Posted by Romy the Cat on
05-17-2007
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Since I know about a few ongoing attempts out there by different people to build Melquiades I would like to share with some of my observations regarding corrections, simplification and possible modifications of Melquiades amplifier.
Obviously you have read the Melquiades release page:
http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Melquiades.aspx
Please take very seriously my insistence for high sensitively speakers. It was not the paranoia or preferences of a horn guy. There are deep underlying reasons (that I live aside) why I insist to use high sensitively speakers.
Below are a set of randomly organized thoughts about Melquiades that the people who have considered devote/invest into Melquiades might find useful. All below comments will be regarding a regular full-range Milq, not about the Milq DSET.
1) Melquiades, Milq, Melq – across this site they are the same names of the Melquiades SET
2) The Milq’s Driver state tube is easily available on eBay for slightly more then one dollar. It is ridiculously wonderful as the Morons pay a lot of money for 6H30, 437A, “kinky” 6922, and many other drivers but they completely disregard the dirt-cheap 6E5P that in fact sound order of magnitude more interesting then any other indirect heated drivers.
3) There is a mistake in Milq circuit. The B+ of the driver stage has almost insufficient amount of critical inductance. It was because I drew the circuit having the Super Milq in my head where the PS was feeding 3 stages and consequently drew more current. I recently opened my full range Mils and confirmed that I have not 15H coke in there but 30H. So, ether you increase the current you draw across the PS lowering the R23 bleeder or increase the value of the L1 choke (Hammond has 30H and 40H chokes that do very nice). My presumption is that any PS with input choke should be tested in continuity, so it is easy to see what is going on….
4) It is not necessary to run input choke filtration for the Milq’s bias supplies. If you wish to do for CRC filter before the gas tubes then it is fine (use input cap of a small value thought). You will also need much lover voltage on the secondary of the bias supply transformer. With input choke the bias need to be 220V as the input choke will eat up ~10% and the gas tubes need 190V to light up. With input cap you will have an increase voltage from bridge and I would go for 140V-150V on secondly if you use CRC…
5) You might consider do not make a dedicated PS for positive bias but to take it via a resistor right from C2 capacitor. I did it and I did not see any worsening in sound.
6) Do, not screw with Milq’s bias principle for both states. The input stage should be in Milq exactly as it is and the output stage should be fixed biased. Keep the R6 of very good quality, and keep it very short and right at the grid. Bring the return to ground of C5 right to the V2’s ground.
7) The C12 capacitor is not relay necessary if your C9 capacitor physically located close to VR2 attenuator.
8) If you never used 6C33C before then print many posts at this site about this tube and put them in your restroom. Sometimes when you spend long time in there please read about the tube. Do not forget to heat the tube for a long time (40-60) minutes before REALLY stressing it.
9) Amorphous core output transformer is absolutely mandatory for this amplifier. There are a number of companies that do it. Find it, pay premiums and get the amorphous transformers.
10) In the circuit I marked the out stage operation at 225V and 180mA. However, these markings are only for 200mA Lundahl transformer. Lundahl can not gap them for more current as they have fixes core size and any increase of currant will reduce inductance of primary with consequential loosing of bass. Even at 225V and 180mA with 200mA on LL1627, loaded to 8:1 (depends of your speakers) the Milq does very fine. Still it is for my speakers. If you are not using the off the shelf Lundahl but go for a custom transformers then I would suggest to stay with 190-200V and run 250mA across the tube, with a transformer gaped at 300mA. Sure, it will greatly depending from your speakers - do not forget the Milq has no feedback and therefore it is very sensitive to load. Do not use the transformer taps under any circumstances. Anyhow, you can go as low as 170V and as high as 250V, driving from 180mA to 330ma across the tube, loading it from 5:1 to 12:1. Increase current lower plate impedance and adds transients… You will need to play with current and loading in order to please your speaker… BTW, do not forget that the bass section of your loudspeakers and the HF section of your loudspeakers might have different optimum loading demands…. but I promised don’t talk about DSET in this thread….
So, my recommendation for the folks with 300mA transformer would be for average circumstances of above 12R loudspeaker to go for 200V/250mA (on full tube). It largely would be OK for people who use normal, mid colorfulness Alnico compression drivers. With very flowery drivers you might slightly drop current and with very dull drivers or with ceramic drivers you might drive more current through the output stage drop voltage. It is always a good idea to have an extra gap in transformer that would allow playing with current. The 6C33C will slightly fluctuate current with signal, even with low PS impedance, so to have extra DC capacity in your transformer is good idea to keep away form saturation. Let your transformer maker to advise you about the balance between the transformer core size and the diameter of the turns… Let them also advise you how much excessive gap would be desirable. From one perspective with amorphous core it is hard to get bass out of transformer from another perspective the amorphous core tolerate proximity to saturation with more damage to sound then regular non-amorphous core…
11) Do not save money on the output transformer. It is perfectly OK if the output transformer will cost you as much or more even a few times then the rest of your Melquiades. I assure you that Milq will do sonically wonderful thighs. You assure yours that you will get for Milq a deserving transformer.
12) Put two 10R, 5W resistors (in each leg) between the rectification bridges and secondary of the power transformers.
13) Read my article about the gas regulator tubes: http://www.goodsoundclub.com/GetPost.aspx?PostID=2792
14) The 6C33C tube sockets are very bad, unless you go for expensive Johnson tube sockets. Still it is not too difficult to replace the cheap 6C33C tube sockets once in 2-3 years. You will extend the live of the 6C33C tube sockets if you clean the 6C33C pins of your every NEW tube. The pins are covered with some freakish candle-like material. Use fine sand paper to brash the pins up and to remove the material.
15) If you do not cool down the Milq internals then allow some space for 6C33C to breathe. Make 3”-4” around the tune as the parts-free zone and drill some ventilation holes around the 6C33C - it runs hot. Twist the filament wires to the 6C33C socket and then solder it. I have seen as in not cooled down tight enclosure the heat of 6C33C melted down the solder on the filament pins. Use the 6C33C pins a high temperature solder. BTW, do not use heavy silver solder anywhere in signal pass. The very light-silver solder (like Wonder solder) is tolerable.
16) If you have a very good quality VR2 that can handle some power then use it and get rid of the R19, R18 chain. I used the 10-turns Burns that are 2W I believe and the R19, R18 are juts to keep the attenuator cooler. Keep the VR2 as good quality as you can get and put R20 as close to the 6C33C’s grid as possible (do not burn if by the tube though)
17) There are a very few wires in Milq – it is very simple amp and most of the parts might be connected by their natural leads. Sure no silver wires must be use anywhere but almond all equally good cupper wires that you will chose to use some wires are more important in Milq then other. You will have a wire between negative pin of C9 and R18. Pay attention to that wire. It layout, the proximity to ground and etc is auditable…
18) R2, R12 and R23 should sit right in the tube socket.
19) The Milq even without loading resistor has enough impedance from the bias resistors but I still like to current-load my cables using 20K resistor as R3.
20) Use good quality tube socket for 6E5P. it is very fast tube and it has some minor tendencies for microphonics when is it getting worm (not as horrible as some other tubes through). The Connex 70032, the 9-pin tube socket does very well and it is not too expensive. Expect approximately on year from a single 6E5P with approximately the same from 6C33C. it is $12 per year – it will be all maintenances that you need to do on Milq.
It is all that I have atop of my mind for now. If something else come to me then will dump it here…. Good luck, Romy the Cat
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
07-04-2007
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My project to add 3 one-stages channels to Super Melquiades look like progressing (it means I will have the new 15,5:1output transformers very soon) and in context of upcoming changes and, after long consideration and some tests, I desired to combine the addition of the one-stages with some other modifications. Here is the list of the changes the Super Melquiades will endure (besides adding 3 more channels that itself is a major invasion):
1) Elimination the current filament 6.3V/12.6 transformer and replacing it with new 12.6V/15A toroidal transformer. All 9 Super Milq’s 6.3V tubes will be paired and driven by 12.6. (Do you know who makes standard serial 6.3-0-6.3 toroidal for 12-15A in order avoid going custom?)
2) Dropping the plate current of the out stage from 220V to 190-200V. The new plate transformer will be introduced: 220V/3A. Since, the HF channels will not be driven by 6C33C anymore I do see a rational to drop voltage and increase current on the 6C33C’s plate.
3) A new fan will be added to cool down the cluster of the very narrow positioned six 6E5P/6E6P tubes.
4) The peripheral wholes around the 4 large B+ capacitors will be sealed, converting the internals of the Super Milq into air-taught with objectives to navigate the air flow from of the Super Milq’s main fan more prissily. Rgs, Romy the caT
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Posted by shannon on
08-08-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d
5) You might consider do not make a dedicated PS for positive bias but to take it via a resistor right from C2 capacitor. I did it and I did not see any worsening in sound.
I'm not sure i fully understand what you are saying here, could you clarify.
How would this change schema v4.4
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Posted by shannon on
08-08-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d people cant handle that it must have no cathode resistor. That r2 must be 15k. that gas tubes must be used but not for regulating voltage. etc.etc. well if you want good sound anyways. I think many people probably have built it. It is so ridiculously simple and can be cheap really. If no amorphous opt was used(i do not condone this idea)its super cheap. The people that build this likely don't worry about posting on forums. build it and forget about amps until you need to build another one or need supermelq. That was me anyways. sorry was supossed to be in one year later thread
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
08-11-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d Positive voltage supply does nothing but balance zero volts at impost. You can go for "pure" implementation and to get a dedicated PS of you can take voltage from any positive voltage, let say from B+ of a driver tube, use voltage divider and drive with it a left side of the biasing resistor.
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Posted by Vincin on
10-07-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d Hi,
I buillt the amp based on your circuit with the exception of the bias scheme. Currently I have CRCRC bias for the ouput valve and Lithium battery grid bias for the driver. I use the amps to drive low efficiency 2 way ported boxes and vintage Tannoy coaxials to play girl & guitar music and occationally some chamber classical music. All standard parts and home-made OPTs, chokes and power trans wound by a friend of mine on the M6 silicon steel lams.
I'd like to report that the amp sound really good, even on my "shitty speakers for morons", given that the amp is not driven too hard. On moderate volume and simple music, the amp is transparent and no distortion that I can detect. I have a tweaked out 300b amp using most expensive ions and parts that do not compete very well with this 6C33C amp. Someday when I get less lazy, I will try to have some amorphous OPTs custom wound, and also the VR tube bias but at the moment I doubt on my speakers I would hear any meaningful improvements (any comments please?).
Also, I have been surprised how low costs the amp can be built.
Thanks Romy for sharing your passion. I have read your site for a couple of years, and found the site and your journey very entertaining even though like most moronic audio people I have no incentive to go so far (no ass kissing! intended).
Tks. Vi
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
10-07-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d Vincin, thank you for appreciation of my work. A few comments and thoughts about the
direction you went.
I do think that to compare 300B with your version of Milq is
not proper way to demonstrate or to learn anything about sound, particularly
with low sensitively speakers. I am not a huge defender of 300B but if 300B is properly
cooked then she has to be able to stand on her own, not that it has to be
"better" or "worse" but the proper DHT has own interesting aspects
that is very hard for Milq to compete, possible but hard. Most likely you have very bad 300B structurally
that juts can't not drive your loudspeakers and Milq is just more powerful amp
that can.
About your implementation. The CRCRC bias for the output is
fine. The Lithium battery grid bias for the driver is not. I am not saying that
Lithium battery grid bias is a bad idea all together. I personally do not like
it wherever I heard it but I have no business to insist in any general
topologies of amp building. What I AM very competent is the Milq topology/sound
consequences. The amp that you built is not Melquiades but rather 6E5P-6C33C
amp. There is nothing wrong with it and it is most likely a very good amp but
it do not have the "Melquiades' message". The hard of the Milq design is the selection
of the driver tub and bias of the driver tube. THAT make the Milq to sound in a
way unique and with battery bias the amp sounds to my ears a bit mechanical, overly
glossy, too linear dynamically and too unintelligent at dynamic margins. If you
want you might try the gas tube version with time. Do not worry about anything
that goes before gas tubes – you can use any PS you already have in the amp,
juts drive 15-23 mA across the negative tubes and mimic what was done in Milq after
gas tube. You do not need even positive tube voltage for experiments – you will
have some DC on input – so do not switch cable while the amp is up.
If you use vintage Tannoy coaxial then neither your 300B not
Milq are not good for you – go for 100W SS amp. You will see what I mean. The
Low power tubes amp might be used with them (particularly with Gold) but only
for getting what I call "boutique sound", or rather boutique sounds.
If you go with amorphous OPTs custom wound then you might
test the idea somehow as amorphous give you slightly faster transients and in
my experiences it always make me to load the amp slightly heavier with amorphous
in comparing with any, even fast steel. I would say you might want to consider
good 20-30% more heavy 6C33C loading if you got from M6 to amorphous.
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Posted by Vincin on
10-07-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d Romy, Sure, the tone could be a bit more special ie: delicate and colorful (sorry for lack of the right word). Thats why I have come back to these pages to read and hopefully understand a bit more and find the right incentive to tinker further. I have a bunch of gas tubes but they are 0B2 which are 105V tube, not the 0A2 you prescribe. Any reason to pick the 0A2 and run high current 25ma through them? When you said too linear but unintelligent dynamically, do you mean the amp would sound very loud and appear to be able to push sound dynamically but there are too many faults in the amp dynamically as such the reproduced sound is not interesting, in other words it is predictable & boring? Actually this one is over the top for me and I have no idea so I just guess what you meant. I know whether an amplifier/speaker/system restrict dynamics too much or they reasonably do not do so. Call me a moron or whatever names but educate me. Thanks, V
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
10-07-2014
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fiogf49gjkf0d Generally the 105V gas
tube are the best and the most stable gas tubes and if you are willing to use
them then it would be a good idea. You need to recirculate the whole bias
securely to do so and it is tricky. It is not so hard to figure out how to get
from 105V the 4.3V of bias but they are bias line and whatever you do with it hugely
affect sound. The last resistor and the last small cap – all of them do impact sound.
You can do your own experiments of you can use my template. My secretary works
the vales in there are actual values. You do not need to follow but you might
if you wish.
When I was taking about “unintelligent
dynamically” I was referring that the driver tube with my bias demonstrate something
that I called intelligent dynamic viscosity. Find it, I have write about it a
lot. This “intelligent dynamic viscosity” is the key in the amp and without getting
it with my bias I assure you that you did not build/heard Melquiades.
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Posted by shannon on
01-04-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d Romy the Cat wrote: | 3) There is a mistake in Milq circuit. The B+ of the driver stage has almost insufficient amount of critical inductance. It was because I drew the circuit having the Super Milq in my head where the PS was feeding 3 stages and consequently drew more current. I recently opened my full range Mils and confirmed that I have not 15H coke in there but 30H. So, ether you increase the current you draw across the PS lowering the R23 bleeder or increase the value of the L1 choke (Hammond has 30H and 40H chokes that do very nice). My presumption is that any PS with input choke should be tested in continuity, so it is easy to see what is going on…. 4) It is not necessary to run input choke filtration for the Milq’s bias supplies. If you wish to do for CRC filter before the gas tubes then it is fine (use input cap of a small value thought). You will also need much lover voltage on the secondary of the bias supply transformer. With input choke the bias need to be 220V as the input choke will eat up ~10% and the gas tubes need 190V to light up. With input cap you will have an increase voltage from bridge and I would go for 140V-150V on secondly if you use CRC… 12) Put two 10R, 5W resistors (in each leg) between the rectification bridges and secondary of the power transformers. Romy the Cat |
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3) For the 30h do you change r23 to like 42k? the arrow from r23 to l1 seems to imply that r23 depends on the choke. does this effect r2?
4) what is your opinion of small value input cap? the schematic 4.4 has 100uf with choke input, is this small
12) what does this accomplish, what does this change in the rest of the circuit. If you used high current fred instead of sic schottkey does this still apply
thank you
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
01-05-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d
**** For
the 30h do you change r23 to like 42k? the arrow from r23 to l1 seems to
imply that r23 depends on the choke. does this effect r2?
Yes,
they are related. the R23 in the supply of the driver state is just a bleeder.
If you drop R23 then more current will flow across the choke and you will
sooner hit minimal inductance. If you do so then make sure that your coil at
the power transformer is able to handle more current. Whatever you in there
shall not affect R2, unless you go with super low current and super inductive
choke with very high serial DCR that would sunk the voltage. The voltage adjustment
i is not done by R2. It is loading resistor and keep it as it is.
*** what
is your opinion of small value input cap? the schematic 4.4 has 100uf
with choke input, is this small
Actually
it is not small but if you would like to rise it then be my guest. You see, this
is LCRC filter where the first cup is not for full filtration but for forming proper
LC input, then you have a decoupler by a resistor and then the main filtration come
to the play. The choke input configuration and the values are well described in
technical literature, seek and you will find. Warn you that in input choke
configuration choke is a critical element, the values of a cap to ground is semi-irrelevant
of it followed with another filtration stage.
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Posted by dl on
01-09-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d It might be true that a properly configured Milq will cause you to forget about amps for the foreseeable future, if not forever...but really it is not so simple, especially if you are accustomed to particularly high-performing (unfortunately offensively expensive, for the most part) SET amps. If you are used to middle of the road crap, or worse, as the great majority of audio enthusiasts are, then the Milq is a categorical, unqualified winner, "stock" from your local builder. It is extraordinarily fast (not just in terms of acceleration, but also deceleration, where most of the realism typically missing in audio actually lies) and open sounding (wow, soundstage!), and has unusually good (great?) bass. But taming this circuit to your sonic demands (I don't say "expectations," and I doubt that most listeners even have "demands") is a very, VERY involved process, both technically and psychologically. From the first notes, there is a huge promise -- a combination of extreme power (sounds like 100W -- or 1000W, if you opt for the LL1693) and extreme passiveness (every inch of cable radically changes the sound of this amp) -- that will convince you that you can finally control every aspect of your overall sonic presentation. But you will be swapping out everything from DAC's to diodes to drivers to capitalize on what you have now discovered (the double-edged sword of "transparency"). The Milq is a tabula rasa, not a quick fix for beginners, and thankfully I am not one. But whatever your experience, the Milq somehow turns you into a beginner, like it or not, and you very well might not leave with the same "religion" you came in with. As I did, you might arrive at an unusually LYRICAL and "perfect" sound. But some years later! And you will still be left with a 5-year plan for what's next...
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
01-11-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d dI, thanks for your post. It is an interesting post, might I
comment upon it? I do not share your experience with Melquides amplifier even those
I know exactly what your were taking about when you wrote about changing own expectations
by observing the amp performance. I went over exactly the same things during my
few years with original Lamm ML2.0, which I consider is way more powerful educational
tool then Milq. The objective of Melquides was to much sonic and exoteric ML2’s
performance. To a degree Milq did and in some extend went way beyond ML2 as
Lamm amp is very rigid in his performance expressionism and has very strict
presentational boundaries.
Can a properly configured Milq will cause you to forget
about amps for the foreseeable future? I would probably say no. If you have sophisticated
tonal demands then probably the word of vintage DHT might deliver to you more results
mostly, one-sided results however. It
never was a problem to me as after making the Milq I immediately went to DSET
with Milq – a very different world all together. There is another whole array
of characteristics where I feel Milq would lose to a specially tailored amp. All together however, I think Milq is a very reasonable
and well balanced amp.
To forget about amps is not truly sonic state but rather the
state of wondering of audiophile mind… It is a complicated subject and I do not
want to talk about it now. What is interesting in your post is a derivative question:
when an audiophile mind and his listening preferences are evolved and sound
made by Milq become no enough. I feel that in DSET configuration, the vintage
drivers and DHT at MF it might be satisfactory for very a long time.
The Cat
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Posted by dl on
01-11-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d
Right. I do not mean to suggest that my
own solution for arriving at an acceptable global result using the
Milq full-range was not a short-cut with regrettable new weaknesses
(or just missed or postponed opportunities). But I am curious (wary)
about what you mean by the “one-sided” results of using a DHT for
the upper midrange (if I misread you correctly). I also wonder whether it is even conceivable that
such an amp might use valve rectification and still keep up with the
Milq. Suppose further that it was asked to drive not only a
compression driver but also a 6” paper cone from 400Hz to 1000Hz? I want to doubt all that, but I haven't thought about it too much.
What I do know is that I am quite allergic to the sound of
solid-state bridge + 6C33C + amorphous iron in the upper midrange.
However, with oversized, steel-core OPT's, lowish end of permissible
voltage (not starved!) on the 6e5p, foil caps on C4 and C5, and a
system-wide ban on silver molecules (ok atoms), you do start to get a peculiar,
stoic elegance out of this tube, and you do not lose too much. Though
I am keen on trying a DHT to play along with the Milq, I suppose it's
easier said than done. There are a lot of amps out there using
celebrated or obscure triodes but which have precious little in the
way of tonal sophistication. Less than my Milq, anyway.
As for the M2, I heard it only once in
a very controlled environment (one of these demonstration rooms in
NYC where you are made to feel that you ought to have paid admission
just to behold this or that sonic magnificence, and then kicked out
after one movement of something like “Hilary Hahn” played back on
a $75,000 CD player). If I'm honest, I was amazed by the sound. But I
did not really do much about it at the time. I was using ANJ M77 and
Neiro (parallel 2A3) then and had not yet discovered real problems
with that amplification. Also, the Kondo, even if it has a
particularly strong sonic signature, benefits from an
organic-sounding tonal shaping, whereas the Lamm sounded more
synthetically processed (and I did not know, or care that much, if it
was some Disney-esque production quality of the recording or
something else).
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
01-12-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d dl wrote: |
But I
am curious (wary) about what you mean by the “one-sided” results of using a DHT
for the upper midrange (if I misread you correctly). |
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What I meant is that practically no one uses "a good DHT for the
upper midrange". Usually people make a good DHT with good DHT driver end
up with astronomical cost and then understandable use it as full range amp,
having compromise, power, dynamic, up and down extensions and many other things.
It is not to mention that "a good DHT for the upper midrange" might
not have proper loading for let say upper bass… As a result it is frequently
that even a promising amp, without doing to DSET, might not deliver all
together possible-to-be-delivered sound in context of most of installations.
dl wrote: |
I also
wonder whether it is even conceivable that such an amp might use valve
rectification and still keep up with the Milq. |
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Why not. I am not against any
valve
rectification, particularly for MF amps. To "keep up with the Milq"
is a bit more complicated subject. Milq is not a reference of any kind and
there is no need to keep up with it. If you multi-amp then you do want the amps
work together in the same way. I however feel that type of the rectification in
case of matching the multi-amps is less prominent factor. In term of rectification
BTW, the LCLC approach with super fact switching bridges deliver very good result
and I do not know if it were necessary to have all of those trouble with valve
rectification. My initial tests with 6C33C indicated that valve rectification
was inferior to LCLC, particularly in bass. I did not experiment with valve
rectification for my MF-only DH DSET.
dl wrote: |
Suppose
further that it was asked to drive not only a compression driver but also a 6”
paper cone from 400Hz to 1000Hz? I want to doubt all that, but I haven't
thought about it too much. What I do know is that I am quite allergic to the
sound of solid-state bridge + 6C33C + amorphous iron in the upper midrange.
However, with oversized, steel-core OPT's, lowish end of permissible voltage
(not starved!) on the 6e5p, foil caps on C4 and C5, and a system-wide ban on
silver molecules (ok atoms), you do start to get a peculiar, stoic elegance out
of this tube, and you do not lose too much. Though I am keen on trying a DHT to
play along with the Milq, I suppose it's easier said than done. There are a lot
of amps out there using celebrated or obscure triodes but which have precious
little in the way of tonal sophistication. Less than my Milq, anyway. |
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Well, I do not feel that
400Hz to
1000Hz is an upper midrange at all. I consider it to be lower midrange not upper.
If the sound you get out of 400Hz to 1000Hz is not what you like then a few
things that you might consider. What driver you use and what enclosure? If you
like the amp overall but do not like this specific region of 400Hz to 1000Hz
then it is likely not the amp problem but your acoustic system. What is
definition of you "being allergic". Can you provide more specific criticism
of what you do not like in sound? Also, if you have 2 Milqs then can you use a
second one to drive your 400Hz to 1000Hz channel and slightly more idle this
second Milq? In many cases the lower midrange is too heavy loaded by wide-band
amps, DSET or picking a good dedicated lower midrange driver would certainly
help a lot. You might also to drive your 400Hz to 1000Hz from different section
of the same OPT that you drive your MF. Let say you load your MF at 1000R but
you might load your 400Hz to 1000Hz at 1800R, taking signal from different sections.
I would be more specific to advise you something to try if you will be more specific
to explain what exactly you do not like.
dl wrote: |
As for the M2, I heard it only once in a very controlled
environment (one of these demonstration rooms in NYC where you are made to feel
that you ought to have paid admission just to behold this or that sonic
magnificence, and then kicked out after one movement of something like “Hilary
Hahn” played back on a $75,000 CD player). If I'm honest, I was amazed by the
sound. But I did not really do much about it at the time. I was using ANJ M77
and Neiro (parallel 2A3) then and had not yet discovered real problems with
that amplification. Also, the Kondo, even if it has a particularly strong sonic
signature, benefits from an organic-sounding tonal shaping, whereas the Lamm
sounded more synthetically processed (and I did not know, or care that much, if
it was some Disney-esque production quality of the recording or something
else). |
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Well, unfortunately
whatever
Lamm ML2 was today is dead and the true
sound of that amp might be obtained only by chasing 15 years old heavily-used
amps. BTW, I did hear a few very positive result with ANJ but it was in context
of a small-single drive mini-monitor and in very limited range.
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Posted by dl on
01-13-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d
Thanks, Romy, for your generous reply.
I won't try to address everything about everything, but let me bore
you with a mini-history of what is going on with my playback so you
will understand where I'm coming from and where I'm trying to go. And
how I wound up with the Milq in the first place.
Back in the days when I used the ANJ, I
was using a pair of the small Hoerning speakers. These were fine, but
you got the sense that it was really a 4-way speaker with one of the
channels – mid-bass – removed. Or you might say it is a 2-way
speaker with a built-in subwoofer. Anyway, I noticed even with the
huge Hoerning “Alkibiades” towers, that as you listened you could
“see” the missing...maybe pair of 10” low-mid/upper-bass
drivers per side or maybe 12” driver. But Hoerning did not go in
that direction – in fact his new big speakers use 16 8” bass
drivers per side but downsize the midrange driver from the 8”
Lowther DX3 to the 6.5” DX65, which is not nearly as good sounding
as the 8” one, first of all, and also makes the one stand-out
problem with the old version audibly worse. Anyway, I decided more or
less at that moment that I ought to try to build a speaker system
myself.
In the meantime, I had heard some horns
for the first time, just a pair of old YL compression drivers in
metal horns which I stuck on top of my Hoernings, and was seduced. I
was not really ready to start a construction project, so I just
bought a pair of 2-way horn speakers from Aspara Acoustics – a 12”
Precision Devices driver and a sort of radial horn mounted vertically
on top. It was not long before I realized that now what I had was
actually a 5-way speaker with 3 channels removed. There was no real
“bass,” and in fact no tweeter at all, but more importantly there
was no midrange anymore. I decided that “audio” was getting way
too complicated and was detracting from my enjoyment of music, and I
impulsively sold my entire system. I later wound up with a
single-driver speaker from Audio Tekne (with a Diatone 610 in a leaky
box) and drove it with a push-pull 300B amp. I moved my new system to
a small room in my apartment was happy for a long while!
Then I moved to a place with only one
large room, and the Diatones just sounded diminutive and “lost”
in there. I figured, maybe now is the time to fix those old audio
problems. My logic was, I did love that 6” Diatone driver, so why
not try a 12” alnico driver and put a horn on top, then look for a
midrange driver to put in-between. Last, I would worry about deep
bass.
This plan did not work, at least not at
first, because the Altec 414 I started with is a crappy and bloated
sounding driver, overrated in every way. I did discover the JBL 2440
during that time, which I still use. To replace the Altec, I first
tried the 12” alnico driver from Supravox (285-2000). This driver
is also a headache for 2 reasons. It has such a strong magnet (2.1T)
that it is impossible to get any mid-bass out of it. Second, it has a
nasty sharpness around 1-2kHz, which, I am told, is due to the fact
that the phase plug has a neodymium magnet inside of it (??!!). I
used a series resistor to lift the Q, but I could not put up with the
“veiled” (from the resistor) or the piercing (from the
phase-plug) for very long. I went instead for the 285GMF, which has a
more reasonable magnet (1.4T).
As the transparency of my system began
to increase, I discovered that my push-pull 300B amp was actually
awful sounding (even though I had no complaints when it drove the
92dB Diatone). I tried several 300B SET amps, i.e., middle-market
ones, and these had no bass control whatsoever. I was always
high-passing the 285GMF, even with air-tight enclosures. Then I
thought: hmm, why don't you get someone to build you a Melquiades
amp!
Fast-forward to the present, and I
still have that same problem I started with. Namely, there is no
“mid” (what I am calling 400Hz-1000Hz) in my setup. If I use the
GMF in a high-passed bass-reflex arrangement, the upper-bass really
comes to life, but the mid becomes thin and washed-out. Mostly to
avoid port spillage issues, I keep it sealed, and though there are no
obvious problems, the sound is fairly flat, boring and literal. But
as you lift the volume, you realize that the midbass is doing a lot
of things that you wouldn't normally expect. It's very tight, but
also “broad” and expressive.
The reason I ask about using a DHT
“add-on” amp for my non-existent midrange driver (and which would
also drive the 2440) is that I worry that I will never find a 6” or
8” driver to play along with the 285GMF. This is partly because of
level matching, but also because as you increase the inductance on
this “woofer” it sounds more and more veiled, slow and boring. So
if I am going to introduce another amp, I would ask it to play from
400Hz up.
But the idea of using different
combinations of sections from the LL1693 is interesting, and perhaps
I should buy a pile of drivers and start experimenting. Just browsing
ebay, you notice lots of things, like this alnico 8” driver with Fs
100Hz and 97dB sensitivity, pulled from a garbage dump:
Who knows. I would like to use such a
driver in a Voigt pipe (or I guess sealed since the Q is something like 1.3), then go back to high-passed bass-reflex on
the mid-bass driver.
As for my allergy to the amorphous-core
OPT's in the high range, it's just a sense of raw, as if all the
mechanical elements of the tone were chipped away like flecks of
rust, then sprayed into the room a fraction of an instant before the
timbre. I managed to counteract this obtrusive sense of distortion,
on digital, with a warm and puffy sounding NOS DAC using microphone
transformers at the output. FM tended to sound fine. But I was
getting headaches with vinyl, even with lush sounding cartridges, and
I got really tired of that DAC. With steel-core, the sound is much
smoother. At least coming out of the 2440.
-Darren
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Posted by Romy the Cat on
01-13-2015
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fiogf49gjkf0d
Darren, I understand what you say. I would like your confession
about acoustic system with any comment as this is amp thread and I would like
to be on more or less on the subject of the thread.
I do not know the 285GMF driver but it is very common for
the bass drivers with cupper cap to have a situation what the filter coil
"talks" with instanced of voice coil and the filter become less effective,
letting the driver to shot-through much more then you would like it to. Well,
by-amping is certainly help in this situation of going for subtractive filters
where no serial coil is use but rather a parallel cap.
I do not have any allergy to the amorphous-core OPT's in the
high range and I do not think you do. What you describe sounds to me not amorphous-core
contribution but rather the evidence that you do not load your OPT properly.
Make a simple experiment. While your amorphous-core OPT produce overly raw
sound take a 4 resistor of a few watts and short the secondary of your OPT, or
your speaker driver terminal. By doing it you will lower the impedance of your speaker
and will load the output stages with that amorphous-core OPT much harder. You
will have many thing different changed in sound but then you will also will instance
see that this "overly freshness" that you do not like will be gone.
You then might remap your transformer and keep using it. Be advised that as you
load your output stage the gain of your amp will rise as well.
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