+1 @nordicnorm
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- 69 posts total
Thank You for all of the feedback and recommendations on these questions. I am going to take a few days to look some of these amps up. I wish I could sit in a room, listen and compare them over a couple of days but I get a feeling that is not going to happen (ha) Interesting @lowtubes that the older amps can still hang with more modern technology. I like the idea of a professionally refurbished older amp because some of them have a great cosmetic appeal as well. The Belles SA-100 and most Pass amps have a great look to them as well. About 20% of my choice would be based on this ( especially since I can't hear them). @Phusis -Thanks for the well written piece. I didn't know that some of the better D amps draw comparisons/characteristics of class A. Nothing wrong with liquidity. I have a Peachtree Grand which is ICE and nice but I find it sort of lacking bite and texture at lower volume levels. One thing I didn't mention is that my Kenwood 700 M & Wadia Dac 321 is in a smaller carpeted room and the Grand system is in a larger room with a tiled floor. The larger room does have a rug, furniture and broad band sound panels. I will have to do an amp switch to make sure it's not the room vs the amps. |
You might start with Audio Bluebook on this site. See what's in the market. https://bluebook.audiogon.com The triodes (valves) plus Class A power supply appears preconception more than a criteria which assures a quality experience. Unreasonable constraints elevating legacy technology (& sub-optimizations) works against you, not for you. There is a point in the used market where you are just buying someone else out of their boat anchor. This is business built on scale. As the components, and various engineering trade-offs, of legacy systems become rare- available inventory inelasticity changes the value...non-linearly. This all works against you. Still- "may the odds be ever in your favor", though. |
@sumwhat Are you saying there is (less than optimal) legacy equipment available at some price points while (optimal) legacy equipment at perhaps higher price points ? "As the components, and various engineering trade-offs, of legacy systems become rare- available inventory inelasticity changes the value...non-linearly. This all works against you." |
- 69 posts total