One thing I agree with here is that high quality, high-power amplification is not cheap. At least not usually and certainly not if vacuum tube based. Though within solid state, the Ampzilla 2000 Second Edition shames very many high-power amps priced heroically stratospheric. YG chooses to put into the market a line of speakers that require a disproportionate expense on amplification before they or their dealers will accept judgment about the resulting sound.I have resisted posting in this thread, but given Keith's post, I feel it's the right time to chime in.
From day one, I told Keith he'd be listening to *everything else* in the chain but the speakers, if he went with YG. To show that effect, I brought some cables to his house, that promptly showed how the speakers could sound bloated one minute and thin the next, with a mere power cable change.
I also told him he'd need new amps, and those would not come cheap, as my experience then (almost 3 years ago) was limited with amps in the $10-15k range, which is where Keith wanted to be. Unfortunately that price range has enough sub-par products, and it seems picked a number of those sub-par amps to evaluate, including some which I downright told him not to bother with.
So, obviously I respect Keith's choice of not wanting to investigate proper amp pairings for his YG. Usually the biggest thing in the room gets the blame, so the speaker it is. Moving back to an obviously colored and resonant speaker allows him to choose a much wider range of amps, which not only suits his budget, but is, in itself, part of the fun of the hobby.
Two of the things that have hindered YG's adoption in the marketplace: their high price (in absolute terms), and 2nd, the need for high quality, abundantly powerful amplification. Power is cheap, but high quality isn't. So on top of that $46k speaker, you'll need another $40k-odd for good electronics.
It's clear that Keith wasn't willing to go there, given his other priorities in life, and nobody can blame him for it. But from here on to infer speaker X is superior to Y "just because", it's a huge leap, and frankly, it is pure intellectual dishonesty.
As usual, I welcome everybody to come to the store, and listen to both Hailey 2.2 and Sonja 2.2i and make up their own minds. I've had a pleasant surprise in the Bricasti line of amplifiers that we've picked up recently, as they work amazingly well with YG speakers, and they start at $15k, the top end of Keith's budget.
However, there's much to disagree with. First, taking the position that taking delivery of YG Hailey means one will be hearing everything else in the chain but the speakers is nonsense. Excepting the speakers is tantamount to contending the speaker is perfect, which it is not. While the "everything matters" school of audiophilia is essentially correct that everything results in sonic consequences that can be heard (but might not be), transducers are the most compromised category of sound reproduction products and are very far from perfection. Put a YG speaker as the output of a system, and you are still hearing the YG impose itself on everything that came before it. It still sounds like a crossover-intensive speaker with driver-discontinuities and dynamic choking at the crossover points, among other traits.
The problem with a $46,000 speaker pair that its own dealer says requires $40K worth of "abundant" amplification before he will accept validity of any judgements about the speaker is that the owner is forced into a very narrow range of amplifier design choices, all of which have common problems a system owner might not want to incur -- the primary one being forced into solid state amps of 500w - 1200w relying on massed output devices. That by itself imposes a sound profile that rides on top of individual differences between amps. I expect Bricasti amplification to be able to cope with YG, but that still is in a narrow bracket of amplification, as is the Ampzilla. I have a recent acquaintance going through the same thing with Wilson in his system. No matter what he spends on amps, it sounds clean but not musical. His wife cannot listen to the system. He's certainly spent enough money, though not the way I'd have spent less. I get private messages and emails every week from people all over the world, asking for my hifi advice. Time and again, the highest incidence of frustration and dissatisfaction is from people who bought into the linearity-over-everything con, that saddled them with crossover-intensive, inefficient speakers, dreadnought solid state amps, spiraling costs and tanked satisfaction. Magico, Wilson, YG lead the dissatisfaction contingent in my email inbox, for the common reason that their aggregate approach to loudspeakers prevents musical realism.
With a speaker like a Fyne, simpler and more efficient, a big advantage was demonstrated when one of the best sounds we got out of the system was by installing a pair of custom Williamson-circuit tube monoblocks, stuffed with NOS Siemens EL34, wired as triodes for ~20w output. They actually produced deeper, tighter bass than some of the solid state amps and the power level was eminently usable, pushing levels too loud for conversation. This is not possible to leverage with a YG. The kicker is these amps are made by a Chinese amp builder and anyone can get a pair for $1500 sans tubes, or $2500 if you want the upgrade. If they were made in the US, they'd probably cost $6,000/pr.
Now, I used a $20,000 pair of PSET amps on $4000, then $6000, then $10,000 Zu Druids, 3 generations over a 15 years span. But not because it was necessary to incur that amplification expense to get the Druids to sound grand. The pairing was synergistic. My solar installation forced eviction of my SET amps. My somewhere-around-$20,000 Zu Definition 6s will be powered by single-ended pentode custom amps in the same price class as the Williamson, because the amps are great, and the speaker can deliver convincing dynamics, scale and elasticity along with accuracy, from 10-25 watts.
My inbox from Zu, Tannoy, Klipsch, vintage Altec, Devore owners, et al, contains requests for advice on getting more realism out of speakers in systems they already like or love. From them, I rarely get the frustration factor present in requests for how to get music out of crossover-intensive, inefficient, multi-drivers speakers. The mainstream market has sold the audio buyer many myths and some lies. The idea that if you put YGs in a system you're hearing everything but the speakers is one of them.
Phil
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