@coppy777 yea I dont need more power, it would be a sound quality difference
Solid State Preamp to replace tube unit
I currently own a CJ tube preamp. Ive always owned tube preamps and I would like to get my first solid state preamp.I am fed up with buying expensive hard to find tubes that last 3 months or new production tubes with that not so great sound. I pine for consistency. I probably wont sell my CJ I'll just keep it. My power amps are NAD M23 for the summer and CJ Premiere 12's for the winter.
Since I dont dabble in the solid state world I am not sure what to get. I figure since this is my first SS unit 4-5k preowned??. Some brands I have considered CODA< Pass, AYRE, Classe, Bel Canto, Krell etc. Note: I have tried the Parasound and Benchmark but they didnt do it for me. I dont like anayltical sterile sound. If it is a touch warm/colored that is probably good as I am coming from a very warm CJ tube unit.
Must haves are a remote with balance control. Multiple outputs (XLR and RCA). I have an outboard phono pre. Thank you for reading and for your suggestions.
@jimbones doing some quick checking over AudioAsylum and TubesAsylum to see if others with CJ Premier 12 and/or 6550s had tried others such as some of the better KT88s. Also, located some comments indicating the Premier 12s are 650v at the plate. There is some mention, not a lot, but possibility of running good KT88s in place of 6550s maybe in your Premier 12s, worth checking more to see its a candidate. Seems the older discussions of running the Sventlana 6550s, led to others jumping over to KT88s. But again, you may need to find multiple sources there to know for sure that its safe in your amps. On a related note, I helped a friend and we upgraded his older Jolida amp, it use to run 6550s, and a few local friends and I suggested to the try the latest PSVane KT88 TII MKII tube in it. The result has been quite pleasing, less of a glassy modern sound, and more of a lush body/warmth to the amp now. Can be nice if that's what you like. Find a replutable tube reseller of KT88s if you try it. Note: I run TS KT120s in my own QS Monoblock tube amps, and while I like the KT120 too vs. KT150s, if my amps had lower plate voltage, I'd be running really good KT88s as an alternate. Long story, I cannot, i have the big amps with extra larger transformers and big plate voltage, will burn them up prematurely. In your case, though - might be worth a nice try, and worth checking with peer P12 owners, and maybe CJ would advise you on this, worth asking. There are some big fans out here who prefer good KT88s over most of the othe TS KT series tubes fwiw.
|
@decooney Thank you so much. Yes I have heard others say they used kt88 as well. Some prefer 88's other prefer 6550's. from what I know I can use the 88's without any problems. |
@jimbones that’s great, on a different path and price point - my local 55-year-in-business audio dealer has retired clients with upcoming birthdays and Christmas presents due -or- goals for their "bucket list" buys. He has ordered quad sets of E.A.T. KT88s. While they are quite pricey, if you want to splurge, I gather from people who purchased them, they were quite pleased. One other possible way to help squelch your TS KT120 desires, these might fill in nicely as another option. . I’ve never tried them but I might if my amps could run KT88s like yours can! MFG and specs found here by European Audio Team https://www.europeanaudioteam.com/en/eat-kt88-diamond-valve-wp000023.html |
@decooney im sure they are pricey, but HOW PRICEY ARE THEY LOL!! I have a buddy with lots of spare kt88 to loan me to try. They are EH 88's so they are not the best but should give me an idea of the change in sound I would get. |
@jimbones I had the EH KT88s in my Cary SLI-80 stock, and never could get myself to warm up to those - at all. Kinda lean and non-engaging in that amp. Did not like then much at all for my amp at the time. Depends on the amp too, and how they are driven, biased, and of course how they work with the rest of your system of course. Your friend can probably tell you why they are available as loaners. I only kept them to give away with the amps as backup test tubes. When I upgraded the SLI-80 internally, the next tubes I tried was reissue new Genelex Gold Lyon KT88s. They were nice tubes (balanced top to bottom) for the quad price $ at the time. My buddy did the PSVane KT88 MKIIs, and those had a little more body and warmth, slightly rolled off on top taking the etch off, and he's been running them 2yrs, loves. them, they did well in his amp. As for the overly pricey and limited availability EAT KT88s, maybe I spoke too soon, I noticed just now on a few sites they are unavailable, out of stock. When I mentioned birthdays, christmas time, or bucket list buy - here is why. You could call TD and ask them about EATs, and they do sell other decent KT88s too. Hold your breath now, LOL, seems they may not be available much right now anyhow...ugh. https://www.tubedepot.com/products/eat-kt88-diamond-power-vacuum-tube-matched-quad?srsltid=AfmBOoqggHuzJXgBXwvysqp1ORO7lRJ0AXCrUvY4B9PwrTacqQ-pyN2B |
@decooney DOH! Note the EH sound fine in my buddies system but then again the rest of his system is amazing. He has the funds to do it so... |
You have Nice Conrad Johnsen amplifiers why would you want to change out of your CJ pre-amplifier? Which model is it? I hear pairing CJ is really a good idea. I thought about buying one of the amplifiers to go with my CJ and didn't do it because I wanted to biamp with tube and solid-state. I would upgrade the preamp from CJ, can't believe tubes would be that much of an issue. |
@jimbones I didn't read the whole thread so I apologize if someone already mentioned this. I had the same problem. My phono stage needed the tubes replaced yearly and then I got a tube headphone amp and was going through tubes every 3 months. The problem was the voltage was high, which fried my tubes. I got a $20-30 voltage meter to confirm the voltage was above 120. It was not much above 123 - 126, but that was enough. I get a step-down transformer and that solved the problem. I hope this helps.
Mike |
Post removed |
@miker123 thanks. I also have a PS Audio power plant buty I am not going through it. Maybe I should. Also, my tubes tend not to be a catastrophic failure but get hiss or noisy. |
I sold my VAC Sig and now use the MSB Referece DAC as my pre. Very happy with the move. I also went from an Aesthetix Rhea phono pre to the Pass XP-27. I loved the Rhea but hated feeding it tubes and fighting hum. The Pass sounds as good if not better. I would definitely look at a Pass Labs Pre. Good luck. |
Heillo @jimbones after reading back through this thread and some of the steps you’ve taken so far, and about to take next, there are helpful suggestions by several members here.
One is to ensure you have clean power at the outlet -or- your PS power conditioning unit. Whatever you use. The other is solving your curiosity about running a nice SS preamp, and seeing how that goes comparatively in terms of sound and presentation for you. Maybe there is a 30 day demo in our sights. While I’ve played with some older pass preamps, and after messing around myself, I don’t disagree with @skinzy - something like the XP-27 designed by Wayne Colburn would be nice to try for sure. It commands a real price. I’ve not tested one, yet I’ve chatted with Nelson a few years about the layering and presentation a really good tube amp brings. Comparing to this preamp, and Nelson’s DIY Korg flat tube preamp could be fun too. Nelson told me he has many SS amp customers using his amplifiers with tube preamps on the front end. I use both and rotate, yet always go back to the tube preamp for my own preferences, imaging, layering, etc. In a few cases i’m noting your comments about "tube noise", and your comments about buying some new (as in new re-issue) tubes and trying again. If you purchased tubes from Brent / Andy before, and the tubes tested well, something else comes to mind. Some times tubes get rattled and become compromised in shipping. Also wondering if you’ve tried the other "new" tubes you mentioned, has that helped at all? Local Tech: Re-test your tubes, all of them. Do you have a local tech you can go to around your area, bringing all of your small and large input/driver/output tubes and have them tested to possibly identify any culprits in the bunch contributing to your noted tube noise? Local electrician: If you’ve not already done this, do you have a local electrician who could come in and test your AC outlets to validate if there is noisy power? I had something similar going on years back with my tube system and my other solid state system at the time. I ended up rewiring and replacing outlets, when with a Richard Gray power station for my amps and preamp and the issues disappered fwiw. Some other ideas for thought in finding the root cause, if possible. Best of Luck on the journey. |
@decooney I was hoping to embed my response into your comprehensive post but not sure how to do it so ill try my best to answer. I agree that I have received many great ideas for which I am thankful and take seriously. I have a PS Audio Premiere power plant. Not sure I hear an improvement with it but I will make sure to route the preamp through it (right now it goes directly to the wall)
I have recently purchased a Tesla tube that sounds fantastic. Its a bit microphonic when I tap on it or change volume. But I dont believe it is an issue when listening to music. There is no hiss.
My buddy has a tube tester and is kind enough to test when ever I need. so that is not an issue. I feel very lucky as this guy is very knowledgeable.
I have 2 dedicated lines to my hifi equipment that I personally ran. I remember a buddy came over with some kind of noise tester but I dont remember what the results were.
Thank you for your input. It is much appreciated and want to make sure that I personally respond to the suggestions. I was at CAF this weekend and it was a ball. If anyone has the chance, do it.
|
@jimbones wow, sounds like you have all the bases covered and then some, and access to capable people around you to test things out. Very nice. The only reason I commented was the original post was the possibility of a solid state preamp instead of tube. Last year I thought I’d try something similar, going in reverse of where I came from over a few decades. While it was in interesting exercise to re-validate history. and I enjoy a Class A preamp/amp periodically, I usually go back to my all tube preamp and tube amps system to experience what it does in its own unique way - for those more engaged listening sessions. Keep us posted on how the new tube testing goes and wether the original inquiry is solved yet or not. I’ll be sharing this thread with a few friends doing something similar as you, going through all of the exact same checks and such. Enjoy!
|
@decooney I should have stated that the main complaint for my system is that the sound gets congested when playing classical music. It sounds flat. I need a open and transparent with high dynamic range. Thanks for following this. |
@jimbones does your Nad M23 amplifier mentioned in your original post hold up to that classical music challenge for you?
|
I replaced an ARC Ref. 3 preamp with a Pass XP-30, which listed for $16K but I found a used one for $6K. Mine is three-units, one for power and the other two for each channel. However, they sell a two-unit XP-22 for about $10K that I have read is damn close to the XP-30. First, let me say I loved my ARC Ref 3. It was a serious tube preamp in that it didn't have the over-blown bloom I've heard in other ARC preamps. I owned an LS 22 which sounded rich and wonderful to me at first. The midrange bloom seduced me. After owning it for a while, I realized that bloom obscured weak bass and somewhat shrill treble. The Ref 3 had all the seduction of the LS 22, but everything was balanced and nothing was weak or shrill. The reason I sold it was that I simply could not deal with changng tubes all the time. As much as I loved the Ref. 3, I have to say the Pass XP-30 is an improvement. It has clarity and transparency I haven't heard in any other preaImp. I might say that it disappears and lets the music come through unscathed. I hear my turntable and amp, but the preamp has no signature but clarity. I would highly recommend Pass. |
@ghdprentice These aren't hard tube failures, mostly noise related. I mentioned earlier that may be since I am buying tubes from suppliers where the tubes are "pulls" and maybe not NOS. |
@audio-b-dog I am strongly considering the Pass Labs. |
OP, OK, that may explain it. Good, new graded tunes should last the whole 3,000 hours without failure. I am running something like fifty tubes and in the last ten years replaced two because of problems.
Audio Research does the most extensive testing before selling and Upscale, The Tube Store always test, but not to as great an extent. I would simply recommend getting new tubes and your trouble with tubes are likely to be reduced to nothing. |
I commented earlier in this thread that I have been happy with my Pass XP-12, it offered a nice balance in comparison to the other preamps that I tried. However, I chanced upon a good deal on an Audionet G2, I struggle to find the words to describe this upgrade. Yes, when new it is four times the price of the XP-12, so it should be good. But I think there is just a completely different philosophy in this design, the amount of aural information is astounding, coupled with a totally natural presentation. Worth a look. |