Lampizator Pacific Review

abeidrov

VIP Donor
Dec 17, 2015
698
341
443
Moscow
Hi Jturbo,

Beautiful setup. I am sure, it sounds as good as it looks. Congratulations!
Most likely, you are using USB into your DAC. Can you try the LAN input and share your experience?

Thanks,
Aziz
 

Golum

Well-Known Member
Jun 7, 2018
1,810
2,569
405
Lausanne, CH
Hi all. Ive hd the good fortune of upgrading from. Gen 5 set if Lampizator 211 balanced amps to the newly introduced Pacific 211 balanced amps.

A couple days into the burn in process, paired with a Pac dac. Its been a painless process so far.

Within a few hours, this combo had dusted my prior gg2 / 211 balanced combo.

Much more authority and control, dynamics and nuance. Its awesome! I feel like the characteristics that are making the pacic dac so wonderful have been extended into the pacific 211s. A powerful pairing.
Listened to these exact amps before being shipped to USA few weekends ago at Lampi HQ on FE speakers and they sounded sublime...enjoy the combo!
 

Mr P

Well-Known Member
Apr 17, 2015
25
22
235
Fort Myers, Florida
Adam - I would appreciate an update on your Pacific when you get a chance.
 
  • Like
Reactions: christoph

kernelbob

Well-Known Member
Oct 23, 2011
102
104
948
Hi all,

I'm using the Pacific DAC, having upgraded from the Golden Gate. I was hesitant to move from the GG to the Pacific since I was quite happy with the GG and was concerned that there would be a trade-off with the Pacific being better in some ways versus some strengths from the GG being lost. That has turned out not to be the case. My main concern was that the bass from the ladder DAC based GG may be softer in the Pacific. If anything, the bass is more realistic, being as powerful and honest as the GG, but now with more transparency. It's quite a feat to achieve both. Throughout the spectrum, the Pacific has improved front to back depth and, again, that sense of transparency along with providing an improvement in the ability to differentiate separate instruments in even the most complex orchestral passages.

The Pacific DAC includes the tube selection control. I have a quad of KR-Labs 300BXLS tubes. I checked with Fred of Lampizator-NA who checked his spec sheets and gave me the go-ahead to try them in the Pacific. I've only had them running for a few days, but one thing I will say is that if you want to hear what brass instruments sound like, you'll want to give either the 300B or the -XLS variants a try. Quite a sound! I'll have to swap back in the PX4 tubes and compare after a few weeks.

I want to underscore the comments by JAX357 regarding the 211 amps. I'm using the Lampizator 211 True Balanced Monoblock amps which are the immediate predecessors to the Pacific 211 amps. These amps are a revelation. In my opinion, the key to their performance is 1) there is no global or local feedback; 2) there is no phase splitter; 3) the amps use exclusively balanced input and maintain the separate signal phases from input to the output transformer where they are combined. What is unique in my experience is the cohesiveness of their sound. The integrity of each musical instrument's unique timbre is maintained better that in any other amp I've heard. One thing with the 211 amps, since they don't use feedback, their damping factor is understandably modest. On my dynamic driver speakers, the bass is better controlled with solid state amps which have an extremely high damping factor (i.e. very low output impedance). Since the speakers were designed from the ground up to support biamping, I've combined amps of very different topologies to optimize the system. Running full range, the 211 amps do present more musical information than the Spectrons, but the Spectrons really maintain a vice-like grip on the drivers.

My system follows: The Pacific DAC drives the Lampizator 211 True Balanced Monoblock amps and a pair of monoblock Spectron Musician III Mk-2 amps. These feed respectively the top (mid and treble) and bass drivers of my Von Schweikert VR100XS speaker system, which includes a pair of XS15 subwoofers integrated as the "XS" components of the system. All cabling and power cords are MasterBuilt Ultra. I ordered my Pacific with no volume control, feeding the output to a Tortuga LDRxB balanced controller. The Tortuga, which I'm powering via an Optima 12v marine battery, was custom assembled using MasterBuilt wiring. The Tortuga allows me to fine tune the input impedance seen by the Pacific with my favorite sounding range roughly between 81 and 93 kohms per phase. The Tortuga includes acoustic polarity control, or phase if you prefer, that allows me to set (from the remote) the system's acoustic polarity for each recording. A must-have feature in my opinion. Since the Tortuga's volume control is performed by LDRs (Light Dependent Resistors), I have no active devices between the output of the Pacific DAC and the input of the power amps.

Best,
Robert
 
Last edited:

adamaley

Well-Known Member
Apr 15, 2016
587
546
228
Minnetonka, MN
Hi all. This is my first posting to the Digital Audio Forum. I've been thinking a lot about my Lampizator Pacific, and figure I'll share my impressions for whatever benefit anyone else may derive.

Some background. For years, I had a mid-level solid-state-based system consisting of an Ayre QB-9 DAC attached to Krell equipment (pre-amp, amp and speakers). It wasn't great, but I was too busy to listen much, so it didn't really bother me.

A couple of years ago, a dedicated audiophile friend invited me to listen to his primarily tube-based system, which was built around a pair of wonderful Von Schweikert speakers. The difference between his system and mine blew me away, and inspired me to try for something like it myself.

I immediately went far to the other side of the fence and switched to a highly rated tube-based preamp and pair of tube-based amps. The sound was way too mushy, even after I upgraded my speakers to a pair of Wilson Maxx 3's. Yet, even with the mush, there was a painful harshness that infected nearly every track.

After trying a bunch of different amps, I settled upon a pair of Pass Labs XA200.5's. They brought a sense of power and authority to the music, and got rid of at least 75% of the mush. I decided to build the rest of my system around them -- seeking to follow the relatively common path of mixing tubes with solid state to blend warmth and authority.

Over the next year, I auditioned quite a number of different preamps. Some helped reduce the mush, but only at the expense of increasing the harshness. Some made the mush worse. I began to despair of finding the "right" preamp. The best result I got was from using my Woo Audio WA33 headphone amp as a pre-amp. It actually functions quite well using the pre outputs. But it was not quite "right."

During this time, I also tried a bunch of different DACs, and settled upon a Lampizator GG. That made a big difference. I thought the GG provided a great balance between warmth and clarity. I also worked hard on my room modifications and added a lot of absorption and diffusion material (my listening room presents some significant challenges). Things definitely were getting better. Indeed, sometimes I thought I might be done.

Then I tried the Pacific, which is the primary focus of my comments. And here's where writing becomes difficult because what I want to say sounds embarrassingly like the Lampizator marketing material. When I inserted the Pacific into my system, there were two changes at once. First, was the Pacific itself. Second, was the complete elimination of a preamp. My system got very simple. Mac mini to Pacific to amps to speakers. The difference was huge. The sound got cleaner, the harshness was reduced, there was absolutely zero sense of mush, and I simply felt closer to the music -- especially solo jazz vocals, which are my most critical test. To be sure, I violated the rule about changing only one variable at a time. Some of the other equipment I auditioned in the past never got the benefit of my evolving room modifications. I could have purchased the GG with a volume control and used it without a preamp (but I didn't). Thus, this is not a perfectly scientific report. But the bottom line is that, by the time I acquired the Pacific, I had a pretty darn good system in a pretty well-treated room, and inserting the Pacific made a big difference. I listen to music more frequently as a result of having it, and I more thoroughly enjoy the experience. Could I have achieved the same result with a less expensive combination of equipment if I went back and re-auditioned everything after having completed my room modifications? Perhaps, but I don't think it's likely. At each step of the way, as I auditioned different pieces, I selected for the best combination I could find. Then, when things were really quite good, the Pacific made them a lot better.

Did the Pacific solve all my (audio) problems? Absolutely not. I listen to a lot of recordings that have major flaws in themselves (older jazz, obscure contemporary jazz engineered on a tiny budget, 1970's rock, etc.). Often, I make use of a Manley Massive Passive EQ to adjust the sound of individual recordings to make up for inherent flaws in the recordings or simply to deal with conflicts between a particular recording and remaining flaws in my listening room (and I heartily recommend the Manley for this purpose). But there are many recordings (the best ones) where I am able to ditch the Manley and listen to my system in its most simple form -- Mac mini to Pacific to amps to speakers. That's when the experience is the most enjoyable.

Three recordings immediately come to mind when I think about how the Pacific changed my system. The first is Sara Serpa singing "When Sunny Gets Blue" on her album Camera Obscura. It's a spare, brilliant, highly unorthodox rendition, and the engineer seems to have strongly favored an approach of crystalline purity over any sense of gentleness in presenting her voice. Before I got the Pacific, I could only enjoy this track at low volume or by mushing it up with a piece of tube equipment. It was just too cold and harsh. With the Pacific, I hear the human elements of her voice without undue harshness and without mush. It pretty much saved this track for me.

Second is Grace Jones singing "Walking in the Rain" (multiple versions). Exceedingly different from Sara Serpa, this song is all about layered production. When I added the Pacific, the sound jumped dramatically from 2-D to 3-D. There's nothing "natural" about this piece of music. But the Pacific brought the many layers of electronic elements to life.

Third is Kyung-Wha Chung performing Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto in D (Decca 1982). This is hardly the best technical recording, but it's absolutely my favorite version of the concerto because of the performer's passion and willingness to flirt with the edge of disaster. Especially when the violin is taken to its highest notes, I always felt like I was missing something due to the limitations of my system. After adding the Pacific, my experience is different. It feels like my system can fully handle the demands being placed upon it, and with lots of capacity to spare. I now accept what I'm hearing at face value, as what the performer/engineer intended.

At this point, I think I'm done evolving the electronic side of my system. Perhaps, someday, I'll switch out the Maxx 3's. They seem now to be the weakest link.

A few minor additional points. First, I know there are folks who enjoy tube rolling their Lampizators. I haven't tried this intentionally, but I did have an interesting experience. Out of concern that replacement tubes for the Pacific might be difficult to obtain in the future, I purchased a back-up set of identical tubes. I've only swapped the sets wholesale (not on a tube-by-tube basis). And I swear I can hear the difference. One set seems genuinely warmer than the other. I can't explain this and it's certainly surprising to me, but there it is.

Second, although perhaps this shouldn't have much impact on an audio purchasing decision, the Pacific is quite simply one of the most visually beautiful pieces of equipment I've ever encountered. It gives me pleasure to see it on my audio rack every time I walk by, even when there's no music playing.

Finally, and this is perhaps a more legitimate basis upon which to make a decision, the Pacific is built like a tank. Over the last few years, I've auditioned a few pieces of equipment that sounded pretty good, but seemed like their internal connections wouldn't survive a few hundred (let alone a few thousand) heating/cooling cycles. The Pacific is at the opposite end of the spectrum. Except for the natural burn-out of the tubes, it seems that my Pacific will still be healthy long after I'm dead.

Have you given some thought into upgrading your source from the Mac Mini. I suspect jitter and power supply / motherboard noise will not do your system justice. A cheap Ethernet renderer or better yet, a dedicated music server will sound magnitudes better.
 

Zappadaddy

Well-Known Member
Dec 27, 2020
274
179
115
62
Czech rep
Hi all,

I'm using the Pacific DAC, having upgraded from the Golden Gate. I was hesitant to move from the GG to the Pacific since I was quite happy with the GG and was concerned that there would be a trade-off with the Pacific being better in some ways versus some strengths from the GG being lost. That has turned out not to be the case. My main concern was that the bass from the ladder DAC based GG may be softer in the Pacific. If anything, the bass is more realistic, being as powerful and honest as the GG, but now with more transparency. It's quite a feat to achieve both. Throughout the spectrum, the Pacific has improved front to back depth and, again, that sense of transparency along with providing an improvement in the ability to differentiate separate instruments in even the most complex orchestral passages.

The Pacific DAC includes the tube selection control. I have a quad of KR-Labs 300BXLS tubes. I checked with Fred of Lampizator-NA who checked his spec sheets and gave me the go-ahead to try them in the Pacific. I've only had them running for a few days, but one thing I will say is that if you want to hear what brass instruments sound like, you'll want to give either the 300B or the -XLS variants a try. Quite a sound! I'll have to swap back in the PX4 tubes and compare after a few weeks.

I want to underscore the comments by JAX357 regarding the 211 amps. I'm using the Lampizator 211 True Balanced Monoblock amps which are the immediate predecessors to the Pacific 211 amps. These amps are a revelation. In my opinion, the key to their performance is 1) there is no global or local feedback; 2) there is no phase splitter; 3) the amps use exclusively balanced input and maintain the separate signal phases from input to the output transformer where they are combined. What is unique in my experience is the cohesiveness of their sound. The integrity of each musical instrument's unique timbre is maintained better that in any other amp I've heard. One thing with the 211 amps, since they don't use feedback, their damping factor is understandably modest. On my dynamic driver speakers, the bass is better controlled with solid state amps which have an extremely high damping factor (i.e. very low output impedance). Since the speakers were designed from the ground up to support biamping, I've combined amps of very different topologies to optimize the system. Running full range, the 211 amps do present more musical information than the Spectrons, but the Spectrons really maintain a vice-like grip on the drivers.

My system follows: The Pacific DAC drives the Lampizator 211 True Balanced Monoblock amps and a pair of monoblock Spectron Musician III Mk-2 amps. These feed respectively the top (mid and treble) and bass drivers of my Von Schweikert VR100XS speaker system, which includes a pair of XS15 subwoofers integrated as the "XS" components of the system. All cabling and power cords are MasterBuilt Ultra. I ordered my Pacific with no volume control, feeding the output to a Tortuga LDRxB balanced controller. The Tortuga, which I'm powering via an Optima 12v marine battery, was custom assembled using MasterBuilt wiring. The Tortuga allows me to fine tune the input impedance seen by the Pacific with my favorite sounding range roughly between 81 and 93 kohms per phase. The Tortuga includes acoustic polarity control, or phase if you prefer, that allows me to set (from the remote) the system's acoustic polarity for each recording. A must-have feature in my opinion. Since the Tortuga's volume control is performed by LDRs (Light Dependent Resistors), I have no active devices between the output of the Pacific DAC and the input of the power amps.

Best,
Robert
Why did you choose Tortuga? There is some nic pasive preamp Bespoke. Is the price why you decide it for Tortuga or some feature you like?
 

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