Class D = Trash?
So, before I went further down the SET road, I wanted to try a better class D product using a modern class D module. I settled on the D-Sonic M3-800S with the Pascal module and custom input stage. I read from reviews that these things like to have big cables, so I picked up an eBay 8 gauge power cable (Maze Audio, el-cheapo Oyaide copy plugs, braided 4-wire cable) to go along with it.
Mid-range GONE.
Soundstage depth CRUSHED.
Euphonics DISAPPEARED.
Yes, resolution went up. Driver control went up, allowing me to play compressed rock/pop and orchestra with the speakers being able to render it all. But enjoyment in the sound is basically gone. Using my best power cable (LessLoss Original) improved performance, but didn't fundamentally change the amp's nature. I ran back to my headphones (Focal Utopias) to detox my ear canals.
So, how long does a class D need to burn-in? I want to give it a fair shake before writing the technology off forever.
- ...
- 236 posts total
sfseay msalha +1 sfseay and msalha, this is just a lot of Class-D paranoia rubbish, it’s said just to calm owners down that don’t like it from the get go, to eventually take it on the chin and live with it. Cheers George |
yes, the 1000 hrs is a total red herring. I’m embarrassed to hear it being uttered. If, in your familiar home environment....you don’t hear some fundamental qualities that you like, and enjoy (IE, emotionally!! not cerebrally!! vital point!!), then it is simply not working. Music is about your balls, your butt, your body, your heart, your breath of life. not your brain. You can analyze all you want, but it must get your butt swinging. Otherwise it should go in the trashcan. Seriously. It’s about the endorphins. For with them on the fly and in-situ, you actually experience positive neural growth and change. You become more intelligent and become a better listener, a more accomplished listener with greater aural discernment skills. Every listening session you get really mentally/physically ’high’ on, you literally become more capable, and more intelligent. Mo’ wired for mo’ better. The brain is plastic and the body’s ’positive engagement function’ (endorphin highs, pleasure, enjoyment, etc) is literally what enables the plasticity ----- to become something new. If the sound does not move you, then get rid of it. Yesterday. |
All, the aforementioned "red hering" suggestion that upwards of 1000 hours and sometimes more might be required to break in a class D amp, or for what it matters, a class A/B amp, SS or tubed linestage, or CDP comes from me. Over the years I have broken in a number of pieces. They all eventually stabilized with break-in times largely hovering around the 1K hours mark with some exceptions. Many of them created eventually thir own special kind of magic. Some did not at all, no matter my persistance. Shown below are only the ones which in time delivered real music: Aragon 4004 (A/B) approx 1K hours Rowland M312 (D) approx 1K hours Bel Canto REF1000 Mk.2 (D) Approx 1K hours Bel Canto REF500 (D) approx 1K hours Rowland M625 (A/B) approx 1K hours Rowland M725 (D) approx 1K hours Rowland M925 (D) More than 1500 hours Merrill Veritas (D) approx 1100 hours Merrill (Teranis (D) approx 600 hours ARC LS2B (linestage hybrid) approx 1K hours ARC REF3 (Linestage tube) approx 1K hours Rowland Capri (linestage SS) (approx 1100 hours Rowland Criterion (linestage SS) approx 1100 hours Rowland Power Storage Unit approx 200 hours Rowland Aeris DAC greater than 1500 hours Esoteric X-01 (CDp SS) approx 1K hours Esoteric K-01 (SS CDp) approx 1200 hours GamuT CD-3 (CDp) approx 800 hours As for warm up from power-on time for a well broken-in piece, I experienced it to vary from about one hour to about one day. I claim no particular scientific knowledge. I purely rely empirically on my own old ears, which I have used one way or another for listening, studying, and occasionally performing music for some 60 odd years. Doubtless, other equipment might behave differently. Besides, you might not experience the same long break-in curve as I did. If your quest for sonic nirvana is on a steeper curve, more power to you.... But if you find that after a couple hundred hours of installing a new piece nirvana has not yet reached you, you may want to wait a bit before succumbing once again to Upgraditis Furiosa.... Patience can be Golden! G.
|
- 236 posts total