Lewm - James at Whest explained to me that when he designed the 30 range he wanted to make a more affordable phono stage directly from the V's design and he spent a great deal of time deciding on what he could take out of the V to end up with the 30r, then the RDT and finally the SE.
Having owned all of them and now the V and seen the insides I can confirm that 30 range is a stripped-down version of the V, although the SE is much closer to the V than the others.
The main difference is that the V has some 20 or so (per channel - 40 or so total) regulators, each with hand-picked and matched components. The boards are much larger, and all components are hand-picked and matched too. James says that Whest have to test about 100 or so components just to get one matched pair that they deem suitable for the V. That's one of the reasons it's so expensive - labour time is huge.
I'll post some pics up of the interior when I get a chance.
I'll also post up my experience of the V soon, but as a starter, everything DCarol has said is dead right. It is utterly magnificent!
Oh, by the way, in the time I've known him I've found James is a genuine music lover. He's not driven by the need to make just money - as many manufacturers are - his aim is to make the best phono stages in the world.
I think he's done it with the V.
Having owned all of them and now the V and seen the insides I can confirm that 30 range is a stripped-down version of the V, although the SE is much closer to the V than the others.
The main difference is that the V has some 20 or so (per channel - 40 or so total) regulators, each with hand-picked and matched components. The boards are much larger, and all components are hand-picked and matched too. James says that Whest have to test about 100 or so components just to get one matched pair that they deem suitable for the V. That's one of the reasons it's so expensive - labour time is huge.
I'll post some pics up of the interior when I get a chance.
I'll also post up my experience of the V soon, but as a starter, everything DCarol has said is dead right. It is utterly magnificent!
Oh, by the way, in the time I've known him I've found James is a genuine music lover. He's not driven by the need to make just money - as many manufacturers are - his aim is to make the best phono stages in the world.
I think he's done it with the V.