The 300B World


Disclosure:  I am not new to Aric Audio, but I am new to the 300B.

 

I took delivery of my Aric Audio 300B PSET a couple of months ago. Since then, every listening hour has been different than it would have been were I new to both. I want to know who is responsible for what I'm hearing. So, the overriding question every observation is passed through is simply "Was that the 300B or was that the 'Aric Audio Heft'?" Over the years I have purchased a number of different amps and preamps from Aric and have come to identify certain characteristics that can be expected from all of his builds. That's why I keep going back. Examples include the "dead black" background, the solid signal strength delivered by his preamps, the ease with which the soundstage can be mapped, and the raw power resulting from the overbuilt approach he takes in his design work: "The Aric Audio Heft." Knowing what I would get from any Aric Audio amp is instrumental in being able to appreciate the magic of the "show off tube." 

 

I've heard it said that people who go to the 300B never really come back and I've been intrigued by that ever since. It invites critical listening across the broadest spectrum of music one can tolerate. It's here that observations are bagged and tagged, the first being the kind of music I listen to matters much less because I find myself listening differently and hearing so much more. One of my favorites is the leading edge of the lower frequencies and the way every beat reminds me that I'm listening to a 300B. The way I would characterize the sound profile would be to say it's as if the veil has finally been lifted and the distance between the performance and my listening chair closed. You know it immediately even if you can't quite define it yet and it commands your attention.

 

For some reason I'm surprised by how closely the tonal qualities of SET and PSET modes align. Somehow, I thought there would be more of a "sonic cost" for that extra power. I'm still cautious here though because the quad of tubes I'm using for PSET mode are not topflight tubes. So, the final analysis will have to wait until I can level the playing field. In SET mode I'm listening to a pair of Gold Lions, which I consider to be at least among the heavyweights. The question I'm presently grappling with is which tubes come next? I've done my due diligence researching the various offerings and think it will be a quad of Emission Labs XLS 300Bs. Any input around your experience with 300B tubes I would welcome. Yes, I have my wish list that starts with the Western Electrics (which I'm sure I'll own one day) but the guidance I'm seeking here is the step between now and then. What would be a suitable tube to take an already remarkable experience to a whole new level? Conversely, are there tubes that I should simply stay away from? My thanks to all. Happy listening.

128x128pseudonym

I definitely agree that NFB amplifiers need appropriate matching speakers. If this is achieved then extraordinary sound quality can be the outcome. NFB adjustment is a very reasonable and useful idea.. It would widen the range of speakers deemed suitable for the amplifier.

In my audio system the 300b SET, 101D preamplifier and 6080 tube DAC are all zero NFB and the combination sounds remarkably emotionally engaging and sonically captivating. For sure the speakers are designed from the ground up to be very compatible with zero feedback amplification.

Charles

I'm using the Sophia Mesh 300b (2.5V version).  Didn't see them mentioned.  I think they are a great tube and is underpriced compared to the competition.

I think rectifiers are as important at the output tubes.  For a GZ34 designed amp, you can't beat Mullard or Matsushita (same equipment).  I'm currently using a radio shack that sounds excellent.  Probably cost $2.99 new.

Jerry

A typical 300B SET with zero negative feedback. Frequency response .The green line represents a simulated 8 ohm speaker.

@jtgofish FWIW the kind of speaker in the simulation is rarely used with SETs. They are low power and so speakers used with them tend to higher efficiency; also designed to expect a higher output impedance of the amplifier, with no expectation that the amp behave as a voltage source!

Most tube amps with zero feedback will act more like a power source than a voltage source. So the standard ’simulated speaker load’ is irrelevant if the user has his SET set up correctly.

In @charles1dad ’s case, the speaker he is using was designed specifically for tube amps with higher output impedance and no feedback.

For more on this topic see:

The Voltage and Power Paradigms

Since loudspeakers of all types typically have much wider frequency variation than amplifiers, the theory is that the tonality imparted by distortion figures more importantly than tonality induced by FR error. This is because the ear/brain system converts all forms of distortion to tonality and pays more attention to that as a result. SETs produce innocuous distortion so can be fairly neutral in this regard.

The brightness and harshness of traditional solid state is an example of this: you can’t measure it on the bench in terms of FR error, since the brightness is caused by distortion interpreted as a tonality. Its really hard to get away from this problem with amplifiers using feedback, since what usually happens is the the distortion vs frequency starts to rise somewhere near 1KHz due to a lack of Gain Bandwidth Product.

Ideally distortion vs frequency should be a flat line across the audio band, and with any zero feedback amplifier with sufficient bandwidth that’s exactly what you get. Alternatively this can be fairly easily accomplished with a self oscillating class D amplifier, since obtaining super high GBP values is fairly easy with them so feedback is properly supported across the entire audio band. See

The F word

for more information.

When distortion rises with frequency, its because the feedback is decreasing with frequency and so distortion is going up. This usually does not show in THD figures; in effect sweeping this problem under the rug. So the actual distortion at higher frequencies where the ear is more sensitive can be quite a lot higher than the THD values suggest!

So while I’m not an SET fan by any stretch, picking on them due to FR errors due to output impedance is not the way to expose their real problems!

 

Thanks for that Ralph.Rising distortion with rising frequency due to decreasing feedback seems to make sense.I think some tweeters are going to expose that more than others.In my experience higher sensitivity ones like compression drivers seem to be much more fussy about amplifiers than less efficient ones using say soft dome tweeters.Or perhaps they are just masking this rising distortion less?

Perhaps the most beautiful and pure treble I have heard came from a zero feedback SET.It was a Kondo Ongaku though.

 

I think some tweeters are going to expose that more than others.In my experience higher sensitivity ones like compression drivers seem to be much more fussy about amplifiers than less efficient ones using say soft dome tweeters.Or perhaps they are just masking this rising distortion less?

@jtgofish I don't think so- for teh last 65 years audiophiles have been hearing this problem despite the measurement camp touting its all 'expectation bias'; IMO/IME the measurement guys that think this don't have the engineering knowledge to understand why its happening. This in particular with solid state since its inception.

It really doesn't seem to matter about the tweeter (tweeters with breakups will make it worse).

IME this is why tubes are still in business 65 years on from being declared 'obsolete'.

Fortunately class D is offering a solution; just in time since in the next 10 years tubes will get a lot harder to find.