Yes, I will do just that. My DIY friend in San Francisco is a brilliant engineer with a lust for audio improvements that can be done very economically. There is a problem, he tells me, with the delicacy of the boards in the 5XXX amps so mods can go sideways if not done with a high degrees of TLC. I reckon he might have $100-$200 in new components in my 5400 so for the DIY cats, this could be a path to an excellent amp for a pittance. Honestly, I thought the stock amp sounded quite pleasant (although clearly not comparable to my McCormack amp), but he tells me that I the amp I will be getting back will be profoundly better in every respect. In part, he focuses on beefing up the power supply with lots of additional caps.
Amp away for 20 year upgrade...back-up amp to the rescue
I just sent my SMc Audio Revision A+ modified McCormack DNA-1 Deluxe amplifier to SMc for an apparently much needed upgrade. I bought the amp in 1997, had a Revision B mod done in early 1998 and then the A+ revision done in 2002. On a whim I decided to call Steve McCormack two days ago to find out what was current with their modifications for the DNA-1.
In the course of a 25 minute chat I learned that virtually none of the mod parts in my amp are part of their current upgrades and that for a reasonable price (approx. $1300) I would get an entirely new motherboard, upgraded soft recovery diodes as well as new output caps., resistors, input and output jacks and wiring scheme. So away it went today via Fedex.
Out of the closet comes my Musical Concepts modified Adcom GFA-555. In listening through it right now, I remember how endearing this amp can be as it flatters the music with good ebb and flow and a recessed soundstage so the music never seems to "come at you". Very enjoyable. So why own and upgrade my full service amp? Verisimilitude!! That you are there or even better, they are here presence to the sound. The lack of transient attack and air around instruments also belies a sense of realism. Again, don't get me wrong, I'll be enjoying music for the next month or so that my main amp is getting a spa treatment, but it will be exciting to hear the music back in the room with me and the open soundspace where the music seems here again.
In the course of a 25 minute chat I learned that virtually none of the mod parts in my amp are part of their current upgrades and that for a reasonable price (approx. $1300) I would get an entirely new motherboard, upgraded soft recovery diodes as well as new output caps., resistors, input and output jacks and wiring scheme. So away it went today via Fedex.
Out of the closet comes my Musical Concepts modified Adcom GFA-555. In listening through it right now, I remember how endearing this amp can be as it flatters the music with good ebb and flow and a recessed soundstage so the music never seems to "come at you". Very enjoyable. So why own and upgrade my full service amp? Verisimilitude!! That you are there or even better, they are here presence to the sound. The lack of transient attack and air around instruments also belies a sense of realism. Again, don't get me wrong, I'll be enjoying music for the next month or so that my main amp is getting a spa treatment, but it will be exciting to hear the music back in the room with me and the open soundspace where the music seems here again.
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- 20 posts total
- 20 posts total