OK, I didn’t know how much Don was keeping under wraps, so I was a little vague about our continued progress.
The new full-size chassis of the Blackbird (compared to the models at the show) gives us the freedom to "open up" the Blackbird ... ultra performance caps in critical locations, a bit of Raven tech in the front end, and more rigorous isolation between the high-voltage power supply and the audio circuitry. All of these need more room, which is why the production chassis will be 18" wide. Sonically ... well, I haven’t heard it yet, but they’re all good things that move in the same direction as the past year of collaboration.
One the things about the Raven/Karna/Blackbird that is frustrating, but also very gratifying, is the circuit is extremely transparent and revealing. The frustrating part is that parts quality is revealed in a relentless glare, at least in the critical nodes of the circuit. This is the downside of any zero-feedback design; there is no clean-up crew of servo feedback to tidy up afterward. You hear things as they are.
But the transparency is also a gift, because "minor" substitutions are immediately apparent in the first minute of listening. I think Don, Cloud, and the rest of the Spatial team will agree on that point. I feel we are fairly close to the upper bound of what the circuit can do, but I keep being surprised.
The Raven, which I had never heard before, took me aback ... that was not what I was expecting. It is super fast and resolved, with sounds flying out of dead-black space. You can practically see the shapes of the notes as they fly by. No exaggeration, no tipped-up HiFi sound, no artificial edge sharpening, but boy, it’s all there. If it was on the recording, you will hear it.
I find it kind of shocking that a late-Twenties Bell Labs/Western Electric telephone repeater, built with modern ultra-wideband parts and quiet MOSFET cascode power supplies, sounds like that. There ain’t nuthin’ retro about the sound at all.