I have only had a Line magnetic 216i and not the others. I had see a lady technician on YouTube who stated a Willsenton amp has a design flaw that is critical. She offered a fix but I don’t recall which model. Skunkie Designs. I went with a US dealer who stated LM Audio would back any part or design failures and I had a transformer fail after about 5 years that the company fixed. I wouldn’t buy from a Chinese dealer.
Cayin, Line Magnetic, and Willsenton with 805 Feedback
I am considering one of the following integrated amplifiers and I'm looking for feedback from others familiar with these amplifiers or have experience with the brands. We listen to a wide variety of music but classic rock and jazz are at the top of our listening list and our speakers are vintage JBL L100s. I'm familiar with the PrimaLuna 300i so any comparisons to it will be appreciated. I am interested in how well it sounds, it's build quality, reliability, and anything else you think is noteworthy. The manufacturers are Cayin, Line Magnetic, and Willsenton so do you have feedback on them?
The amplifiers are:
- Cayin CS-805A
- Line Magnetic LM-805ia
- Willsenton R800i with 805 tubes
Thanks in advance for your help.
I have the Willsenton R8, the model modified in the series on Skunkie Designs Electronics Youtube channel. The "critical" mod is a bias board pot resistor bypass to prevent a potentiometer wiper failure leaving the circuit wide open and causing the power tubes to red-plate and cause further downstream damage to the output transformers. The R8 is a KT88 push-pull design. The R800i is a SET design IIRC with an 805 triode transmitter tube as the power tube, one per channel. Willsenton makes two variants, the other using an 845 tube with slightly lower power output. |
I’ve owned a Willsenton R800i 845 for over two years now. I upgraded all the tubes w fancy NOS in preamp section and better new issue tubes in 300b and 845. It sounds fantastic driving Klipsch Forte IIIs, Heresy IIs, and Focal Aria 926, all high sensitivity. I’ve rolled in a Cary Audio 300SEI and Dennis Had Inspire KT-88 as well as a vintage Crown DC300A in the main rig. The Willsenton definitely held its own and outshines the others in PRAT, bass control and treble extension. The Cary Audio bests it with vocal midrange, as to be expected with 300b output tubes. Never had any issues with it. The 805 or 845 will drive your JBLs with ease. |
@bannon I am happy with the R8, but it is not the amp I bought (AMZ). I did about 3/4 of the Skunkie mods, upgrading the signal path capacitors and resistors and swapping out the stock choke. I left the mains voltage switch stock and same for the headphone jack, all of which Skunkie deleted, and I didn't bother rerouting the tube heater wiring. I swapped out all of the tubes for PSVane matched power tubes (KT88), higher-grade PSVane for the 6SN7 drivers and voltage regulator and NOS RCA 5691s for the stock 6SL7s in the preamp. The sound was never bad, but there was a noticeable improvement in detail with the better tubes. The power output with the R8 makes the use of the amplifier possible with several of my less sensitive speakers, something a SET amp would not do as well. For the money, it is a very good tube amp. I have not heard the Muzishare X7 which I have heard is very good and not needing mods.Since the Skunkie vids, Willsenton has made unannounced upgrades to the bias boards and offers tube upgrades on order (upcharge). Skunkie has gone further to swap out the output transformers for high-grade Japanese transformers. To me, the R8 is a great budget tube amp, and remains so as long as you keep the upgrades in check, but if you are going to buy the amp then do all the mods and change out the transformers, you are 3/4ths the way to a clean used Audio Research i/50 which is a much better amp. |
It seems many people in this hobby are skilled in electronics either by profession or hobbyist experience so doing the Skunkie mods is well within their capabilities. Unfortunately, I wouldn't trust myself with a soldering iron anywhere near any of these rigs. Nonetheless, I enjoy reading about your experiences and thank you for the information. |
I own the Willsenton R800i (805) and all I can say is that I can’t imagine going back to solid state. It’s my first tube amp and apart from this one I have basically zero listening experience regarding other tube amps. I’d love to A/B it with others to really know how the Willsenton performs, but that has not happened yet. |
Can’t speak for LM or Willsenton, but Cayins are indeed excellent. In fact I wouldn’t hesitate to pit Cayin performance against the likes of VAC and Audio Research. I had an original Cayin A88T that was built in 2006. I was at least its second owner—owned it for about 6 years between 2017 and 2023. It never gave me any issues other than a failed preamp tube, and is/was built like a tank. The Rogue Cronus Dark is also around your price range and sounds excellent. |
Completely agree with @helomech. I still own a Cayin A88T Mk II that I purchased around 2007. It sounds great, built like a tank and responds well to upgrading the preamp tubes. I rotate the Cayin into my system with a Luxman integrated. |
I have no experience with the Cayin or the Line Magnetic, but I do own an R800i that I’ve had modified by Scott Frankland (had a 300B tube blow and the amp wouldn’t biasing correctly). Here’s a cut and paste of a post I made on StereoNet: |
To be clear, these were the two design issues Scott found with the R800i: • Lack of enough filtration for hum (minor) |