Is a VTL ST-150 enough?


I have been shopping for a new amp for my verity Parsifal Encores. I am trying to avoid mono blocs due to room constraints. I demo'd a VTL ST-150 and in tetrode it was fine. In triode it was magical, though the bottom end at times was a little loose and not fully defined. Soundstage was freaky holographic and at times I was actually laughing hearing such a thing out of my system it sounded so cool. I am concerned though that it may not have enough power for all my needs, wish VTL would make a ST-250. Others experience? Suggestions? My system is posted though with upgrade to veriy parsifal encore, Nordost Frey speaker wires and Naim CDX2. Thanks.
davt

Showing 2 responses by samujohn

Triode amplification is addictive, but the price is less power out of the amp. I had several triode amps, including a set of VTL 185 monos which sounded about as you describe (in triode), and on a variety of speakers. In Tetrode there was lots of power, but who cares?
Cheapest way out is powered subs. The other plan is something like the VTL 250 monoblocks, or to change to much more efficient speakers.
Welcome to the triode fan club.
David Manley made his amps switchable to triode because, given a reasonable load, he thought they served the music better. If speakers sound better in tetrode than triode, I suggest that they would sound still better with a good solid state amplifier - like a CJ 2500A.
Speakers and amplifiers are literally made for each other. Most modern speaker designs are made assuming high current solid state amplifiers. High voltage devices like tubes do best when given loads that do not require gobs of current and steep filter curves. Electrostatics, on the other hand, are tough on solid state designs and, as they are high voltage devices, they were made for tubes.