Zu Druid & Definition Roundup


In separate threads about the Zu Druid V and Zu Definition 3 & 4 in this forum, several questions have been directed to me about the comparative merits of these models, supertweeter capacitors, and a variety of other variables. Rather than bury comments in those threads, I thought it better to start a new thread and focus any follow-up comments or questions in one place.

Over the past few weeks, I helped a new Definition 3 owner install and setup his speakers, after earlier having setup his loaner Def3s that had an earlier iteration of the supertweeter network. Additionally, I made a capacitor change on the high pass filter to the supertweeter on my own Definition 4 and Druid V speakers. For further perspective on this, I have lived with my Definition 4 speakers for the past 13 months, and my Druid Vs for the past three months. Prior to that, I have migrated through the Definition 1.5 > 2 > 4 upgrade path, and Druid “3.5” > 4 > 4-08 > 5 upgrade path in two discrete systems since 2005. Any search on Zu topics or my handle here will serve up plenty of commentary on Zu speakers, cables, suitable amplification and other related matters, so I am not going to attempt to repeat all of that here. But I am going to roll up a collection of observations in response to prior questions, that might help Zu owners understand the relative value of current options in the upper half of Zu’s range, as well as people who have never owned Zu but who are considering their speakers, to better grasp what they might gain.

Druid 3, 4, 5

My first Druids were a used purchase from a prior owner here in Los Angeles. It turns out they were one of the first 10 pairs of Druids made. They had been sent back to Zu in late 2004 to be upgraded to then-current configuration plus had full internal Ibis cabling. The first 10 Druids made had the Speakon connector for full B3 geometry from amp to drivers when using Zu cables (I did), along with parallel Cardas posts for connecting any other cable. When I bought this first pair of Druids, they were shipped to me from Zu, in what Sean called a configuration he approximated as “version 3.5.” That speaker hooked me on the holistic Zu sound, but it had a euphonic warmth and soft top end that was forgiving and not fully revealing. Nevertheless, that v3.5 Druid was addictive for its unity of behaviors, and much like the original Quad electrostatic its ample advantages made it easy to overlook its limitations. The v4 upgrade opened up the top end marginally and was welcome, but the Spring 2008 v4-08 upgrade to Druid was a big leap toward bringing Druid closer to the liveliness and open top end of Definition. Then Druid was taken out of the Zu line. I let the Essence aberration pass by. Sean got back on track sonically with Superfly but I preferred the Druid form factor so stuck with the dead-ended Druid 4-08 for my secondary system, all the time lobbying Zu – along with other Druid owners – to restore Druid in more modern form in their line.

We got exactly that in Druid V late last year. For 4-1/2 years, while Essence came and went, Superfly got the HO FRD and then Nano, Druid was static and falling behind. Version 4-08 still had some tone-density and focus that was sacrificed in Superfly in favor of that speaker’s livelier, burstier dynamics and somewhat more expansive scalar projection. Superfly also had a slightly more extended top end than Druid 4-08 so to most people it simply sounded more like a modern speaker should, than Druid 4-08. It also had a more complete Griewe implementation, for faster and more textured bass than Druid. Druid V addressed all that, and more. The more advanced multi-composite cabinet with integral full Griewe and the mechanical grounding of the thick aluminum plinth would have comprehensively improved Druid even if the old Druid drivers had been installed. But the advance of the Nano FRD and the Radian 850 in supertweeter use gave us a Druid form factor speaker that has the linearity and finesse of Definition, with the traditional focus, unity and tone density of Druid even more present and obvious than in any prior version. Druid V *is* the modern equivalent to the original Quad ESL, without the extreme beaming, the bass limitation, dynamic restriction and fragility. It just happens to deliver Quad-like unity and speed from dynamic drivers with much higher efficiency *and* power handling. Druid V is finally an uncompromised and uncompromising speaker that despite its price can be justifiably driven by the very highest quality amplification at many times the cost of the speaker, yet can put modest amps in their best light. Why would anyone drive Druid V with amplification that costs lots more than a pair of the speakers? Because the total design can leverage stellar amplification, and no other speaker today can duplicate the full combination of attributes that Druid V delivers. You can get even greater focus and unity, ironically, in Zu’s line from the ~$60,000 Dominance, with its radiused front baffle and three FRDs, but not with Druid’s lightness of mass, presence and drivability. No Magico at any price can deliver Druid’s pure unity of behaviors regardless of what you try to drive them with, and no Magico is as musically satisfying with such a wide range of amplifiers. Druid V laughs at the cacophonous disunity of a Wilson speaker. Druid V ridicules the dynamic choke points imposed on Focal speakers at the crossover points. In the same way that no one appreciative of the unity of the Quad ESL heard any musical value from the Infinity IRS or a Duntech Sovereign back in the day, a Druid V owner today can pretty much ignore the rest of the alleged “high-end” speaker market inflicting damage upon our hearing, with the exception of other Zu speakers.

Because of the newest Nano FRD’s ability to reproduce more musical scale than prior Druids, for the first time in version V, Druid is a credible HT2.0 speaker in addition to being a great 2ch music speaker. Also for the first time, Druid is now quite good for listening to a full orchestra, whereas earlier Druids fell short on scale for orchestral purposes. Druid V is the first “no-apologies” Druid. That’s not to say that Definition doesn’t have advantages for more money – it certainly does. But Druid V is now a true all-music, all-purpose speaker with no real musical limitations in practical domestic use, and if a lower linear limit of about 35Hz isn’t deep enough for you, there’s always Zu’s new subwoofers. It’s also extremely amplifier-friendly. And the Griewe implementation does a fabulous job of extracting solid, tuneful bass from low-damping-factor/rising-deep-bass-THD SET amplifiers. Druid V gets qualitatively better bass from 2a3, 45 and 300B SET amps than any unassisted (no powered sub) speaker I can think of.

Definition 1.5, 2, 3, 4

The 2004/5 era Definition 1.5 was a revelation in its day, for its combination of speed, transparency, resolution, scale, bombast and finesse while having very good unity behaviors and terrific amplifier friendliness. It was sharply different from the same-era Druid because of its extended top end, almost tilted a little bright, and for its impressive sub-bass foundation. It was a relatively big, bursty, lively speaker even driven by modest power. It also had two clear deficiencies: first the sub-bass array amp had no level control (later and quickly rectified for everyone after I pointed out the glaring omission upon receiving my speakers), and second, that v1.X Definition’s MDF cabinet “talked” at high SPLs, marring the clean and incisive sound with an overriding glare. In Definition 2, cabinet talk was dramatically reduced by introduction of the birch-ply cabinet structure, stronger baffle, more robust plinth and associated damping techniques. The voicing of the speaker also tilted somewhat darker but the net result was a Definition absent ringing and glare, cleaner at moderate SPLs and far less fatiguing at high playing volumes – even fair to say altogether unfatiguing. While Definition 4 introduced many simultaneous improvements, Definition 3 shows clearly how much cabinet talk was left in Def2’s “silent” cabinet. Def3 starts with a Def2 cabinet and gets additional bracing and damping during the upgrade and it is plainly apparent when you first fire up Def3s after being familiar with Def2, that sound emerges from cleaner, quieter noise plane in the newer speaker. Def3, while retaining Def2’s 4x10” sub-bass line array on a rear baffle, gains seriously-improved deep bass by virtue of replacement of the Def2 plate amp and level control with Def4’s D amp with parametric controls. The Dominance trickle-down Nano FRD gives Def3 a close facsimile of Def4 performance from lowest response up to 10kHz or so, but Def3 uses the older-generation Zu supertweeter, which cannot begin to match the beauty, finesse and spray of the Radian 850 supertweeter used in the upper range Zu speakers. Def3 sub-bass performance is not equal to Def4’s but it is surprisingly competitive. In the Zu FRD range of roughly 38Hz – 12kHz, Def3 is very close to Def4, separated by clear differences in cabinet construction and internal configuration that give Def4 advantage as should be the case. As you get above roughly 8kHz, where the Radian 850 in Def4 begins to slope in, the upper range of the FRD in Def4 through the Radian’s exclusive extension on the top are in absolutely every way contributive to an elevated sense of musical fidelity and realism.

Definition 3 would be a market-wrangling speaker not surpassed at 3 or 4X its price if Definition 4 did not exist. But it does. As good as the new sub-bass amp and parametric controls are for the older 4x10” line array on the back baffle of Def3, the 4x10” rear-firing cones can’t load the room as evenly and deliver the incisive unity of Def4’s downfiring 12” driver. As closely as Def3’s Nano FRDs match the same in Def4, the completely re-architected cabinet of Def4 allows the drivers to perform with greater neutrality and freedom from distracting resonance. And the Radian 850 sprays the loveliest and yet most objective harmonic content of any tweeter I can think of today. The combined effect of Def4’s improvements over the Def2/3 design make it a compelling upgrade worth every penny to anyone who can afford its price compared to Def3, and yet the bargain roots of rendering Def3s from donor Def2s yields a speaker that is astonishingly great for its sub-$10K price and is necessarily limited in the number that will be produced. Notwithstanding that Omen Def is probably the peak value point in a two-FRD Zu speaker, for true high-end applications, Def3 is the high-discretionary-income value point and Def4 above it is the luxury alternative that nevertheless has no non-essential waste in its composition or price.

Definition 3 or Druid V?

I get this question privately from time to time: “For less than $2K difference, Druid V or Def3?”

These two speakers suit different priorities. Ask yourself the following:

1/ What is your application? That is, do you use your speakers strictly for 2-ch music or is your system doing dual duty for 2ch music and HT2.0?
2/ How important is the bass region between 16Hz - 35Hz to you?
3/ What are you using for amplification?
4/ What is the size of the space you have to acoustically load, and how far you sit from your speakers.
5/ What are your music listening habits, and what are the 3 - 5 sonic attributes you most value to feel satisfied?

There’s not a straightforward answer to this question, without knowing the above, but it’s easy enough for anyone reading this to self-sort. Druid V will give you focus, tone density, top end finesse and beauty that Def3 can’t quite match; Def3 will give you spatial & dynamic scale, deep bass foundation, resolution and horizontal dispersion that Druid V can’t equal. Overlapping both are the speed, agility, transparency and shove of the Zu Nano FRD. So, having the honest self-awareness to know what satisfies you most if your finances force a choice, will yield a crisp answer. If you can’t live with the trade-off, that’s your signal to save, and save, for Definition 4s.

Supertweeter Network Capacitors

Recently, there has been a lot of new interest in capacitor upgrades for the supertweeter high pass filter in Zu speakers, particularly the Druid and Definition. I have not been able to listen to all the available and oft-discussed options. My Def2s and Druid Mk 4-08s had Mundorf Silver-in-Oil caps. I had my Definition 4s built with V-Cap CuTF as an upgrade over the Mundorf. My Druid Vs were built with Mundorf Silver-in-Oil. In January, at Sean Casey’s recommendation, I had Clarity caps installed in both Def4s and Druid Vs. My Duelund capacitors are back-ordered (well, Zu urgently needed my pair for a more demanding customer), so I await them. I have heard Duelunds in non-Zu speakers. There are a few things I can say about capacitors at this stage, with more comments to follow as I put more contenders head-to-head.

1/ Every capacitor brand, formulation and composition brings specific attributes and a sonic signature. None are perfect. Not even Duelunds. You tend to think that what is best in current experience is as good as it gets until you hear something better. I can understand why someone feels ecstatic allegiance to Duelund caps, while at the same time appreciating why someone else prefers V-Cap TFTF or CuTF or some other alternative to them. For example, Sean Casey takes the position that Clarity caps bring 85% of Duelund’s sound quality to Definition 4 and Druid 5, for less than 1/3rd the retail cost. Elsewhere on this forum, another poster relates a conversation wherein Sean said something similar about the Audyn True Copper caps (90% for 10%). I haven’t heard the Audyn capacitors so have no comment right now. I will say that if Clarity is close to Duelund results, then both are a clear improvement over Mundorf Silver-in-Oil. The Clarity cap is both revealing and exceedingly smooth. But the case for Clarity (and by extension Duelund if Sean’s assessment holds) isn’t a slam-dunk compared to V-Cap CuTF or TFTF. There’s such a thing as too-smooth. This is reminiscent of the same disagreement I have with advocates of “slow” voiced SET amplifiers compared to the quick and transparent Audion SET amps that are so unlike most other SET brands. Some listeners are strongly attracted to a too-smooth representation. A lot of instruments have some harshness and rough texture in their output. The Clarity sands a touch of this off, just like (but less than) the round-sound old-school SET amp voicings some listeners favor. The V-Cap has more snap & tooth in its sound, but it is also less forgiving. I’m still in trial with a decision about whether to stick with Clarity or return to V-Cap CuTF or TFTF – as well as Duelund – pending. No, don’t bother assuring me that I’m going to love Duelund caps. Just consider me open to being convinced, but also not assuming a priori I will be.

2/ All of these exotic film caps take time to settle in. Clarity sounds great fresh but then they put you through a few weeks of meandering performance. They seem to be sensitive to temperature during the infant hours of use. We’ve had an unusually cold December and January here in Los Angeles, and I don’t use much furnace heat (you northerners and east coasters should see what people in SoCal consider a “furnace…”). A day of 64 degrees in my house sets breaking-in Clarity caps back a couple of steps. A warm day with internal temps in the high 70s pushes them forward. Then they go through a period of sounding beautiful on simple music, but shut down with congestion and blur on complex music. And then they start being reborn again to reassert their original convincing impression, and more. You have to be patient with any change.

3/ The Radian 850 in supertweeter application in Druid V and above in Zu’s line is intrinsically smooth, articulate, detailed and lovely. Frankly every cap sounds great into it, with the worst and the best still within the realm of excellent. You’ll hear differences and likely develop clear preferences, but even the basic Mundorf Silver-in-Oil sounds fully credible and completely acceptable in the absence of hearing something better. But the advantage of upgrading the Clarity (or Audyn True Copper, I imagine) is unmistakably beneficial to Def3’s supertweeter, and any earlier Definition or other Zu speaker using it, is fairly dramatic insofar as you are paying attention to top end harmonic character and are influenced by it. Clarity really tames much of the comparative roughness in the pre-Radian Zu supertweeter, compared to all the stock cap choices put in those speakers. What I’m saying is, pick your cap for Def4 and Druid5, knock yourself out. Some will sound definitely better but all will sound very fine. But if you have a Zu speaker using the older supertweeter and have an appetite to give them a worthwhile refinement, get a Clarity cap network upgrade. The cost is very reasonable and the benefit is disproportionately large at the price.

4/ There may be a cheap sleeper in capacitors. I was discussing film cap upgrades with Bob Hovland a couple of weeks ago. He mentioned that his more recent research indicated that the material consistency of the dielectric in film capacitors (even thickness & density, absence of pinholes) is more influential to sound quality than specific materials themselves. He wasn’t suggesting that all more exotic capacitors might not deliver someone’s preferred sound, but he does believe an excellent sounding cap can be made from prosaic materials. SuperCaps has a relatively new family of “Robert Hovland Edition” film caps that are highly affordable. They are handmade in the US, comprised of non-exotic materials, highly inspected during build and sealed tightly. I got some samples from Bob to try in my tube-output DACs and the results exceeded my expectations by a wide margin. They are more than good enough to settle on, and are staying in the DAC (mhdt Havana Balanced). He is next very eager for me to try a pair of 1uF/1000v versions in my Zu high-pass networks. I don’t know what to expect relative to Mundorf, Clarity, Audyn, Duelund but it’s a trial too interesting to not undertake. I’ll post back results, perhaps after I can put Duelunds in the mix, too.

Enough for now. I’m happy to add comments if questions are posted. I am sure I will remember something I intended to write here, but forgot.

Phil
213cobra
A q to Phil, Charles and all the other SET fans with special reference to the 4s.
I'm going to have a final 2 week trial with SETs, first the Audion Black Shadows with the Audion line stage, my own Hovland tube pre, and maybe a Silvercore tvc pre, and in the 2nd week, an all-NAT chain of Utopia tube pre, and SE2SE SET monoblocks.
My experience with Hovlands and the 4s is a great synergy, but some leaness in the mids/midbass, leading to a slightly reedy quality to vocals. This is only a hint, I can easily live with it.
My experience with the NATs was a tilting down in the tonal balance, emphasing a really 'earthy' quality, but with more treble info than my apparently more tilted-up Hovlands.
This apparent contradiction I found not at all negative, but nonetheless noticeable.
Can an amp be more earthy, bass orientated, and still present more treble info?
The Audions I have no idea how will compare, but really looking fwd. Will this earth/bass balance likely be repeated also?
Perspectives on these matters please.
Spirit,
If by "earthy" quality you mean more tonal fullness,body and density I`d say I get this with my 300b SET . I`m sure this characteristic varies depending on the particular amplifier,tubes and other factors.As you observed, I detect no affect on the air, purity and quality of treble performance,it isn`t rolled off.This density-earthy tone IMO makes the music sound more real and correct.I don`t hear any thiness,leaness or stripped tone at live venues with unamplifieded instruments(ever).The live sound is vibrant,saturated and full of life and energy yet clear as can be. Jordan(Germanboxers) has two SET amps and could offer a lot of interesting perspective as I`m certain the two amps differ in their presentation.
Charles,
Thanks Charles. I'm going to listen to the Audions as well, which Phil strongly recommends.
This fullness was a little new as an experience. I listened to some close miked acoustic guitar. Thru my Hovlands, the soung was v. toppy, with the full attack and 'steel' of strings present. With the NATs I really could hear the wooden body of the guitar, but with no lack of top end attack.
This could really get addictive.
Is there any DISDAVANTAGE to running 70W/ch SETS (NAT) as opposed to 25W/ch (Audion) in a listening space 27'x22'x13'?
Other than heat from tubes? How much is heat an issue long term for SET users? There are a pair of big tubes per monoblock with the NATs.
Spirit - I do not detect any downward tilted frequency balance between the two SET's I own and my OTL or past solid state amps. I do detect what sounds like a slight bump with some solid state amps. The extra energy that I detect in many very good solid state amps is based more in the 5-10kHz area. This slight bump sounds livelier, sometimes more detailed, but also less real to my ears than both of my SETs. To most this region is considered high frequency, but it really doesn't correlate to what you may see in specs. My ears are tested twice a year due to the industry I work in which gives me a regular grounding in what the frequency ranges sound like. Unfortunately, we have detected a very mild loss in the 10k to 15kHz region in my hearing over the last 15 years, probably age-related, but minor nevertheless.

If the Black Shadows are properly burned in, I think you will find them eminently capable of portraying music in a natural, richly texured, and - most importantly - believable way with little concern about treble balance. I highly recommend just listening for a week or more (much better) without A/B listening to give your ears a chance to adjust to their presentation. If you still feel the need to A/B after the "orientation" have at it.

You should be in for some real fun. Good SET's on Zu Definition Mk4's have been revelatory for me. Regardless of your own personal conclusions, you will have answered important questions for what makes YOUR ears/brain happy. Have fun!

Jordan
Is there any DISDAVANTAGE to running 70W/ch SETS (NAT) as opposed to 25W/ch (Audion) in a listening space 27'x22'x13'?

70w/ch versus 25w/ch is only a 4dB difference. Put in context, with 101dB speakers, a 25w/ch gives you about 115dB. Adding about 3dB for two speakers, another dB or two for room reinforcement and subtracting 6 dB for a 3m distance from speakers and you're left with 113-114dB capability at the listening position. That's a bunch! Does having 117-118dB capability really make a difference? I would say no. With Zu's, no real need to be too concerned about watts per channel once you're over 8 or so (in my opinion).
Oops...just realized you asked for any DISadvantages to running a 70w versus 25w amp. I see no disadvantage.
Thanks for your input guys. This is pretty much going to be my last major component upgrade - made some major paradigm shifts in last 5 years: going to xoverless full range driver Zu spkrs, away from belt drive tt/pivoted arms to direct rim drive tt/air bearing linear tracking, away from power conditioning to balanced power, room acoustics solutions with bass attenuation, and now quite poss. SS to SET.
Germanboxers, I'm going to run the Audions fully uninterrupted for a week, and then on to the NAT SETs for a full week. This is going to have to be sufficient for yet another big, and final, change in listening direction.
I'm not sure if I've explained very well what seemed to be like a low frequency bias in the presentation of the NATs. Since treble was all accounted for, and better than SS on reflection, I guess this might be described as an alteration in the centre of gravity of the sound.
A friend of mine who loves my system with the Hovlands, has one major caveat, he loves vocals and felt the "throaty" aspect of singers was missing in my sound. I suspect the filling out of mids and midbass with SETs may solve this shortcoming.
Spirit,
I`m looking forward to reading your impressions of these two highly respected SET amps.70 watts from twin GM70 tubes is a lot of power for the Zu DEF IV. It would seem 25 watts is plenty of power surplus(in theory at least) with this speaker.Gary seems to do very well with 10 watts(Ancient Audio 300b amplifier) in a large open listening space.
Charles,
Jordan,
Now that you`ve had your two SET amps for a while how do they differ(if at all) to previous amps in terms of nuance,inner detail, harmonics and ambiance(the little things)?
Charles,
My only tube based reservation is that I'm not investigating OTL, and I don't know if this is a mistake. Sean Casey at Zu isn't the biggest fan, my NAT dealer is resolutely anti-OTL, and correct me if I'm wrong, but internal changes have to be made to alter the spkr from it's nominal 8 Ohms, to 16 Ohms.
So I'm missing out on not auditioning Atmasphere or Dave Berning. In reality, is this much of an issue.
My main reservation about SETs is the heat created. Standing near the NATs with 4 big and 4 small tubes btwn them, in addition to the tubes in the pre, after an hour it felt like a couple of irons were on in the room (and I really HATE ironing!). I'm just wary that this is a practical consideration - I would hate to find that the heat generated becomes noticeable enough to distract me from the greater transparency of the sound.
I'm not sure if I've explained very well what seemed to be like a low frequency bias in the presentation of the NATs. Since treble was all accounted for, and better than SS on reflection, I guess this might be described as an alteration in the centre of gravity of the sound.
A friend of mine who loves my system with the Hovlands, has one major caveat, he loves vocals and felt the "throaty" aspect of singers was missing in my sound. I suspect the filling out of mids and midbass with SETs may solve this shortcoming.

I think I understand what you are referring to. Put a little differently than your friend, with both of my SETs I feel like vocals sound more like the air is forced out of lungs via the diaphragm through the throat and mouth, rather than as if originating from the mouth floating in space. This is true compared to my OTLs as well as solid state I've owned. This effectively allows my brain to interpret it as if the vocalist is fully "standing" or "sitting" in that space.

And yes, the balance between wood and steel is better managed with good SET in my opinion. These two attributes, along with what I feel is a more realistic portrayal of decay trails, are what draw me to SET and into the music, unfatigued, for far longer listening sessions.
Jordan , my friend will love that. He commented on vocals being a lot more upfront at mine than he's used to on his all-Rega system, a function of transparency and timing issues in my rig. But he literally, sat fwd in his seat when claiming he was missing the solidity of voices he's more used to.
He LOVES my system otherwise, and SETs may really complete the spell for him. And me, I hope, since I'll be opening my chequebook for them!
As Charles mentions, I have a 300b SET (made by Ancient Audio) that sounds great with my Def 4s. My space is large - a 15x24x16' tall primary listening space that is one end of a lively 45x24x16' overall volume. I use Takatsuki TA-300b. I have never heard an 845 SET so I cannot comment about "big glass" SET sound. However, I did try an 80 watt SS and did not think that my 300b SET lost anything. Conversely, I did not like either a 45 or a 2a3 SET - too anemic. My musical preferences include large scale orchestra as well as classic rock.
Thanks Gsm, I'm sure power won't be an issue with either SET. My NAT dealer feels the SE2SE may have more rhythmic drive than a lower powered SET. We'll see.
Thoughts on the heat from big tubes, and the practicalities of this?
Spirit,
Everything seems to come with a price(compromise) the NAT SET will sure provide much power.However those twin GM 70 tubes are goint to bring considerable heat along with that power(70 watts). I can`t imagine in your generous size room that the Audion amp with 0ne 845 per side would cause a noticeable heat issue.You`ll soon have these in your system and can judge then.

If you find the Audion sonically is the equal of the larger NAT then obviously there`s no need to put up with the heat excess of that twin GM 70 amplifier.On the other hand if you prefer the big NAT could you tolerate the extra geat it generates?
Charles,
It's just getting a little warmer in the UK, so a good time to assess tube heat. What's interesting is that prior to getting my Straingauge, I didn't go past 11-12noon on my volume with either tt or cdp. Now I go to 1-2pm on the tt (still 11-12 on cdp). That's on 125w/ch ss. Dropping to 70W or even 25W surely means I'll have to turn the wick up. And that might introduce hum as I go past 9pm on the volume. We'll see.
Heat o/p def will be a consideration, as will price, the NAT combo being c2x the entry ticket for the Audions.
Spirit,
The volume control setting could reflect the gain level of the amp(or input sensitivity) rather than output power differences.
Charles,
Jordan, I got the impression you had a pretty steep learning curve with the Audions. Can you tell me how they changed, and sum up their characteristics now?
So, for high eff xoverless FRD Zu Def4s, can one have it all with SETs?
I mean tonality AND transparency, deep bass harmonics, fully see-thru mids and incisive, sparkling top end? Rarely in life is it possible to have your cake and eat it, but you SET guys really seem totally positive.
Spirit- you might also try an EAR push/pull amplifier as comparison to the SETs since the company is UK-based. It will provide some reference to your current auditions.
Spirit,
Jordan has offered very insightful impressions and expressed himself well.He has the unique opprotunity to use a high quality 845 and also a 300b SET amplifier. His reference point is solid as he has much experience with OTL and SS amps for contrast. I`d never claim any amp as perfect and right for everyone(not going to be the case). I can say of all the amps I`ve been exposed to the SET connects me more emotionally to music than any other type so far.The highest praise I can give any audio component is to deem it natural and reaistic(what more could you want?).

What ever the minor short comings of my amp, they`re rendered insignificant in the overall scheme of things given their superior realism and the ability to engage me deeply into the joys of music.As Gary mentioned the Takatsuki-TA 300b tubes I also used them and in a good amp they are sublime they just reveal the soul of musical bliss.
Can`t wait for you to try the Audion, it may or may not provide the same outcome for you.
Charles,
Spirit - the gain of the amp determines where your volume pot is set for a given SPL at the listening position. I would bet that if you turn the pot all the way up on the Audions, that your preamp volume pot will be much lower. You really have a nearly infinite adjustabilty when you run a pre and the Black Shadows (due to the gain knob on the front of the amps).

My learning curve on the Black Shadows was really two-fold. 1.) Getting adjusted to the sound BEFORE micro-critiquing. 2.) I agree with Phil that the Black Shadows benefit from an active linestage driving them. I was running them DAC-direct at first. Strangely, the Frankenstein 300B amps sound "slightly" better without an active linestage driving it. Really doesn't make sense given that the active linestage I bought was the Coincident Statement...same mfg as the Frankensteins.

So, for high eff xoverless FRD Zu Def4s, can one have it all with SETs?
I mean tonality AND transparency, deep bass harmonics, fully see-thru mids and incisive, sparkling top end? Rarely in life is it possible to have your cake and eat it, but you SET guys really seem totally positive
You cannot have it all in this way: If I was in to techno, punk, synth music, I suspect I'd be happier with an OTL or SS amp over the SETs, but I say that partly because hardly anything about those genres relies on "natural portrayal". I think a large part of the connection with those genres is power and edge. If, on the otherhand, you are in to jazz, blues, flamenco, orchestral, chamber, most rock, I think good SET can fulfill as well, and probably better, than OTL or SS. Just my opinion...hope it helps.

Jordan
Well, my collection runs the gamut from Miles/Coltrane to Bach/Stravinsky to Beatles/Who to Marillion/Mars Volta, so SETs should fit the bill.
My decisions may come down more to factors such as hum, heat etc. I know tubes are inherently noisier than ss, so this should be interesting. I'm getting a little hum from the Def4s onboard amps, and my air bearing arm's pump, which don't bother me unduly.
Was just a little concerned that the move lower in centre of gravity in the audio spectrum of SETs compared to SS was a colouration. I've actually removed a lot of colourations from my system moving away from belt drive/pivoted arms, fitting the Straingauge cart, installing balanced power and sorting room acoustics - I sure don't want to reintroduce colourations, no matter how euphonic.
The 'realism' test with SETs should be interesting.
Thanks Charles, Jordan et al for your really valuable input.
The Druid V's continue to amaze as they run in, they make listening to music extremely addictive.

Having owned the Druid IV/2008 and now the Druid V, Sean and the guys at Zu certainly know how to improve and get the best out of a design for pure musical engagement and enjoyment.

Phil was absolutely spot on with his description of the Druid V.
Avonessence,

Do you have any experience with Zu Definition 2s? I've got a pair I've upgraded with a Clarity CapMR and the nanotech drivers which are tremendous speakers, but maybe not the best fit for my room and I suspect the Druids would be a better fit overall.

Phil's breakdown and my subsequent conversations with him were quite informative, but I'd love to hear from other owners as well as I don't know of many Druid V owners that are active on the boards.
Jordan, any further input on your Duelund cap upgrade to the 4s? Your initial impression seemed to conclude it was worthwhile, but subtle. How's it all coming along?
New to this discussion, but I have read most of it and interesting it is. I have a pair of Def-4s coming and of course I could use some advice. I am coming from a system that is purely digital sourced. Bryston BDP-1 into a PS Audio PWDac II directly driving a Sanders Magtec amp driving Dynaudio C4 speakers. The C4s are gone with the Def-4s to arrive hopefully next week. I had a pair of Druids in my system back in 06 but sold them for reasons already discussed in this discussion.

I have narrowed amp choices to simple Integrateds like LFD and Lavardin. Of course for a tube amp the Audion stands out because of the usefulness of the volume control which will be necessary to keep the PS DAC volume control from being too attenuated. I am going direct because I finally preferred it to going through my Conrad Johnson ET-5 and I have eliminated analog. So I guess my question is: I have seen lots of mention of 300B and 845 amps but how would the Audion KT88 single ended mono blocks work with the Def4s? The $5500 price tag is about as far as i would want to go.

Also, I sometimes wonder, am I wasting time and money on such a combination if I am using only digital as a source? Thanks for any advice.
Hi Gopher,

I have only heard the Zu Definition 2's in a dealer's dem room on a number of occasions, this was with solid state amplification (about 5 years ago), one was an extended listening session, when we put the Druid IV/2008's back in the system, they had a magic (which is hard to describe) that was just right.

I can only concur with Phil's excellent writings on the difference between the Druid and Def's. I personally prefer the Druids as they are more of a front row intimate experience and a thoroughly engaging speaker overall, to my ears, and the Druid V's take this to another level over my IV's.

All Zu's speaker offering that I have heard (Omen, Omen Def, Union, Soul, Soul Superfly, Druid V) are all outstanding speakers, you just need to decide which one is the best interface with your room, music and your ears.

Happy to help further, James
Allie,
Two points,
A well conceived high quality digital front end can provide superb musical satisfaction. I was an analog listener for many enjoyable years (decades) I don't miss my previous turntables and my current digital source is exceptionally natural, realistic and communicates much emotion. So like anything else it depends on the individual components you choose.

I'd think a talented designer who's committed to building a quality amp could do well with the KT88 tube as a single end amplifier.
I will admit a strong bias towards the DHT tubes, they just sound so right and more like the real thing when implemented correctly. The best and most realistic musical-emotional music I've heard has been via these types of amps (with the appropriate speakers of course). As always YMMV.
Good luck,
Charles,
Allie,
I should add that my music taste is overwhelming acoustic jazzI (some classical) and DHT amplifiers seem to be the perfect fit for this genre. I don't listen to much electronia, pop or rock. That could make a difference in amp preferences. When I occasionally listen to some roxk it does sound very good I'll admit.
Spirit - I really haven't noticed any changes due the Duelands, but that is not to say they may not be happening. The process just may be really slow. I can say that when I do get a chance to listen these days, I just kick back and enjoy with little to no neurosis...a real happy camper here.
Allie - if it were me and $5500 was my limit for an amp, I'd buy a pair of Coincident Frankensteins Mk2 and never look back. They appear to respond well to DAC-direct set ups and unless you have a massive or highly damped space and/or listen at crazy volume levels, they are more than powerful enough to satisfy. I have a pair and also a pair of Audion Black Shadows. They are very close in performance and I could live with either long term.
Germanboxers offers good advice, you'd have a world class 300b SET amplifier for a truly reasonable cost.Buy the best quality 300b output tubes you can afford and this amp will reward you with a lifetime of musical delight.
Regards,
Jordan, do you ascribe the lack of change with the cap upgrade to a simple burn-in issue, like spkr cables needing hundreds of hours, or the stock caps used in the Def4s being sufficiently good anyway?
Is there any downside you're experiencing with the Duelunds? Components often sound lousy until burn-in complete. I have to say my 4s took a lot more time than my previous 2s in getting up some steam. Sean feels they're a totally worthwhile upgrade, but the stock caps not embarrassed by them.
Really curious about my SET shootout. I have to say I'm totally happy with my tube-ss combination Hovland HP200 pre-Radia pow duo. It's pushing all my buttons, sounding sweet but sufficiently detailed, and even, with the 4s. For the first time in my audio upgrading path (17 years and counting), I'm just 'in the moment'. However the buzz is that the 4s are REALLY suited to tubes esp SETs, and I have to find out if this is all justified. I'm really fascinated to see if 2 weeks' immersion in SET territory will open up a whole new level of enjoyment. Any move to SETs will have to be because they provide a new perspective on music, or a significant harmonic/transparency experience that eliminates sufficient veiling to give me a palpable 'just there' experience that musicians are in front of me. That's why I'm not interested to look at any more ss options, I don't think other than spending silly money I can get any of this from them (all my auditions with alternative ss since I got the Hovlands in 2005 have never conclusively bettered the Hovs).
Thank you Charles and Germanboxers. Charles, I would describe my music tastes as identical to your own with an emphasis on big-band jazz. I have a big room (22x27) but my listening is near field (10'). I know the magic of 300B as I built a kit over 20 yrs. ago and used it briefly with some Spendor SP 1s. Played small chamber music beautifully but put horns or Count Basie on and no way. I have been thinking I would need some paralleled mono blocks which get really pricy, but maybe not. Thanks again, I appreciate it.
Hi Allie,
Your Zu DEF IV speakers will be a much easier load to drive than the Spendors. I don't know the quality of the transformers, power supply and part quality of your previous 300b amplifier. I can attest to the high level of these components within the Frankenstein. I listen to large jazz band recordings also and there's no problem. What volume range (SPL) do you listen at usually? Jordan's listening space is larger than mine and his listening level is at higher volumes than me yet this amp serves him very well. The Frankenstein MKII reflects very clearly the choice of output tube. Jordan described this SET amp very accurately.
Charles,
My Def 4s have the stock caps. The next time Sean is in DC, I may ask him to upgrade them. Or not. I am pretty happy with how things sound. Hard to imagine a major improvement. Easy to imagine screwing up a good thing. And certainly not a project that I would do myself. Sometime it is best to leave well enough alone.
Spirit - to this:
Jordan, do you ascribe the lack of change with the cap upgrade to a simple burn-in issue, like spkr cables needing hundreds of hours, or the stock caps used in the Def4s being sufficiently good anyway?
I say that any of which you mention could contribute to my impression, but I also had many variables changing in a short period of time and no easy way to go back for a comparison. I'm an engineer by training and a scientist by nature, so as much as I would have liked to control the variables, I could not, and it is this that makes me more cautious with what I can attribute to the Duelands more than anything else.
Is there any downside you're experiencing with the Duelunds? Components often sound lousy until burn-in complete. I have to say my 4s took a lot more time than my previous 2s in getting up some steam. Sean feels they're a totally worthwhile upgrade, but the stock caps not embarrassed by them.
No downside at all. From the moment I fired the system back up after I changed them out, I've been enjoying music, both through the Franks and the Black Shadows. I can't say for sure, but I suspect that if I could directly compare the original Mundorfs to the Duelands that at the very least the Duelands would be equal or equivalent, and probably better. I just can't be certain.
Spirit- I think the 4s are suited for both SS and Tube. I am demo'ing the Dartzeel 8550 soon which the Zu owner uses as his reference.

What I've learned is the Defs have a slight inherent leanness --and therefore pair best with a warmer than neutral amplifier. Not Cary 805 euphonic warm, but definitely not a cool or "neutral" sounding amp.
Allie - I have a large space as well, ~6,000 cubic feet, not including the open staircase up to the main floor. To this:
Played small chamber music beautifully but put horns or Count Basie on and no way. I have been thinking I would need some paralleled mono blocks which get really pricy, but maybe not. Thanks again, I appreciate it.
The Frankensteins do not fit with your 300B description. They are not soft and mellow without the wherewithal to handle more complex music. They are not ball-busting solid state like either, but they can and do express the macro dynamics and scale of complex music while also delicately conveying all the nuance and micro dynamics that is so crucial to having an emotional connection to the music.
GSM - the Duelands are not a must have upgrade. I "believe" they were worth it for me, but I can't be absolutely sure for the reasons stated above. They do not, in any way, change the inherent qualities of the Def4's that we have come to love. As I think Phil said in the original post, the stock Mundorfs are not embarrassed by any of the cap options. I am happy I upgraded, but I am also aware that some of my feelings could be subject to confirmation bias. Unfortunately, I was not able to control the variables well enough to be purely objective.
Keith - I agree with this:
What I've learned is the Defs have a slight inherent leanness --and therefore pair best with a warmer than neutral amplifier. Not Cary 805 euphonic warm, but definitely not a cool or "neutral" sounding amp.
Keithr, this is the second time the 4s have been described as lean-sounding, first by Roy Gregory in his Audio Beat web review, and now by you.
I'm a bit confused by this - with the addictive 'tone dense' character Zu's are famed for, first in my case the 2s, and now the 4s, I'm struggling to reconcile the lean attribute.
What I hear with the 4s, and the 2s before, is a really full character, esp with the FRDs reaching in my system at least well below 40Hz.
Augmented by the really powerful sub performance, and seamless treble integration further up, lean is not a word I'd ever use about the Zus.
My Hovlands are pretty special, but probably on the slightly cool side of neutral. However, other than my "possible" shortfall on mids tonality in voices, I don't want any extra warmth.
My expts with the Linn LP12, Koetsu carts, and BAT amps, have taught me I don't need any extra warmth or smoothness in my presentation.
Maybe we need to switch the words 'lean/warm' for the term 'harmonic development'? If SETs can really make audible the full harmonics in the mids on the 4s w/out introducing any cloying sweetness or warmth into the sound, I'll be a v. happy audio bunny!
>>Can an amp be more earthy, bass orientated, and still present more treble info?<<

Yes, I have this argument all the time with people I don't think are listening carefully enough. There is a difference between the apparent extension of an amp that has unnatural transient emphasis, especially on the top end, and an amp that is midrange-tone focused with very good bass underpinning while nevertheless not obscuring actual event information. Amps especially are highly varied in their presentation of information, even when they measure pretty much the same.

I've heard some....well....shocking of presentation characteristics in well-regarded amps simply losing (or really, simply obscuring) event information despite the fact that sharp sparkle was present. There are a lot of ostensibly good amps that simply get presentation wrong, so everything sounds more hifi than natural.

Phil
>>...this is the second time the 4s have been described as lean-sounding, first by Roy Gregory in his Audio Beat web review, and now by you.<<

The Def4s are not "lean" sounding. They are just more objective than most of what passes for a listenable speaker in the price range, and much less artificial than the many crossover-based competitors with tilted up detail and treble gloss that isn't present in actual acoustic instruments.

If Druid V is your reference, Def4 is "lean." But it's Druid V that has the contributing error (though a euphonic one), not Def4. Now Def4's slight midrange recession is less present than in Def2, and particularly because of the extended beauty of the Radian 850, Def4 can make a difficult solid state amp listenable in a way that it would not be on Def2. Such an amp is generally lean itself. A relatively objective triode amp, like a Coincident 300B or Audion Golden Dream running KR 300B tubes will nicely maintain Def4's objectivity.

The larger problem with leanness is the rest of the audio chain. Almost every modern phono cartridge has a lean recession. All but a very few solid state amps have it. Nearly every Delta-Sigma DAC at any price is guilty. And then it's a sonic bias built into the majority of our current recordings. Between the modern propensity in hifi to sacrifice tone in exchange for unnatural detail, and relative slowness, unintegrated behaviors, and real-world colorations in the vast majority of speakers people hear and buy, it's easy to imagine why some people hear Def4 as "lean," but reality is context makes all the difference.

Phil
Spirit- I learned this with my initial amp on Def 2s, a BAT 300xSE (tube pre/MOSFET ss integrated amplifier) that sounded horrible. It took a quick swap to a McIntosh to even allow me to retain the speakers.

The amps recommended for Zus in this thread and others--Audion, Quad, McIntosh, DartZeel, Melody, Coincident, Luxman-- are all warm amplifiers. Coincidently, I have heard all on Defs outside of Coincident and Luxman--and have the latter on demo next week for fun.

The 845B tube used by many is a warm tube of course as well.

I had an Ayre VX-5 in my system for a week recently--that is what I would deem a cool/neutral amplifier and it didn't gel completely with the Defs. It sounded glorious on Sonus Fabers at THE Show and in a dealer room (a warm speaker). My recent experience with SS has me wanting to upgrade further actually and the DartZeel could be the best SS I've heard.

It all comes to synergy and that's just my experience. Technically, there are some frequency response issues of Zu speakers that would agree with this conclusion as well.
Hi Keithr,
Where does the Valvet fit in your amplifier classification, warm or cool?
I bet you'd really like the Silicon Arts (Concert Fidelity) amplifier. This is one of the more natural sounding SS amps I've heard.
Charles,
Phil et al, just a follow up re the Def 4s lean/not lean discussion. What I'm finding with my Hovland HP200 tube pre/Radia ss amp is a really good synergy. Let's put it this way, if SET amps didn't exist, I wouldn't be looking to upgrade. My Hovland combination is really transparent, dynamic, and excellent at tonal shading.
However, my Rega system listening friend, who loved the system for it's dynamic range, bass impact and transparency, REALLY felt there was a shortfall in vocals solidity and tone. Me? I heard it, but it had to be pointed out to me, and even then didn't jar me in the least, but realised there was scope for improvement - is this a function of possible lack of tonal density or harmonic development in the mids as a product of ss amps thru the 4s?
When I listened to NAT SETs, I was really struck by the descent of the centre of gravity of the presentation, things seemed to be v. bass orientated, but further listening 'thru' the sound revealed really solid but transparent mids and sparkling treble - it just didn't SEEM this way on first acquaintance.
So, my qs are ahead of my two week stint with Audion Black Shadows and NAT SE2 SE SET demos - do I need to adjust my attitude to listening to 'get' the SET sound, or just let things wash over me for that period? Is this apparent wispiness to vocals a function of ss amps, that likely will be corrected by SETs? Is my analysis correct that SETs reemphasise the bass qualities of the presentation, but this enhances rather than obscures mids and treble, despite not striking me this way to begin with?
I really want to go into this period with a little confidence as what to expect, and what not to be misled by.
Spirit - context is important (as Phil stated). The context from which I agreed with Keith (I.e. "slight inherent leanness") is not that the Def4's are lean compared to the universe of high-end speakers. They bear no resemblance to the many Thiel-like speakers in the high-end. They do NOT have a lean overall balance. There is, in my view, a slight narrow band midrange reticence that benefits from pairing with the right amps.

The Def4's are the most satisfying speaker I've ever heard, but for my ears, their many magnificent qualities and very few minor quirks are best served by amps that have a little bit of warmth to them. Objective SET's like the Black Shadows and Frankensteins are the equivalent of Goldilock's porridge for me when paired with the Def4's. These are not warm, slow, and syrupy amps, but their slight warm of neutral balance, coupled with their coherent, "from a single canvas", portrayal of the soundscape, and their ability to convey artistic nuance that impressively elicits elements of empathy with the artists is what makes them the perfect match with the Zu's...in my opinion.

Does this help you understand the context from which I concurred with KeithR's statement?
Sure Jordan. Like you I find the 4s totally convincing with a really even top-bottom balance. Looking fwd to getting this SET holism of sound that should mate really well with the 4s.
It's going to be a shootout btwn the Audions and the NATs, will bear in mind the probable need for the merest spoonful of sugar in the diet likely need to be fed to the 4s.
>>....who loved the system for it's dynamic range, bass impact and transparency, REALLY felt there was a shortfall in vocals solidity and tone. Me? I heard it, but it had to be pointed out to me, and even then didn't jar me in the least, but realised there was scope for improvement - is this a function of possible lack of tonal density or harmonic development in the mids as a product of ss amps thru the 4s?<<

Yes. This is almost always the case, even with an otherwise convincing solid state amp, and not just on Zu. I've heard only two solid state amps that don't tone bleach and at least slightly desiccate vocals and midrange acoustics generally. One is the First Watt SIT-1, which sounds very similar to a very good (but not great) single ended triode tube implementation. Compared to your Radia, you would hear this as a slight thickening of tonal body and density. This the SIT-1 does in a good way. The other transistor amp that doesn't lean out vocals and midrange information changes the presentation in a bad way. The Valvet Class A monoblocks congeal midrange sound like a 1990s Cary 805 SET and blur both event and tone composition information, to the point of seeming to simply miss some event content in the music. This was highly surprising and compromising to an amp that is otherwise smooth, energetic and compact, if harmonically arid on the top end. I expected to find it convincing and instead found it glaringly distracting for what it concealed in recordings I know well.

>>So, my qs are ahead of my two week stint with Audion Black Shadows and NAT SE2 SE SET demos - do I need to adjust my attitude to listening to 'get' the SET sound, or just let things wash over me for that period? Is this apparent wispiness to vocals a function of ss amps, that likely will be corrected by SETs? Is my analysis correct that SETs re-emphasise the bass qualities of the presentation, but this enhances rather than obscures mids and treble, despite not striking me this way to begin with?<<

Unfortunately, nothing in high end is not "voiced" in some way by its designer. Sometimes a little, often quite a lot to the point of the designer bending the sound of music to his presentation biases. But that written, generally for a listener conditioned to push-pull and solid state amplification can find SET as initially disorienting as a listener conditioned to crossover-intensive speakers can find a phase-coherent, crossoverless speaker like Zu.

We live in an era when most recordings take tonal weight and harmonic completeness out of a human voice, and then the transistor amplification that prevails, along with speaker crossovers do the same damage again and again. Find some recordings from the '50s and early '60s, before rampant multi-tracking and when consoles were still mostly tubed and mic techniques were kept simple, so hear authentic voice and instrument recordings.

I think it is fair to say that initial exposure to SET sound will drive a perception that the center of gravity in sound spectrum presentation has shifted lower. But less so with Audion than any other SET implementation and even then, this is highly dependent on tube selection. A Black Shadow will not sound shifted in this way with an 845C or KR tube. It may, to you, with any of the Chinese graphite plate tubes, to varying degrees. Even cryo treatment will alter how you perceive this.

However, play a recording with little or no bass information below 100Hz and, no, the center of gravity shift isn't vivid at all. In some amps the bass focus is because of rising harmonic distortion below 75 or 100HZ and when that's true you're electing to live with an anomaly to gain other advantages elsewhere. In such a case, Def4 has great tenability below 60Hz to settle those effects. In other cases, the better SET amps change your sense of bass presence, particularly with acoustic bass, because you are getting much more tonal character from the instrument (or, for instance with electric bass, from or about the amp's sound and the speaker motor & cone). On many transistor amps, bass sounds tight and strong, but also generic. It's not as easy to hear the differences between Fender Precision into an SWR amp vs. an Alembic. But the fuller character of each, along with the players' techniques, will be better resolved and revealed.

You just have to approach an SET audition expecting to lose a little of a few things to gain a lot of others. With Definitions however, you need any SET main power amps to have exceptional bass. The Def4 sub-bass module takes its input from the output of the main amps. So while its a Class D amp that is moving the 12" sub, it is doing so while carrying the sonic characteristics of the full-frequency amp that is feeding it. A bloaty SET amp that might work ok on Druids or Superfly will be harmfully thick and full on Defs of any vintage.

If SET is a new experience to you, listen and play, and if you plunge in, accept that you're going to be experimenting with some tube combinations. A Black Shadow or Golden Dream measure pretty much the same with different tubes but the actual presentation effects can be widely different as glass is varied.

With the NAT's, I am not surprised you felt the sonic center of gravity descended.

Good luck, have fun, and regardless of the outcome enjoy hearing some of your music in a new way.

Phil