Try an Audio by Van Alstine FET valve.
fet valve 550ex
Reveiw by tyson, you'll have to look under reviews:
look under reviews
fet valve 550ex
Reveiw by tyson, you'll have to look under reviews:
look under reviews
Amp/Int. Amp to smooth the highs...
Try an Audio by Van Alstine FET valve. fet valve 550ex Reveiw by tyson, you'll have to look under reviews: look under reviews |
Iasi - Your current speakrs are Usher 719's? I couldn't find any information on them... Okay, you might try this: Wire a 16-ohm, 25-watt resistor across the speaker terminals (if bi-wire capable, then across the high frequency inputs). Just tighten the binding posts down on the leads of the resistor. You can vary the resistor value by ear, between maybe 8 and 100 ohms in large (50%-ish) increments. This may well smooth the highs a bit, depending on what the speaker's impedance curve is like. Without knowing the impedance curve I can't predict what the effect will be, but the InnerSound amp can drive very difficult loads so that won't be a problem. It is unlikely that the problem is amplifier clipping - that's a very powerful amp. If you want to address the problem by changing amplifiers then I suggest you consider tubes, perhaps Conrad-Johnson or JoLida. I'm a dealer for the latter. If you decide to stick with solid state, then try a used Pass Aleph amp of appropriate wattage. But trying a few resistors is a lot less expensive. Duke |