All competently designed amps of low noise and distortion will sound alike. Since amps look different the Mind believes they sound different. Remove sight and sound differences vanish.
Do Harbeth speakers really need a 4000 damping factor?
Just got Harbeth C7ES-3 XD and using them with a "lowly" Yamaha A-S801 Integrated Amp - which with previous speaker (Canadian made Enigma) sounded OK. The Harbeth - are glorious with vocals and even piano sounds good but Orchestration seems somewhat muffled to me. I read that "Harbeth likes to demo with Hegel" (and Sugden?) but also that "Any good Amp will do".... The question is what is a good Amp? Would a Yamaha with 240 Damping factor suffice or really something like the Hegel with 4000? I am mentioning the damping factor specifically since it was such an obvious difference. On paper it looks like this might have a significant effect (assuming to the positive) on the sound. Any first hand experience opinions are appreciated.
I’ve owned several Harbeth models and, while they are very electronics tolerant, I’ve found more difference in the stands and the interface between the stand and the speakers. For my taste, open-frame metal stands sounded best, or at least using a hard interface like casino chips between the stand and the speaker, as opposed to blu tak. But you should experiment with that. They will also respond to better amplification and sources as well. What stands are you using? |
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@ahal1 No, and no loudspeaker ever made does. |
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I have the 7XD with a Leben 300XS and a Supernait 3. They both present wildly different characteristics. The Leben is a holdover from a different speaker and it sounds beautiful at low volumes but doesn't present a soundstage or have bass anything the the Supernait. If I were to ever get a tube amp with these I'd look above 40 WPC, but again that varies wildly with listening preferences and transformers, etc.
I don't know anything about the Yamaha amp you mention but in my experience you get what you pay for. As far as damping factor I'd say 4000 is a bit over the top and not needed for the 7. Never hears a Hegel amp either. |
You are aware that Harbeth shows with Hegel, right? I very much doubt they would choose to do so unless they perceived a significant sonic benefit. Whether Harbeths require high damping factor amplification I can’t say. I can say that when I switched from Well Majestic integrated with damping factor of 200 to Hegel H390, my Silverline monitors "came alive" in a way I’d never heard. That was a dramatic demonstration of the importance of proper speaker/amp matching. Needless to say, YMMV. |
Membrane motion braking current (Lenz law) passes thru speaker, wire, amplifier's output and the other wire. Would adding 0,002ohm (DF=4000) instead of 0.02ohm (DF=400) to speaker impedance make it sound different (damp/brake better)? Even if we assume 4ohm at low frequencies of 6ohm nominal impedance (1kHz) speaker, we get 4.002ohm vs 4.02ohm. As long as DF is decent (>20) it should be fine IMHO. |
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Damping factor is an amplifier measurement. It is 8 divided by the output impedance of the amp. Almost all solid state amps have an output impedance so low that the resulting damping factor is WAY in excess of anything meaningful as to the sound; it is largely an irrelevant specification. The exception is tube amps which tend to have a much higher output impedance, and therefore, a lower damping factor. There are some amps with output impedance of 2 ohms or so, for a damping factor of 4. These amps tend to work best with speakers with high and flat impedance curves; with lower impedance speakers, the frequency response will be affected. Tube amp manufacturers cannot easily reduce output impedance to increase damping factor, anything done for this purpose, such as increasing the turn ratio of the output transformer, will compromise the sound. That is why speaker matching to some tube amps can be trickier. |
The answer is no, 240 is plenty. Your amp is not "lowly". My 40.3XDs are shared as mains between a T+A integrated and a Yamaha RX3080 AVR. I often stream SXM radio from the Yamaha for casual listening and they sound surprisingly good. Prior to the 40's, I did the same with 30.2 XDs - very enjoyable. The stands matter, as do cables. I've use Ton Trager, but if you can build something similar from hardwood go for it, but get rid of metal frames and glass. Buy some decent speaker cables, for example from Frank at Signal Cable. They are not expensive - I own the entry level cables and have compared them with my Acoustic Zen Hologram II and the are damn good for the money. Then, maybe find a used Hegel 590 or similar if budget allows.
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