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Our very own TomS. has chosen the Atmasphere M-60 Mk III's as his reference amps for the Abbey's which are 95dB sensitive. He is completely smitten with them to put it lightly. I'm sure he'll chime in when he has the chance.Anand.
Now I wish I needed an amplifier! I really would like to hear these.Unfortunately, my speakers are internally tri-amped.
Russell - Funny, I am listening to International Guitar Night II on my M60's as I type. The tapping on the second cut (Celtic Medley) is spooky...
Hmmm...Perhaps I should start looking through Audiogon for some used M60's that I can update. I was going to build a pair of GM70 SET's...Anand.
I know as a philisophical design philosophy, I am not into the OTL topology due to the amount of feedback required, but those amps made me question my beliefs. Almost.
I have a feeling those are very different sounds. You might try to listen to a SET and an OTL. Those are as different as tube topologies can be. In theory/rule-of-thumb (which is broad generalizations that don't always hold), the SET will err on even harmonics, mostly H2 with little if any higher order harmonics. The OTL, via feedback will likely create less overall distortion but more higher order through IMD and due to PP canceling, err on the odd harmonics. Pass has often said that in listening tests, people often pick the amp that sides on H3 over one that sides on H2. I think (this being my hypothesis) that the H3 (PP usually) amp typically sounds faster, more detailed, while the H2 amp sounds warmer more inviting. The truth will come in long term listening. I think I determined I prefer the amps that err on the H2 side, but I also believe it comes down to personal preference.
And if cost is no object, might as well have both
Or all three, SET, PP and OTL. All make me happy in various ways. A friend has the Jazz modules and drives them with a Consonance Cyber 845 SET and the combination is really good.