VSI 75 today… REF 75se in a few years… REF 160s in a few more.
can it bee that audio research vsi 75 has lack of open highs/mid ?
i auditioned twice one on display which offered me in kind of attractive price..
did it with my vinyl records
280 hours of working with kt150 tubes.
we tried it on several speakers .
some of them the sound was more open, but i still felt that it’s not "open" and natural enough.
i know that arc saying that the amp need around 600 hours for break in, but still i would expect something more after almost 300.
we compared it with kr audio va 900 which i think was a bit more open, but i think also a bit more aggressive.
does someone have another experience with this integrated amp?
Were you to go ahead with purchasing the Ref 75SE I would highly recommend that you replace the pair of factory supplied new production Sovtek 6h30 Pi EB with genuine pre 1990 production Reflector Corp 6h30 DR Genuine DR’s have become increasingly hard to find and there are a number of eBay vendors listing new production Sovtek Pi EB as NOS 6h30 DR They are a little expensive however you only need a pair and they will most certainly audibly out perform the ARC factory pair. See below an online guide to recognising genuine pre 1990 Reflector plant production 6h30 DR I would recommend this upgrade to any member running ARC equipment with the stock ARC tubes. http://www.aca.gr/index/hiend/hiendArticles?row=1988
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Thanks. Helpful information. So, understanding your situation better. The normal recommendation would be to say, find your speakers first. Then work on subsequent components. After fifty years of improving my audio systems. I am going to tell you my prejudges view. I would buy the VSI75 on faith. It is an incredibly musical integrated amp. While sometimes it is easy to get waylaided by highly detailed trebly forward imaging, the musicality of that amp is truly amazing. That is a world class piece of equipment you can build a truly great system around. Then, I would pick pieces to complement it… definitely an Audio Research Phonostage… you want to hear your TT sound great, I am prejudice, after pursuing the high end for over fifty years and now owning an all ARC system that amazes me every time listen to it… am sad when I have to do something else.
Buy the way, a fellow audiophile came over recently commented on how great the imaging was on my system. Audio Research is known for that too. |
the country is Israel. |
first, i still don’t own this arc, just listened to it in a store. |
Google "teflon capacitor". They are a type of capacitor that a few high end builders use. They also take a long time to break in. They SOUND weird while they are breaking in. The caps will throw sound in different directions and sound bright, harsh, and in general BAD. In a speaker crossover they take even longer 300 hours is not uncommon up to 1000 hours. I hook up speakers face to face almost touching. I put blankets over them and play them for 2 weeks in a row, 24 hours a day. I DON'T hook one out of phase. Both in phase at a low volume. I use a Brain 5800 Nelson Pass amp. It's biased on the cool side and made to run 24 hours a day. It had teflon cap installed 15 years ago. I seldom break in speakers NOW. Up until 5 years ago that 5800 was seldom turned off breaking in speakers over a 25 year period. I bought it as a demo. It has over 150,000 hours on the actual chassis. BTW Teflons seldom wear out, EVER. Few caps other than an "orange drop" type cap (ferrous iron) can say that. Condon Johnson uses the heck out of teflons, so do I for the last 20 years. TNT in particular and good old Russian surplus.. They are not cheap either, even surplus. Regards |
Be patient. Some of these guys are using teflons, 600-1000 hours for sound that last 35+ years, it's worth the wait. I use teflons in a few valve units, wonky is the word for a bit. Drive you nuts in speaker crossovers, but they sure sound good after a 24/7/14 face to face (2 whole weeks.) THEN listen! Regards |