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Gene,Here is another one that should float your boat. Read the entire page. My choice would be the Maxxed Out Phono.Kevin Carter designs for some really big names in the industry including Art Audio and was formerly employed at VAC.Joe Curcio isn't my favourite of designers. Although current sources are great, his applications of them make me run from the room. There are others that do the job far better and have better ears imho. Look to Kevin Carter, Allen Wright, Ralph Karsten, Dan Schmalle (Bottlehead), J. Broski (who designed the Aikido, etc...), Lynn Olson and Gary Pimm (Pimm regulators and awesome differential amps using 45 tubes). It's better to concentrate on the designer than on what parts quality they use first. Kevin Carter in my opinion wears both hats quite judiciously. Joe in my experience does neither and I don't feel his kits are of value to be honest. Too much competition out there.Best,Anand.
I've never been particularly impressed with the Dynas SQ and I wish there was something I could do to fix them but honestly I should probably just sell them and move on.
I have Bottlehead on my shortlist already, not sure how to equate the other names to product.
I am guessing the series regulators are IC1-4 in the power supply schematic? I'm not real certain but the voltage regulators on the signal board schematic look to be simply regulating voltage to the tube plates, is that correct?
No, the series regulators are IC151 + Q151 & IC152 + Q152. The ICs being the error amps and the Q's are the pass device. Note how the Qs are in series with the plate of the tubes not in parrallel as they would be in shunt (B+ to ground). Actually upon reviewing the power schematic, it does appear that there is also a series regulator IC1 and IC2 controls the V- voltage. A bit weird from my eyes. The IC3-4 are for heater regulation (series also). Although that is normal for heaters.
Here is information I needed about five years ago when I rebuilt my Dyna Mk III monoblocks. I now have a pair of VAC PA-160 monoblocks that just blow the Dynas away in terms sound quality, and I paid less for the VAC amps than I have into the Dynas. I've never been particularly impressed with the Dynas SQ and I wish there was something I could do to fix them but honestly I should probably just sell them and move on.I was so impressed with the VAC amps that I sold my highly modded McCormack ALD-1 preamp and bought a VAC CPA-1 Mk II full function preamp and that was not a mistake. One of the features I really appreciate about the VAC electronics is the ability to reconfigure the gain, phono loading of the pre and output tube type, mode of operation, and feedback of the amps. Two levels of gain plus buffered passive of the line section, phono section offers three levels of gain (to include use of LOMC carts) plus five R loading selections and six C choices. The amps can use any tube in the 6L6 family from 5881 through the KT88 plus selectable modes of triode, ultralinear, and pentode. Six levels of feedback are selectable and vary slightly based on operational mode selected.Concerning VAC and Kevin Carter. I was under the impression the Kevin Hayes (VAC owner) did all his own designs but it would seem I am mistaken. Can you please enlighten me some more in this area, Anand? How have you discovered the differences in these designs and what the designer did right and what they did wrong? Are you able to read the schematics well enough to understand how the circuit works and make decisions based on what you perceive? I ask these questions to learn my own folly in choosing amps and kits because I am almost ready to step into the world of high efficiency speakers and SET amplification. I made the mistake of spending way too much money on the Dyna rebuilds only to find a production product that makes mincemeat of them sonically and don't want to go down that path again. History does have a tendency to repeat itself but if we actually learn from our mistakes it doesn't have to.Thanks,Jake
Jim Hagerman also makes quality stuff, I'm just not as keen with the topologies I have played with using the 12AX7, 12AT7 or 12AU7 in the past, although I definitely see their applicability (notably the 12AX7 and 12AT7) in phono stages. Still, you can design without them. The designer sometimes is forced to choose these tubes not for their sonic qualities but for marketability so keep that in mind. Ask him to use a different set of tubes and suddenly you might get a better design as the tubes' spectral harmonic distortion is considerably better.
There is also an octal version of the Cornet2 that uses 6SN7 tubes, some say it sounds better. An octal search on the Hagerman Circle will yield four pages of posts.www.hagtech.com/pdf/cornetoctal.pdfWayne
Concerning VAC and Kevin Carter. I was under the impression the Kevin Hayes (VAC owner) did all his own designs but it would seem I am mistaken. Can you please enlighten me some more in this area, Anand?Thanks,Jake
So it looks like Cornet vs. Aikido phono preamp.