Amp is an Amp you can make what ever nonsense you want out of it DB.
I think the SET folks would probably debate that. Maybe there are some points of clarification that I am missing.
Can a Amp be "timeless" and compete with todays amps?
I’ve been into hi resolution audio for 20+ years, well longer than that but acquired high quality gear about that time. I veered off into other interests for 15 years but still had my system sitting idle in it’s dedicated room. I became interested in it again 6 months ago and began to update it. I still have my Rega Planar 25 table and a Dragon phono stage. I retained my CEC TL1 transport, but replaced my DAC with a Dinafrips Venus II, I also have the Hermes DDC which I feed my CEC into as well as my Cambridge Streamer. I sold my Genesis V speakers because they were having an issue with the left channel bass and since they were out of business I had no way to fix them, it was over my head. I found someone that wanted them and was willing to repair them himself. (he is very happy with them) I replaced them with some Goldenear Triton 1.r’s which I love. So here is the nostalgia part. I still have my VAC Cla 1 Mk II pre amp and my VAC Renaissance 70/70 Mk II amp. I feel they still hold up well sonically, so my thoughts are to send them both to VAC for the Mk III updates this fall of 2022, which includes replacing any necessary parts and "voicing" them back to new as intended when they were first made. I really believe these pieces are worthy of the restoration, are newer pieces today really going to make much headway? I cannot afford to replace these items with "like" items as I am retired and the discretionary income isn’t there anymore. I just feel like they are still really good and offer a very high quality sound. I mean 8- 300 B tubes can’t be all that bad can they? I’ve voiced the pre amp with with Telefunken 12AX7’s and I have a small stash of them. Tube sound is still great right?
@jerryg123 if I interpret that statement correctly, you are saying that all amps are created equal? |
@bdp24 amen and Rip Roger….. |
The Music Reference RM-200 has been in the Stereophile Recommended Component List for over 20 years, with one model/design change in all that time (from original to Mk.2). Compare that with the amps of ARC ;-) . Unfortunately designer/builder Roger Modjeski died a few years back, so there won't be any more made. Some like his RM-9 even more than the RM-200, others---including Roger---his cute little RM-10. Me, I love 'em all, and own one of each. |
The best sounding amp I owned was a VAC Renaissance 70/70 Signature. I only sold it because I had to send it to VAC twice for repairs and each time, it would take 6-8 weeks for the repair and the price to repair fairly simple issues was disproportionately costly. Also, the Signature version of the amp weighs approx. 120 Lbs and I just couldn’t handle it any more (physically and financially). Today I’m using a vintage Music Reference RM9 MK2 with Siemens EL34’s, which Roger Modjeski rebuilt for me in 2017... the amp sounds fantastic, is physically unimposing and has been trouble free. |
My experience over the last forty years of owning top level amps… although in the past mostly solid state (but my preamps and phono stages have been tubed) is that, ten years is a significant improvement in performance… and twenty is in a completely different league. I have followed some brands like ARC, VAC, CJ, and Cary, occasionally auditioning. My feeling is that the evolution of solid state has been faster that tube (coming from further behind). But tube amps have evolved towards better resolution very substantially… while digital had to get more natural. Give that, I would expect that a restored twenty year old tube amp will sound good… but not perform at todays standards. If it were me, I would compare using your amps as a trade in, as is, versus using your upgraded amps as trade in. Perhaps that analysis would help. I actually traded in my 15 year old Pass x350 at only a reduced value of $500.. so, the trade I got was only $500 less than I paid for it… helping offset the cost of my new amp substantially. I am retired. I did a major upgrade a couple years ago. I am so happy I did. I spend over three hours a day listening and being awed by my system. It was worth it for me. But you have to look at your own situation. |
+1 @teo_audio |
I really appreciate all this insight, just to be clear the updates are done at the VAC factory, with their specified parts and the final release of the amp and pre amp's voicing is given by Kevin Hayes himself before it is returned. This is not some hot rod job, but a certified update. I think I am on the right path. Great feedback! |
Just about the norm for me. Simple answers are generally for buffoons, unless you find yourself running from a baboon. Life is entirely non-specific, even if our wiring is designed to generally see it in black and white terms. The mind expands, the body narrows. Black and white terms are things we force into existence, things that dissipate under the slightest touch or inquiry. As a mediator.... I’m sure you get that one... |
As another data point, my Ampsandsound Nautilus is modeled after the Harman Kardon Citation 2 which was introduced in 1959. Granted it is not my main speaker amplifier (I bought it to use as a headphone amp) but when driving my Devore O/93's the sound is different than but just as good as my ARC Ref 150 SE. Your VAC's after a refresh will be right up there with the best of modern anps, imho. |
A lot of people try to meditate, exceptionally few make it to real enlightenment. High end audio is no different. Lots of people try to make it to the the peak of the best in audio..but... few recognize it and few, few make it, and few sell it. Popularity of gear is the center of the bell curve, as.. it is, in all measure, a human bell curve. Where projections of what is best will be what they are, projections. The first false peak, one might say. The one that all the heavy advertising is built out of. The best selling brands are not the best, never have been - and never will be. It’s just life. And, if one moves to the best in gear, it will be difficult to find, difficult to discern, and if one makes it there, no one will listen to them. Maybe ... not even understand what they say, at all. Just like mediation and enlightenment, or any other endeavor that deals with a decently sized cross section of of people. A pattern emerges. One that repeats itself in all human endeavor and groupings.
Arthur Salvatore’s website (don’t even know if it exists, anymore), among others, covered this sort of issue or problem. This is specifically regarding your (the op’s) scenario. He said it, like (I paraphrase), ’the high end audio technician is your best friend. your most desirable friend. The most valuable person in audio, to you. As they alter the gear to sound as best it can, beyond the factory spec/parts, beyond the orignal spec. Not just repair of valued high end gear, but to upgrade it. The rarest technical beast/unicorn of all, the high end tech with an ear and can do good repair work. A talented one, would be one who understands what each and every single part does to the ’sound’ of a piece of gear. and they can then, with your desires in mind, go into the gear, and bring that to you - if it is possible to do so." This is, essentially, the last stop in audio, the last leg of the journey, the last few step sup the hill of audio enlightenment. When i see people reject modified audio gear, out of hand, I think of how right that can be, but also how wrong it can be. It’s a complex affair to judge the competency of a good audio technician. the next problem is the monkey. the monkey carrier, the one who wants to slip into the bushes on the savanna and have some semi-illicit sex with the young female monkeys. Where they are both supposed to be subservient to the top monkeys, and not do such things. Then, foraging for food, a thing done for the self by the self. When this sort of instinctual paring/area gets into audio, we find that we want everything good, to be free, and work hard to find that opportunistic moment. So we want the best gear for the lowest price and we’ll wander far and expend lots of energy to try and get there, via that method. Just part of being ’human’. This is some of this sort of stuff that is in the way of getting to the best in audio. Or, to circle back and ground it.,a bit... sending the gear in to have it modded out is a viable path to getting to better audio. In my mind, it is far better than buying new. Depends on the expense, though. Does reputation (tied to popularity) allow for gouging in prices? Or is the work good for the prices involved? A point which is difficult for the lay person to understand. Recall that success(in it’s breadth) is for mediocrity, not pinnacles or peaks. To keep that in mind when reviewing situations. The coin to analyze has not just those two sides, but is multi-faceted. All that be as it may, modding gear is the last stage in the last rungs of the ladder of high end audio. |
I am having a pair of 1960 Altec Lansing 1570B mono blocks refurbished and modded. I have listened to these and the sound is just incredible. They were originally commercial amps and not suitable for home audio but the modifications change that in a big way. John Tucker (Exempler Audio) will have mine ready in about a month. Golden age gear with a modern twist. |
In the fall I leave for Florida for the Winter, but return home for the holidays, so I can pick them up in Sarasota and bring them back home with me to enjoy over the holidays. So I can ship them there just before i leave and bring them back with me. I am also saving up for the upgrades which aren't cheap. |
Even if you want new features, ..... Definitely upgrade them, then break em in, keep or sell them already upgraded. why wait till the fall? just when you begin to spend more time indoors they will be in the shop. I say upgrade them NOW! Begin enjoying the upgrade sooner. Any advice from VAC on turn around time? Typical slow periods for them to get it done sooner?
|
Just my two cents, 1. Has Amp technology, outside of digital or class D, really advanced that much? I personally do not think so. 2. People spend thousands trying to replicate the sound of "golden era" components. Maybe more so on the recording side of things (mics, compressors, analog tape, etc). However, people seek the "golden" sound of tubes, speakers, etc as well I would send in your components and let VAC give them a go-over. IMO, you have endgame equipment. |