Electrostatic Headphone Energisers


I use a Stax L700 Ear Speakers with an 006T Stax Energiser. I'm very happy with it, in fact I think the L700 are astonishing, I won't be changing them.

 Just wondered about upgrading from the 006T and where to go, to get a real improvement. The obvious answer is the 007T of course and that's  a possibility. There are other choices too, Trilogy do an Electrostatic Headphone amp and there are the  units from Mjolnir Audio in Iceland. Any thoughts guys?

 I suspect any suggstions are going to be costly for me now I've retired, but I can always look out for second hand units.


  Thanks

david12
@freediver the MHA100 is not an electrostatic energizer

To the question the OP asked I owned the 007t ii with SR-009 but was very disappointed with the performance of the energizer. I plonked down for a Blue Hawaii which is one great but expensive, and super slow delivery, way to go. No idea how the new Stax T8000 would compare as it was not out when I was in the market
^^^ You should be researching this at head-fi,oh & The Autoformers in the McIntosh will run ANY headphone including electrostatics!!!
I have the Blue Hawaii too.  It is a very good energizer/amplifier.  The build/delivery time was pretty long (18 months or so).  It has worked flawlessly for me.  I replaced the stock tubes with some telefunkens that a friend gave to me (he brought over 4 different sets of vintage tubes and I got to pick the ones I liked for sound).  I use it to run 007 Omega II phones (I heard the amp with 009s, but, I prefer the sound of the 007s so I've stuck with my now quite old phones).  This amp sounds really good running other phones, like Sennheiser HP 60s, but, either the plugs on the phone or the jack on the Blue Hawaii have to be modified to run the Sennheisers. 
David12 & Folkfreak are correct that the McIntosh MHA100, as well as pretty much any other general purpose headphone amplifier, would be unsuitable for use with Stax electrostatic headphones. For several reasons: All Stax electrostatics produced in recent decades require a 580 volt bias voltage. They also require a balanced signal pair for each channel, to support push-pull action on the diaphragm. Each of those signals must be at much higher voltages than the signals supplied to dynamic headphones, and work into much higher impedances (145,000 ohms in the case of David’s phones, resulting in lower currents than in the case of dynamic headphones). Finally, the connector is completely different, requiring 5 pins to supply the two balanced signal pairs + the bias voltage, rather than the two signal pins (one for each channel) + ground of a standard 1/4 inch headphone connector.

Regards,
-- Al

Thanks everyone, I hadn't really been aware of Head Fi, but have joined and posted there too.

The Blue Hawaii looks very good, perhaps a little over my price range. There are second hand or refurbished units on the Mojnir site, which are interesting though.