Tubes have to me always meant freedom from grain, dryness (lack of liquid transparency), and thinning of the harmonic complexity of instruments and voices. Also superior depth reproduction, the physical palpability of instruments and vocal cords, and a slightly forward presentation (put another way, with solid state, images appear slightly recessed), which I very much like (even if it's a tube-created distortion, which I doubt).
Questions about my system.
I have an Audio Research LS-16 tubed pre-amp which runs into a Madrigal Proceed HPA2 amp.
With the help of the folks here at Audiogon I've got it all set up a tweaked and sounding good.
However, having inherited this system rather than having researched it and chosen it myself....and being new to hi-fi...I have some basic questions about these components, particularly the Proceed.
First, am I correct in saying that the HPA2 is a solid state amp? I've seen pictures inside them and saw no tubes. Huge blue capacitor looking things but no glass tubes.
Second, across the front of the amp it says "dual monaural amplifier". My guess is that this means it is essentially two mono-block amps in one package. Is that right?
Finally, why would one choose to pair a tube pre-amp with a solid state amp? Is that typical? What are the drawbacks?
Thanks,
George
With the help of the folks here at Audiogon I've got it all set up a tweaked and sounding good.
However, having inherited this system rather than having researched it and chosen it myself....and being new to hi-fi...I have some basic questions about these components, particularly the Proceed.
First, am I correct in saying that the HPA2 is a solid state amp? I've seen pictures inside them and saw no tubes. Huge blue capacitor looking things but no glass tubes.
Second, across the front of the amp it says "dual monaural amplifier". My guess is that this means it is essentially two mono-block amps in one package. Is that right?
Finally, why would one choose to pair a tube pre-amp with a solid state amp? Is that typical? What are the drawbacks?
Thanks,
George
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- 12 posts total
- 12 posts total