Biamping Triode Tubes No Feedback With Solid State


Hi, I was wondering if anyone has tried to biamp an integrated SET tube amp with a solid state power amp. I have been listening to amps that were really nice, like the Viva Solista, the Cary SEI 300, the McIntosh 2275 or even the Sun Audio. They are great integrated tube amps but with little wattage some of them lack of punch when it comes to bass. I was thinking to partner them with a warm solid state power amp (i.e. Gamut or McIntosh, I guess MOSFET would be best). Does it make sense? Would it be flawed sonically: How would you connect the whole thing to the cross over? Would I need active or passive cross over?

For speakers I am thinking Triangle Celius, Wilson Sophias or Sonus Faber Grand Piano.

Thanks,

Josep
josep_hernandez
I wouldn't even THINK about it until I found a speaker I absolutely loved AND an intergrated amp I absolutely loved, both of which I wanted to make a little better. IMO, the only situation in which biamping is easy is when you're using 2 identical stereo amps (or the identical channels of a multichannel amp) and you simply feed them with 4 identical signals from the preamp and connect the amps with 4 chunks of speakercable to existing double terminals. The next less-easy situation is when one pair of amp channels is more sensitive than the other and 'all' you need is a volume adjuster. After that, it gets lots more complicated.

Here's my story. I fell in love with a pair of new Eminent Technology LFT-8s, hybrid planar-magnetic systems with coned woofers, that are biwirable. (They replaced a pair of excellent-sounding Quad 989s.) I had and loved a pair of 50-Watt SETs, ASL 805s. The ASLs had not nearly enough power for the 8s and barely enough for the MR/treble panels. I had a 7-channel Outlaw poweramp. I tackled, first, the bass. I dug up an old Dalquist DQLP1, an electronic crossover with an active, second-order, lo-pass section and a passive hi-pass section. I removed and tossed the lo-pass inductor that was the woofer's filter, hardwired speakercable all the way back to the amp*, and started tweaking the DQ's level, crossover, and bass-boost controls. I observed changes in frequency response using a Phonic Audio Assistant II, a hand-held real-time analyzer, a tool that's HIGHLY valuable in this tweaking process. Then I contacted Bruce Thigpen of ET to determine the target range of crossover points for the MR/tweeter high-pass filter, calculated the value necessary for my 100K-Ohm-input-impedance amps, and bought and installed those caps**. That allowed me to remove the huge (475μF) electrolytic cap that was in the crossover. WOW!!! What a difference that made. This removal caused what is still the largest single sonic improvement in a music-reproduction system, caused by changing a ‘passive’ component, I’ve ever heard. That left only the MR lo-pass and the tweeter hi-pass filters in the crossover, and they’re still there, populated with higher-quality components***.

Conclusions? 1. Usually it’s not easy, and it’s sure not quick--all this took weeks, and I'm retired. 2. Going to active filtering still doesn’t necessarily allow one to remove all passive crossover components from your speakers. 3. I now have the BEST BASS I’ve ever heard in my largish (3200CF) room, and all from 2 little 8" woofers. 4. Most-real and attractive-sounding MR and treble I’ve ever heard in my system, in my room. 5. Was it worth it? ABSOLUTELY. 6. Should someone else do it? Only God knows, and He ain’t tellin’! 7. Would I go back? Never, with this system.

* That is, there are NO mechanical or solder joints after the woofer and before the spadelugs attaching to the amp. The cable runs out a hole I drilled in the enclosure's bottom and then sealed

** I chose Cardas Golden Ratio caps and I'm VERY pleased with their nonsound.

*** Those are a Solo copper-foil inductor and a SoniCap-1 shunt cap in the MR lo-pass filter, with a Cardas GR cap as the tweeter hi-pass filter. I think I'd use a Solen Perfect-Lay inductor next time.
Jeff, this is the most robust explanation I have ever heard on how to do proper biamping. I am humbled, honestly. I could not picture myself doing half of what you described in a million years. (Even if I was retired...) Not that I would not like to, but I simply don't have the knowledge nor the expertise. It is too bad. I just feel that in this hobby of ours one has to choose between the amazing warmth and presence you can get from SET (specially if they are zero feedback, ie. Viva amps) and the real bass you can get from SS. Honestly, I like both. I wish I shouldn't have to choose. With your set up, you got it. I am sure. But very few people know how to do it properly. It shouldn't be so hard.

PS. One last question, what do you thing about transformerless amps?
Unless you can match the input specs. and power differential, in otherwords if your top end of the speakers are like 95 db and you have 50 watt triodes, and the bottom end woofers are 89 db with like 300 watt solid state and all it is matchable, its near impossible to biamp a system using different amplifiers on one speaker together with Passive Crossovers, those are hypothetical #'s by the way... The only way to achieve this goal is with An active bi-amped system running your preamp into an Electronic 2, 3, or 4 way crossover and being able to handle different volume levels and crossover frequencys feeding each amp into each set of drivers... this would also require stripping the Speaker of all passive components(filters and crossovers) and leave the drivers only with straight wire to binding posts or out of the cabinet all together back to each amp. I could be wrong but this is the only way to do it right, without dissapointment.
I agree with Matrix's point that biamping with passive crossovers and 2 different kinds of amps is difficult.

I disgree that one needs--or even that it's a good idea--to strip all passive 'crossover' components when actively biamping. Doing so with a 3-way speaker requires one to triamp; biamping actively is difficult enough. Also, most 3-ways have band-pass filters--those that block lows from the bottom and highs from the top--on the midrange driver. Removing it from the crossover requires one in the active crossover.

Also, some speakers have equalization networks in them to level their response. Removing all passive components eliminates the very real benefits of these eq. networks.

I'm all for biamping actively, 2-way, and with the fewest number of components and IC cables and mechanical and solder joints, all of which degrade the quality of the sound to varying degrees. My active high-pass filter has NO mechanical connections and only one extra solder connection per channel. The four pieces of interconnect cable are hardwired to my Dalquist low-pass filter; that eliminates 4 mechanical and at leat 4 solder connections from the low-frequency section. Those who think that active filtering is all good and has NO negative affects on sound quality are wrong IMO.

Good listening.
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Well yes you could keep the simple tweeter circuit in there true, and go 2 way bi-amp I was just simplifying, bottom line it gets tuff and expensive to do it for real. and the efficiency of running 2 totally different amps for bi-amping drops quickly with cost and simplicity of system.

The only real way is to go with 2 Already excellent matching stereo amps and Verticle Bi-amp then you could leave all the passive components alone.. but this is not what you are looking for, you want basically to turn the lower woofs into solid state Sub's(not literaly but essentially) and the top to run on the sweetest tubes, this cannot be done without a very good Active Crossover and full active bi-amp system, with speaker modification. and even then getting it all to be peak level and optimize all other problems gets complex sometimes.