Perhaps the Focal's were the cultprit of the Hi-Fi sound you heard ? It sure isn't the hallmark of the XA.5 series of Pass amps...that's for sure.
+1.... I have Focals and they can be a little edgy.
Perhaps the Focal's were the cultprit of the Hi-Fi sound you heard ? It sure isn't the hallmark of the XA.5 series of Pass amps...that's for sure.
I hate the fact that the words “Hi Fi” have taken on a pejorative meaning. Those words should be a compliment because if something is truly high-fidelity, it should be accurate to the source.
This. And I'll add that I have a similar reaction to the Fremer reference above, indicating that an amp was "too thin and too speedy." Thin? OK, but "too speedy?" Not slow enough for you Mike? You like fat and sluggish?
Tim
More Ponk channeling! Just kidding Mark!
Don made an interesting comment about dropping the damping factor. I noticed that tubes have a rep for being sluggish but I have found that it is load dependent. A decently done 8 or even 3 watt tube amp into 105dB fairly flat impedance loudspeakers will disabuse any believer in this characterization of tube amps in general. Being "stressed" also affects the harmonic distortion levels as Don pointed out.
So to me, when I think of tube like timbre and tone, I am not thinking of the improperly loaded characteristics of tube amps but rather their low level resolving capabilities particularly the type of zero crossover distortion artifacts (the edginess found in less than stellar SS implementation or PP tubes for that matter). I find tubes more benign in this regard. The commonality for me then of the SS amps I tried with the tube amps I like isn't a warm and fuzzy nature. What they seem to also have in common are very fast switching transistors (look at the bandwidth figures). While these alone are no guarantee of good articulation and by that I mean articulation that sounds natural, I'm just stating an observation.
That said, yes tube amps can be PITAs and like I said, that's why I switched.
You can spend a lot more money, but for around $300 I like this:
http://www.avsforum.com/t/855865/measuring-amplifiers/1650#post_18534472
Damping should not be that crucial to Don. He has a planar speaker.
In what way do you think this amplifier sounds like tubes?
HMM. Lots of interesting replies on this thread. First, we cannot forget that system context cannot be ignored...
In any case, how the amp interacts with your own speakers/cables is going to have a lot to do with how its perfromance is perceived, so one must audition with ones' own speakers.
Barrows, excellent points. However, amps are heavy and time is limited...
Ah, but not always! I had Infinity IRS II's for a while and a whole bunch of conventional speakers rotated through. Some I have owned (including the IRS that was replaced by my Maggies) whilst others were just visitors (like the B&W 801's, DQ-10's, various 'stats, and numerous dynamic speakers).
Also FWIWFM, the panels do appreciate high damping at the low end because the panels themselves develop modes just like conventional speakers, only bigger. Quad spent a lot of time and effort working out ways to deal with them.
While I am unlikely to go back to tubes, some of the most magical sound (though not the cleanest by a long shot) was when I had my Maggies bi-amped (actively, don't trust the passive kind that's such a rage now) with an ARC D79 on top and Counterpoint SA-220 on the bottom. I passed over much better SS amps (ML, Krell, for example) to get a seamless blend from high to low. All driven by my modded ARC SP3a1. My present system is cheaper and cleaner but not as magical. Does have tighter bass...
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