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Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or
else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
"roke" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. IME, the old SAE stuff is overrated. It has all the defects of that period. It is much noisier than modern equipment. |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
In article ,
"Robert Morein" wrote: "roke" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. IME, the old SAE stuff is overrated. It has all the defects of that period. It is much noisier than modern equipment. My experience supports your statement. I had a 1980-ish vintage amp and preamp that were noisy and very prone to failure (especially the amp). |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
Jenn wrote:
In article , "Robert Morein" wrote: "roke" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. IME, the old SAE stuff is overrated. It has all the defects of that period. It is much noisier than modern equipment. My experience supports your statement. I had a 1980-ish vintage amp and preamp that were noisy and very prone to failure (especially the amp). On the other hand the QUAD 405 is rock-solid, totally dependable and pretty much indestructible. If you can get one, the 405mkII is better as it provides more current into difficult loads, but as I recall, the KEF Concertos weren't that difficult to drive, so the 405 Mk1 should work fine. Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. S. |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
In article ,
Serge Auckland wrote: Jenn wrote: In article , "Robert Morein" wrote: "roke" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. IME, the old SAE stuff is overrated. It has all the defects of that period. It is much noisier than modern equipment. My experience supports your statement. I had a 1980-ish vintage amp and preamp that were noisy and very prone to failure (especially the amp). On the other hand the QUAD 405 is rock-solid, totally dependable and pretty much indestructible. If you can get one, the 405mkII is better as it provides more current into difficult loads, but as I recall, the KEF Concertos weren't that difficult to drive, so the 405 Mk1 should work fine. Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. S. I've never owned a Quad, but have been impressed on casual listening. I sure love the ESLs! |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
Serge Auckland said:
Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. To keep things standardized, it's better to put the divider in the power amp. I do that, anyway. One other thing of concern: a CD player puts out 2 Vtt max. Most preamps are too sensitive at their inputs, a voltage divider at the CD input, consisting of 2 resistors solves that as well. That way, switching from CD to another source won't leave you with bleeding ears and a quick twist of the volume knob every time ;-) -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
Sander deWaal wrote:
Serge Auckland said: Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. To keep things standardized, it's better to put the divider in the power amp. I do that, anyway. One other thing of concern: a CD player puts out 2 Vtt max. Most preamps are too sensitive at their inputs, a voltage divider at the CD input, consisting of 2 resistors solves that as well. That way, switching from CD to another source won't leave you with bleeding ears and a quick twist of the volume knob every time ;-) Good points. S. |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... Sander deWaal wrote: Serge Auckland said: Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. To keep things standardized, it's better to put the divider in the power amp. I do that, anyway. One other thing of concern: a CD player puts out 2 Vtt max. Most preamps are too sensitive at their inputs, a voltage divider at the CD input, consisting of 2 resistors solves that as well. That way, switching from CD to another source won't leave you with bleeding ears and a quick twist of the volume knob every time ;-) Good points. S. Much appreciated. Ro |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
On Thu, 25 May 2006 18:08:45 GMT, Jenn
wrote: In article , Serge Auckland wrote: Jenn wrote: In article , "Robert Morein" wrote: "roke" wrote in message ... I'm thinking of getting one of these power amps. Can find no reviews. Or else I am looking at the Quad 405. Can anyone tell me what the Mark series power amps are like? (I will be running it with SAE Mark IB pre-amp and Kef Concerto speakers). Thanks. IME, the old SAE stuff is overrated. It has all the defects of that period. It is much noisier than modern equipment. My experience supports your statement. I had a 1980-ish vintage amp and preamp that were noisy and very prone to failure (especially the amp). On the other hand the QUAD 405 is rock-solid, totally dependable and pretty much indestructible. If you can get one, the 405mkII is better as it provides more current into difficult loads, but as I recall, the KEF Concertos weren't that difficult to drive, so the 405 Mk1 should work fine. Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. Most preamps are designed to work with power amps needing 1-2 volts, so you may find that the volume control is somewhat fierce. That's easily solved with a 6 or 10dB attenuator at the output of the preamp. S. I've never owned a Quad, but have been impressed on casual listening. I sure love the ESLs! In that case you should be introduced to a person named Phil Allison over on aus-hi-fi. On second thoughts maybe not... :-) |
Anyone familiar with SAE Mark series?
"Serge Auckland" wrote Only issue I can think of is that the QUAD power amps need only 500mV for full power. The Quad 405-2 signal input level:0.5V rms +/- 0.5 db for 100 watts into 8 ohms. Amp loads input by 20K ohms in parallel with 220 pF. Signal input overload: instantaneous recovery up to +20dB overload. Stability: Unconditionally stable with any load and any signal... according to the brochure. :) |
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