Tube Amp, Preamp upgrades -- what did you do that improved your units?


Hi folks,
If you upgraded a point-to-point wired tube amp or preamp, what did you upgrade?
I assume capacitors, but was there anything else which you upgraded that made a genuine difference for the sound?
I am looking into improving the caps in my Quicksilver stuff, but before doing that, I am curious if there's anything in addition to caps which I should consider.
Thanks.
128x128hilde45
@grannyring Thank you. I'll communicate with my tech on this. The additional bypass cap is not something I anticipated and we'll discuss. 
Do grannyring's suggestions, these may be end game pieces for you then. While I've not yet tried the ODAM, I will drop them in my phono pre in a bit. Reportedly right up there in sound quality with best, and their relatively smaller size vs. film caps makes them better, easier fit. Other parts he mentioned I've heard or modded with, all good. I'm using the Airlock for all my diy power cords, better than Duelund here.

I'm using combo of silver litz and Duelund copper internal wire, Duelund silver bypass cap on power supply in my custom 300b monoblocks. Flavor wise, wonderful timbre, extension on top, controlled bass. I know the silver internal wire and Duelund silver bypass has much to do with attainment of this sound quality. I'd presume the ODAM with Airlock silver would be avenue for you.


I'm not sure all techs will take on custom work, many frown on customer spec'd parts substitution. Don't want the liability if you're not happy with sound and/or don't trust you're substitutions are correct for circuit.
I'm not sure all techs will take on custom work, many frown on customer spec'd parts substitution. Don't want the liability if you're not happy with sound and/or don't trust you're substitutions are correct for circuit.

I'll need to confer with him. Doing caps with exact value matches and not much else would be a decent upgrade and would minimize risk. The preamppot seems very doable We'll find a happy consensus, I'm sure.

just a few additional thoughts for your consideration @hilde45 as you explore this element of hifi-nerd-geekdom :)

in my experience, by far the best context in which to mod high end gear is if -- a) you are committed to keeping the piece of gear for the long term, and b) you yourself are quite experienced in disassembling, reassembling gear, soldering, desoldering, and choosing components - second best way is to have a well trusted, highly cost effective local tech to do the skilled labor

reasons being
-- it costs something non trivial to ship/ship back a stereo component, with attendant damage risk in shipping
-- when soldering in even passive components, there is some risk of damaging the pc board or making other internal connections frail, with unforeseen issues, thus the skill, diligence and experience of the tech is absoutely crucial here
-- trading away a modded piece can be problematic (not always, but sometimes) ... even if you ’restore it back to stock’ to resell, that should be disclosed, and then the market for such a unit will be reduced compared to honestly saying a piece is ’factory original, never altered’
-- there is indeed a market for modded units by well-known modders - dan wright, smc/mccormack, vsei, great northern, and so on from yesteryear -- perhaps bill/grannyring has achieved that level of ’celebrity’ for his mhdt dac mods, but in my experience specific modders become well known for specific modded units, that experienced buyers will honor by paying top dollar prices upon resale
-- of course, modding a name brand component invariably voids any factory warranty, to state the obvious

with the above, i have always been very cautious and reticent about undertaking mods on well known, high value units (i know i don’t solder well, i don’t trust myself to do it to a ’pro’ quality and problem solve issues that may arise) - in fact, i greatly prefer to buy them at a signfiicant discount used rather than pay for the mods to be done, and in the rare instance where i have changed things ’under the hood’, i pretty much resign myself to treating the unit as a ’its mine forever’ unit, or a throwaway if things don’t go 100% right

i know my approach above is rather conservative, and may well elicit ’ aww c’mon man!!’ responses from others who are much more into modding gear, but i just wanted to share my own perspective and experience

i know this is all a fun, and exploratory journey for you -- i hope this helps you and others to hear a perspective from one dedicated enthusiast who has been at it for some time  ...
@jjss49 9

(a) I am committed to keeping this gear.

(b) I would look to a local tech, highly recommended. I wouldn't trust myself to do it anymore than I would trust myself to pick out carpeting on my wife's behalf!

Agree about the ship/ship cost and risk concern.

Good point about the re-sale; Tvad was saying that earlier. My sense is that this unit has really, really good fundamentals and I'd likely be nipping an upgrade bug early if I just take it to a better level, now. Judgement call. I'd rather experiment with speakers and Dacs, etc., down the road, knowing that my tube gear was batting .450

Violating the warranty is a concern, but there's only a little bit more than a year left on it. I could wait, but a caps change seems low risk. I suppose I'm tired of being risk-averse. Could it be the age we live in?

I hear you about the conservatism — I think we're alike. A couple of things are swinging me in this direction:

* Experienced opinion: QS owners who have done these mods are unequivocal in praising the results
* Reality check: This QS gear is not on the level of, say, others — Atmasphere; lots of room to improve; a quick look at some of the parts costs quickly confirms
* Plan B: My solid state can carry me pretty well, if necessary (assuming my preamp is ok)
* Settling the issue: I think it's in my head to do this and I have the time to enjoy the process right now.

All your caveats make a lot of sense — thank you for writing them out.

Sometimes I approach these questions as if they were serious medical procedures; they're not! This is a hobby and I'm trying to slide into the greater ease I see in other hobbyists with, well, trying sh*t!