Bob Carver can not only measure it, appearently he can duplicate it. SMile.
Correct.
Tim
Bob Carver can not only measure it, appearently he can duplicate it. SMile.
The sound that devotees of valve technology hear and love, which cannot be measured.
Tim
Quote Originally Posted by Gregadd View Post
Bob Carver can not only measure it, appearently he can duplicate it. SMile.
Correct.
Tim
How can we square these two statements?
How can we square these two statements?
The sound that devotees of valve technology hear and love, which cannot be measured.
Greg,
In the Carver test the amplifiers did not measure the same - Bob Carver used a null technique to make the modifications that caused them to sound the same. This is completely different from saying that both measured the same.in absolute terms This would have implied that he had taken measurements from the original amplifier and modified the M1.0 to measure the same.
Please understand that my previous post is a joke.
I can see where Tim is coming from about tubes with his being a guitar player. The almost pavlovian association between tubes and desirable distortions would definitely be a strong one.
My friend, this is still the same stereotyping. You are still equating tubes with coloration. I'm not saying that's wrong, I'm saying it isn't always the case. I guess my mileage does vary because I use amps with measurements that would never ever suggest it has a "tube" in it if anyone were to just look at the graphs.
A designer would put a tube in one of his designs for the same reason he'd put a particular transistor, a particular capacitor, a particular type of PCB material or even a particular type of connector. It's to meet a design goal. Whether that goal is a particular sound or a particular set of measured targets or both, a tube or a transistor is just another part. All parts break down, all parts will drift in time. It's all the same. As for tubes not being robust in general, go ask professional broadcast engineers and the military what they think about that.
Let's also put this in the proper context of the OP. Is accuracy your thing John?
The pluses are you get your potential choice from the native manufacturer's sound to more neutral or more euphonic and can do that anywhere from 30 bucks to hundreds of bucks. With all SS you get the one version which may or not be "accurate". You get the current delivery of SS. The integrated I recommended starts at 150 into 8, doubles down 300 to 4, doubles again 600 to 2 and then over 750 into ONE.
The minuses are that you may get some noisy, unbalanced or weak tubes as Tim says. You will also eventually have to change them eventually, after like 5 years or more, more, more LOL.
Of course that's guitar amps. And while their topologies vary pretty radically and the above is pretty universal, this is no guitar amp we're talking about and it has a completely different purpose. But still, I think the warning is valid. There is no good reason to put a tube preamp section in front of a SS amp unless there is a sonic effect. Tubes are inconsistent, unreliable, relatively short-lived and typically high in both noise and distortion. Unless the designer thought those 12AX7s were creating a sound that would not be there with a simple SS front end.
If I were John and I'd been listening to a SS integrated since 1977, I would want to hear that sound, in my home, in my system, in my own good time, before I made any commitment. In fact, I'd want to be able to compare it to modern, high-power SS as well.
Tim
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Jack - The word accuracy scares me. It conjures up images of coldness and lack of emotion. Perhaps you or others can describe what accuracy is?
My friend, this is still the same stereotyping. You are still equating tubes with coloration.
Jack, I'm not really disagreeing with you except on one core principle: Tubes have a characteristic sound. Doesn't mean they all sound alike, but it does mean that most designers would have to go to pretty great lengths to make them sound like SS and vice versa. I believe that and most tube lovers believe that. And again, there is no good reason to use an inefficient, less reliable (even if it is just marginally so), antiquated technology if there is no difference.
And I just think anyone considering an audio device with tubes in it should hear them, hear that difference, and decide if that's what he's looking for before he makes a comittment to it. Simple as that. I know there are dealers out there who either can't or won't send gear out with a liberal return period. I've always managed to find someone who would. And that's what I'd personally recommend for any substantial investment, but especially if you're considering changing basic technologies. I'd say the same thing to a guy who had been using a Benchmark for the last couple of years and was considering an expensive non over sampling DAC. Occasionally I'd even find the objectivity to say it if the case were reversed. That's potentially a big change. You need time to compare and evaluate unless two grand is pocket change to you. I'm really not sure what's to disagree with there. Are you really saying that someone should make a drastic, expensive change in their system without being able to hear it in their system, even if that is an option?
I think perhaps we're having different discussions with each other.
Tim
Greg,
In the Carver test the amplifiers did not measure the same - Bob Carver used a null technique to make the modifications that caused them to sound the same. This is completely different from saying that both measured the same.in absolute terms This would have implied that he had taken measurements from the original amplifier and modified the M1.0 to measure the same.
Please understand that my previous post is a joke.
Tim- the one point I would make is that SS has a sound as well. do bipoloar transistors and mosfets sound alike? hardly. how about full class A vs A/B? hardly. or add an autoformer ala Mac.
and the reason people use tube preamps before an ss amp has nothing to do with coloration---it usually has to do with inefficient speakers that can't be run on a full tube system correctly. that, and perceived ease of use, not sonics.
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