a foundation, then one has to worry about the speaker, the room and the interface right. The electronics variable is out of the way.Take care.I agree, up to a point. The speaker's impedance curve with respect to the frequency domain has a lot to do with the speaker's perceived voicing. The electronics need to be up to snuff to handle the overall load. It seems most (not all) of the speakers people agree on as top performers are a bit tough on amps. They have some pretty wild swings over the audio spectrum. and often provide a low impedance at key points in the audio spectrum. One of the reasons I think tube amps enjoy support are the output transformers. The ability of transformer to present a steady input to the speaker helps smooth out the sound (especially the 4 ohm nominal speakers).
Good point, one can get fairly close with measurements, but I am sure we both use the ear as the final determination. That is because although measurements, such as with electronic gear may measure flat, the sound can still be bright, too full, smeary, etched etc. That has been demonstrated many times.Excellent electronics will help one button things down. If the electronics is accurate, and is a foundation, then one has to worry about the speaker, the room and the interface right. The electronics variable is out of the way.Take care.
"Having some guy tell me what he thinks of a given component without any supporting data does not tell me anything."I agree. Good conversation Freo. Sometime we will have to landline.Cheers.Steve
Toward the goal of assembling a top quality system, IMHO, the more strongly someone promotes the bypassing of a top quality separate analog preamp the more likely that person is to have not auditioned the advantage/benefit of same (they aren't cheap; starting price $7500).
Quote from: ro7939 on 31 Mar 2008, 11:09 pmToward the goal of assembling a top quality system, IMHO, the more strongly someone promotes the bypassing of a top quality separate analog preamp the more likely that person is to have not auditioned the advantage/benefit of same (they aren't cheap; starting price $7500).I've heard a demo of a $100k system including an ARC Reference 3 preamp...and I thought it sounded fantastic. I don't know how that changes the argument though. And I don't even know if we disagree that much either. A well-designed modern digital player like the Transporter has the right output impedance and sensitivity to drive a power amp or active speaker. If the player has properly implemented digital volume and sufficient SNR, when playing 16 bit a preamp has nothing to add to the party.This is not a matter of complex engineering. It is plain common sense.I'm quite prepared to believe the Wadia fulfills all the conditions stated above, Tonepub...that would be why it sounds better without a pre!That a good preamp can improve systems that don't meet the conditions above, is something I'm prepared to accept. Darren
Good point, one can get fairly close with measurements, but I am sure we both use the ear as the final determination. That is because although measurements, such as with electronic gear may measure flat, the sound can still be bright, too full, smeary, etched etc. That has been demonstrated many times.
darren (& ro), i think you are taking tonepub's comments about the wadia, (which he owns), a bit out of context. note he also states:"...I prefer the sound of my Naim 555 with the CJ ACT 2 over anything I've heard after quite some time..."so, as good as the wadia may sound, when run direct to an amp w/o a pre, tonepub still prefers something else - with a pre...
........As mentioned earlier, only the preamp and ICs can be checked vs wire or "nothing". At least a couple of variables can be eliminated, so fewer components to match, making things easier.........
Side One - A proper source has sufficient gain to drive most amps, rendering a preamp redundant at best.Side Two - Preamps bring something to the table not present without them, logic be damned.This is an old argument. All the times I have seen it have been split, with Side One speaking theoretically and Side Two from experience. All general rules of course.
Darren,I live with single driver speakers, so take the driver control, coherency, and other advantages for granted. I’m also trying to not “toot that horn” too often.
Quote from: Steve on 1 Apr 2008, 02:21 am"Having some guy tell me what he thinks of a given component without any supporting data does not tell me anything."I agree. Good conversation Freo. Sometime we will have to landline.Cheers.StevePlease tell me what "supporting data" will tell me how an amplifier will sound....Most good amplifiers these days measure pretty much ruler flat from 20-20k withno real measurable distortion, so why do ten amplifiers all sound different and whycan't I just tell by the specs which one sounds which way?Even the guys that make the gear will ask the same questions.I wish there were a set of measurements or specs that would tell you how an amplifierwould sound.And for what it's worth, the only time the Wadia sounded better without a preampwas when I substituted the McIntosh C2300 that I was using with my McIntosh MC275.In that system, I suspect the Wadia had a better analog stage than the 2300...The Wadia did not sound more musical (the 581i or the 521DAC) in my referencesystem without my preamp. (either the ACT2, the Callisto signature or the Nagra PL-L)Last but not least, the Naim is my FAVORITE, not the BEST. Big difference. The Wadia isstill a great player and by far my FAVORITE SACD player. When you get to the big bucksdisc players, analog or digital, I think there is a lot that can be chalked up to taste.You might come over to my house and hear them both and like the presentation ofthe Wadia better. Remember we all hear a bit different. So much of this is aboutpersonal preference at this level. I wouldn't call anyone a bad guy for owning Wadia..I still own two of them myself!!This is always such a difficult discussion to have. I hope it's not degenerated too far.
A well designed solid state amplifier with a low output impedance will measure flat into real world speaker loads. The Carver tube sound can be emulated by putting a resistor in series with the speaker that is the same value as a typical tube amplifier output impedance. About 1.5ohms in series with the speaker would get the job done. Scotty