Houstonreef. The Ge 6sn7gtb.... if it is the sidegetter version, it is the proverbial "over achiever" if there ever was one in the 6sn7 family. A great score for paltry sum these can be bought for and they fly way below the radar relative to the cost of the other nos tubes in the family. [for the time being anyway]and they sound very good in the Supratek's. Sonically speaking, they are very smooth with a well balanced tone from top to bottom, decent at resolving subtle detail and posses a very punchy bass line [one of the best of the nos 6sn7's in that regard] a robust and reliable tube that's generally free from microphony and low in noise.Certainly not as texturally layered and transparent sounding as the Kenrad blackglass or Tungsol roundplates but certainly not bad in that dep't either. [ then again, only a few others nos examples are] and they generally sell 5x the price. It has been mentioned in the thread that Mick has voiced his current preamps with the stock EH6sn7 and it is a large improvement over the sovtek 6sn7. I would certainly agree with the general concensus when compared with the sovtek however, I do not concur with the general consecus here when compared to many nos 6sn7/vt-231/5692 varieties. The GE 6sn7 sidegetter easily best it, the reasonably priced RCA grey glass versions literally stomp all over the stock EH 6sn7 in every dept. Move further up the family food chain.... to the Kenrad Black or the tungsol roundplate....well.... a whole nother stratosphere to experience. Comparing the two would be like comparing the Supratek Chenin to an old Conrad Johnson preamp employing tired tubes. The 6GK5's in the pro/comm box are probably a late production tube rebadged with their label. Most of the 6gk5's out there are late production tubes and probably all made at the same facility anyway and then rebadged with a Mullard logo or number of other company's name. The early nos examples all had factory date codes. I have a pair of old stock Amperex's with factory codes and bugle boy labels that are far better sounding than the later production examples without the codes. The US made RCA 6gk5's are the way to go here if you can't find the older tubes as they are generally low in noise and all sound consistent.I suppose it's a moot point here for those with the latest production Supratek preamps that are sporting the Covi designed phono stage however those with older Syrah's and cortese models that employ Micks version of the renowned Loesch design should go out of your way to dig up some old stock 6fq5's in place of the 6gk5....A major impact and a big surprise to be had here folks! Regarding the 6bg6???????? Houstonreef, are you positive they say that somewhere on the tube! I am surprised, no more than surprised they would even work in the Syrah, unless the previous owner had the tube socket rewired to accomodate a 6bg6. The 6bg6 is electrically very close to a 6L6 however,it is traditionally employed as an output tube in an ampifier but requires a top hat on the top of the tube to operate in any given circuit. Just "Mind Boggling" to me as to why anyone would go to the trouble of using that tube for regulation duty in the Syrah anyway.
Preamp Deal of the Century
If anyone is looking for a true "World Class" preamp at a very fair price..heed my advice. I just recieved a Supratek Syrah preamp that was hand built by Mick Maloney in Western Australia, and it is absolutely beautiful! This preamp is the best deal you will ever find. I would put it up against any preamp out there for both looks and sound. Price? $2500 for the Syrah (includes Killer Phono stage). Not into phono? Try the Chardonney line stage for $2100. Don't get me wrong, I am not associated with this company. I am just a very happy owner! This preamp is VERY dynamic, yet liquid. It conveys the sound of music better than any other preamp that I have ever heard! You can check out the Supratek website at www. cantech.net.au
- ...
- 3888 posts total
- 3888 posts total