Peeking inside a Carver Crimson 275 Tube Amplifier


So, I just had to pop the hood on the Carver Crimson 275 tube amplifier. I was so curious as to how this little guy weighs so little and sounds so lovely.

  • The layout is simple and clean looking. Unlike the larger monoblocks (that cost $10k), this model uses a PCB.
  • The DC restorer circuit is nicely off to one side and out of the way. It doesn’t look all that complicated but I’m no electrical engineer. Why don’t more designers use this feature? It allows the power tubes to idle around 9.75w. Amazingly efficient.
  • The amp has very good planned out ventilation and spacing. No parts are on top of each other.
  • Most of the parts quality is good. There’s a host of Dale resistors, what look like Takmans, nice RCA jacks, heavy teflon hookup wire, and so on.
  • Some of the parts quality is questionable. There’s some cheap Suntan (Hong Kong mfr.) film caps coupled to the power tubes and some no name caps linked to the gain signal tubes. I was not happy to see those, but I very much understand building stuff to a price point.
Overall, this is a very tidy build and construction by the Wyred4Sound plant in California is A grade. I’m wondering a few things.

Does the sound quality of this amp bear a relationship to the fact that there’s not too much going on in the unit? There are very few caps--from what this humble hobbyist can tell--in the signal chain. And, none of these caps are even what many would consider decent quality--i.e. they aren’t WIMA level, just generic. This amplifier beat out a PrimaLuna Dialogue HP (in my room/to my ears...much love for what PrimaLuna does). When I explored the innards of the PrimaLuna, it was cramped, busy and had so much going on--a way more complicated design.

Is it possible that Bob Carver, who many regard as a wily electronics expert, is able to truly tweak the sound by adding a resistor here or there, etc.? Surely all designers are doing this, but is he just really adroit at this? I wonder this because while some parts quality is very good to excellent, I was shocked to see the Suntan caps. They might be cheaper than some of the Dale resistors in the unit. I should note that Carver reportedly designed this amp and others similar with Tim de Paravicini--no slouch indeed!

I have described the sound of this amp as delicious. It’s that musical and good. But, as our esteemed member jjss [ @jjss ] pointed out in his review, he wondered if the sound quality could be improved further still. He detected a tiny amount of sheen here and there [I cannot recall his exact words.] even though he loved it like I do.

I may extract the two .22uF caps that look to be dealing with signal related to the 12at7 gain tubes and do a quick listening test.
128x128jbhiller

I just looked up Bob Carver's net worth on the net, $39.3 million.  Just a bit of information to add to the mix.

I just looked up Bob Carver's net worth on the net, $39.3 million.  Just a bit of information to add to the mix.

 

 

I wonder how accurate that is, because I looked it up about 2 years ago and it was 8 million at that time.

I wrote Frank Malitz and informed of the safety issue with lack of a proper chsssis ground.  (I’m not installing one myself as I am not an expert in safety when it comes to this type of ground.)

I also asked him if he could, in turn, tell me whether Bob specified the Edcor 15w output transformers?  
 

Frank responded quickly and said:

 

“the design is under review with engineering and I'll contact you tomorrow.”

 

I’ll keep folks on this thread informed about what I hear back from him.  

@invalid I think the one  from 2 years ago is going to be very accurate. He and his wife owned 100% of Sunfire and when they sold it to Core Brands in 2011 it had sales in excess of $15M a year.

 

Not sure if this has been posted yet or not, if so, I apologize.

 

Music Direct has indicated that amp is no longer available from them.

 

https://www.musicdirect.com/power-amp/Bob-Carver-275-Stereo-Tube-Amplifier