
November 18th 04, 10:33 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
Following recent discussions about distortion and an amp's ability to
reproduce without colouration, I though I'd relay a recent experience.
In an earlier thread I had pointed out that my favourite amp would be
described by many on here as noisy and of inferior design on the basis that
the sound may be coloured or because its performance seems to be sensitive
to it reaching an optimum temperature.
I swapped this amp (an Alchemist Kraken APD6a II) for an Audiolab 8000LX
which had been packed up for a short time. Many on here will be familiar
with this amp, if only by reputation.
The first thing I observed was how much more comfortable I was with the
look, feel, ergonomics and operation of the Audiolab. I can put things on
top of it, for starters (I don't block the air from circulating though the
vents, don't worry), the buttons are all cool to the touch - not *hot* like
the Alchemist, both the input and record selector switches feel the same and
it all operates with a great deal of assurance. It also has a lovely 1/4"
headphone jack on the front panel, which is very useful.
Just one problem. It's boring to listen to. I've been running the Alchemist
in exactly the same setup for a few months and in switching to the Audiolab,
and having listened for about a weeks now, I'm totally uninspired. The sound
is very clean and aesthetically it's all very balanced and even handed,
which is fine on paper, but it doesn't entertain me.
If I were a recording artist, first and foremost I'd want those listening to
my music to be entertained, inspired & moved by it. The Audiolab doesn't do
that for me, the Alchemist does. For all its supposed colour, for all its
foibles, operational quirks - whatever you like - it is by any sensible
measure of what a hifi should be and do, better.
It's a similar difference that I experience when listening to vinyl compared
with CD...
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November 18th 04, 10:48 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
"JustMe" wrote in message
...
Following recent discussions about distortion and an amp's ability to
reproduce without colouration, I though I'd relay a recent experience.
In an earlier thread I had pointed out that my favourite amp would be
described by many on here as noisy and of inferior design on the basis
that
the sound may be coloured or because its performance seems to be sensitive
to it reaching an optimum temperature.
I swapped this amp (an Alchemist Kraken APD6a II) for an Audiolab 8000LX
which had been packed up for a short time. Many on here will be familiar
with this amp, if only by reputation.
The first thing I observed was how much more comfortable I was with the
look, feel, ergonomics and operation of the Audiolab. I can put things on
top of it, for starters (I don't block the air from circulating though the
vents, don't worry), the buttons are all cool to the touch - not *hot*
like
the Alchemist, both the input and record selector switches feel the same
and
it all operates with a great deal of assurance. It also has a lovely 1/4"
headphone jack on the front panel, which is very useful.
Just one problem. It's boring to listen to. I've been running the
Alchemist
in exactly the same setup for a few months and in switching to the
Audiolab,
and having listened for about a weeks now, I'm totally uninspired. The
sound
is very clean and aesthetically it's all very balanced and even handed,
which is fine on paper, but it doesn't entertain me.
If I were a recording artist, first and foremost I'd want those listening
to
my music to be entertained, inspired & moved by it. The Audiolab doesn't
do
that for me, the Alchemist does. For all its supposed colour, for all its
foibles, operational quirks - whatever you like - it is by any sensible
measure of what a hifi should be and do, better.
It's a similar difference that I experience when listening to vinyl
compared
with CD...
Yes, my measuring device are the hairs on the back of my neck. If I'm not
inspired, moved or entertained by a piece of kit over time then back it
goes.
Ok its a bonus if it measures well but Idon't yet know of any spectrum
analyser, scope or any test gear that is graduated in emotion. It don't
mean a thing if it ain't..etc
Now the torch is lit - let the flames begin.....
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November 18th 04, 10:50 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
JustMe wrote:
I swapped this amp (an Alchemist Kraken APD6a II) for an Audiolab 8000LX
which had been packed up for a short time. Many on here will be familiar
with this amp, if only by reputation.
basically the 8000LX is the same amp as the Audiolab 8000S without the
remote control and configurable modes (pre, pre-power, int, etc).
The first thing I observed was how much more comfortable I was with the
look, feel, ergonomics and operation of the Audiolab. I can put things on
top of it, for starters (I don't block the air from circulating though the
vents, don't worry), the buttons are all cool to the touch - not *hot* like
the Alchemist, both the input and record selector switches feel the same and
it all operates with a great deal of assurance. It also has a lovely 1/4"
headphone jack on the front panel, which is very useful.
Just one problem. It's boring to listen to. I've been running the Alchemist
in exactly the same setup for a few months and in switching to the Audiolab,
and having listened for about a weeks now, I'm totally uninspired. The sound
is very clean and aesthetically it's all very balanced and even handed,
which is fine on paper, but it doesn't entertain me.
I am not familiar with the Alchemist amp, but the Audiolab is a wire
with gain ... i.e. the sort of amp you want to get if you are after
"high-fidelity" with no audible distortion.
If I were a recording artist, first and foremost I'd want those listening to
my music to be entertained, inspired & moved by it.
Of course. And the artist should make that happen by putting in an
entertaining, inspired performance.
The Audiolab doesn't do that for me, the Alchemist does.
OK, so you admit you prefer your amps to have a "boogie" factor, i.e.
alter the input signal in such a way that the output signal just isn't a
magnified version of the input signal. The Audiolab isn't the amp for
you then.
For all its supposed colour, for all its
foibles, operational quirks - whatever you like - it is by any sensible
measure of what a hifi should be and do, better.
No, that isn't what "hi-fi" should do ... the musicality should come
from the performance, not the equipment.
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November 18th 04, 10:56 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
"JustMe" wrote
Just one problem. It's boring to listen to. I've been running the
Alchemist
in exactly the same setup for a few months and in switching to the
Audiolab,
and having listened for about a weeks now, I'm totally uninspired. The
sound
is very clean and aesthetically it's all very balanced and even handed,
which is fine on paper, but it doesn't entertain me.
WTF's that got to do with anything? - All that matters is that it remains
'faithful' to the input signal...
If I were a recording artist, first and foremost I'd want those listening
to
my music to be entertained, inspired & moved by it. The Audiolab doesn't
do
that for me, the Alchemist does. For all its supposed colour, for all its
foibles, operational quirks - whatever you like - it is by any sensible
measure of what a hifi should be and do, better.
Get thee to a valve ampery....
(While they're as cheap as chips - it can't last...)
It's a similar difference that I experience when listening to vinyl
compared
with CD...
No comment! :-)
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November 18th 04, 11:02 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
"Tat Chan" wrote
No, that isn't what "hi-fi" should do ... the musicality should come from
the performance, not the equipment.
Er, if you want 'Mini Me' status, you'll have to get in line - there's at
least two ahead of you....
(Wot does that fekkin' stoopid remark mean anyway - put a bit of music
through a setup that bleaches all the flavout out of it and blame the
musicians/studio for a 'poor recording' as usual...??)
Ya hafta fekkin' larf!!!
(Do you *not*???)
:-))
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November 18th 04, 11:26 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
"Keith G" wrote in message
...
"JustMe" wrote
Just one problem. It's boring to listen to. I've been running the
Alchemist
in exactly the same setup for a few months and in switching to the
Audiolab,
and having listened for about a weeks now, I'm totally uninspired. The
sound
is very clean and aesthetically it's all very balanced and even handed,
which is fine on paper, but it doesn't entertain me.
WTF's that got to do with anything? - All that matters is that it remains
'faithful' to the input signal...
Well, some would argue that this is the be all and end all of hifi. I'd
argue, as Mike said, that "it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that
swing". I spent the money on the gear to get the maximum pleasure from my
music. If a "straight wire with gain" wont give me that, then a curly wire
with gain will provide me with better value for money.
If I were a recording artist, first and foremost I'd want those
listening
to
my music to be entertained, inspired & moved by it. The Audiolab doesn't
do
that for me, the Alchemist does. For all its supposed colour, for all
its
foibles, operational quirks - whatever you like - it is by any sensible
measure of what a hifi should be and do, better.
Get thee to a valve ampery....
(While they're as cheap as chips - it can't last...)
I've had a couple of valve amps - an Armstrong - although that was before I
had any experience with any selection of hifi and so had no base of
reference to judge it - and, for a while, an AMC CVT3030a, which was great
fun to listen to. I changed it for the Alchemist Forseti pre/power after I
moved and was unhappy with the sound in my new home.
Right now I've got to start SELLING amps, rather than acquiring more as
bills are stacking up. The Audiolab will be the first to go on Ebay.
It's a similar difference that I experience when listening to vinyl
compared
with CD...
No comment! :-)
 )
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November 18th 04, 11:51 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
Keith G wrote:
(Wot does that fekkin' stoopid remark mean anyway - put a bit of music
through a setup that bleaches all the flavout out of it and blame the
musicians/studio for a 'poor recording' as usual...??)
So you DO think the SS amps remove something.
Do you also think valve amps add something or just amplify the real signal ?
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November 19th 04, 12:00 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
Keith G wrote:
(Wot does that fekkin' stoopid remark mean anyway - put a bit of music
through a setup that bleaches all the flavout out of it and blame the
musicians/studio for a 'poor recording' as usual...??)
So you DO think the SS amps remove something.
Do you also think valve amps add something or just amplify the real signal
?
I couldn't answer for Keith, but as a consumer of hifi (rather than a
designer of the kit), and in the context of deciding which to spend cash on,
*I* don't particularly care.
To me "X" gives me greater pleasure than "Y". The value of "X" is about the
same as "Y" .'. the decision is an easy one for me.
Do *you* think that SS amps remove something?
Do *you* think that valve amps add something?
Could you quantify what you think each either removes or adds?
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November 19th 04, 12:47 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
JustMe wrote:
Keith G wrote:
(Wot does that fekkin' stoopid remark mean anyway - put a bit of music
through a setup that bleaches all the flavout out of it and blame the
musicians/studio for a 'poor recording' as usual...??)
So you DO think the SS amps remove something.
Do you also think valve amps add something or just amplify the real signal
?
Do *you* think that SS amps remove something?
The good ones? no. Same goes for a good valve amp.
Do *you* think that valve amps add something?
Only the bad ones. Not that I deny the additions sound nice sometimes.
Could you quantify what you think each either removes or adds?
given the right equipment...
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November 19th 04, 12:51 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Amp swap disappointment
Keith G wrote:
(Wot does that fekkin' stoopid remark mean anyway - put a bit of music
through a setup that bleaches all the flavout out of it and blame the
musicians/studio for a 'poor recording' as usual...??)
So you DO think the SS amps remove something.
Do you also think valve amps add something or just amplify the real
signal
?
Do *you* think that SS amps remove something?
The good ones? no. Same goes for a good valve amp.
Do *you* think that valve amps add something?
Only the bad ones. Not that I deny the additions sound nice sometimes.
Could you quantify what you think each either removes or adds?
given the right equipment...
I'm going to make another post about this, as this raises an interesting (to
me) question...
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