Favorite Amplifier that you could buy, but don’t buy…

AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
What is your favorite amplifier that you could afford, but just don’t buy because it’s not cost-effective?

Mac? Bryston? Mark Levinson? PassLab? ATI?

What are the 3 most important factors that contribute to your answer?

Aesthetic? Pride of ownership? Sound quality?

 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
What is your favorite amplifier that you could afford, but just don’t buy because it’s not cost-effective?

Mac? Bryston? Mark Levinson? PassLab? ATI?

What are the 3 most important factors that contribute to your answer?

Aesthetic? Pride of ownership? Sound quality?

Reliability is top of the list for me. Ultra low distortion, especially crossover distortion and superb SNR. That is what I demand in an amp. Low heat production is also a string consideration.
 
mono-bloc

mono-bloc

Senior Audioholic
-Interesting question. It really comes down to what one user can afford.. If it was choice then it would be a European brand. Most American brands are ove priced
rubbish, and with the exchange rates are completely out of anyone' thinking. Consider the fact that the american price has to be more or less doubled, plus freight and GST

Price no object wou ld be Gryphon, with a life time guarantee. or the Polish brand Block. For a more realistic price Cyrus, upper range models . Class "D" would be an absolute No No. Our mates Quad are more or less unknow in Oz, with one dealer in Melbourne https://soundreference.com.au/brands/QUAD.html And I don't know of anyone who owns Quad or anyone who knows anyone who knows anyone with Quod. I'm not saying there bad, but they completely lack any sort of advertising.
 
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ski2xblack

ski2xblack

Audioholic Samurai
Practically speaking? Amps are mature tech.* Pick one with low distortion, linear response, low output impedance, and enough power that you won't clip it, and voila, your "amp problem" is solved for decades.

That's the reductive Arny Kreuger-ish take. Sorry, Andrew!

I do have some techno curiosity about TLS' preferred Quads. Really clever. No crossover distortion with those, class A output without being toaster ovens, low parts count, wide tolerances for those parts, and longevity in spades. Sure, things like crossover distortion in class AB amps is a long solved problem, and any good amp should last a long time. Still, from an engineering+design perspective, those Quads are very interesting.

* Class AB solid state amps are mature tech. If/when I need another amp, it will most likely be a hypex based one, and probably an unglamorous one since I keep the amps out of sight. Those hypex amps seem to be mature tech as well, and bring SOTA performance on the bench that surpasses everything that has come before.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Since I haven't found much to the sound quality thing, nor aesthetic, I generally go for value/price for power/impedance handling. I have some 40 year old Carver amps that make a bit too much noise these days, but not sure many others would be much better at the aging thing.....
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
Price no object would be Gryphon, with a life time guarantee.
The Gryphon website states:
Service under warranty is the sole responsibility of the distributor/dealer who supplies the product. Do not return the product to our factory with a warranty claim unless authorized in writing by the dealer.

It doesn’t say lifetime or any amount of time warranty.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Practically speaking? Amps are mature tech.* Pick one with low distortion, linear response, low output impedance, and enough power that you won't clip it, and voila, your "amp problem" is solved for decades.

That's the reductive Arny Kreuger-ish take. Sorry, Andrew!

I do have some techno curiosity about TLS' preferred Quads. Really clever. No crossover distortion with those, class A output without being toaster ovens, low parts count, wide tolerances for those parts, and longevity in spades. Sure, things like crossover distortion in class AB amps is a long solved problem, and any good amp should last a long time. Still, from an engineering+design perspective, those Quads are very interesting.

* Class AB solid state amps are mature tech. If/when I need another amp, it will most likely be a hypex based one, and probably an unglamorous one since I keep the amps out of sight. Those hypex amps seem to be mature tech as well, and bring SOTA performance on the bench that surpasses everything that has come before.
Yes, they are fascinating concept. If you look at the circuit you would say they are not stable. But they are and very stable. +ve feedback has long been a no can do in amp design, and yet Peter broke the rule and got away with it. He has to be credited with making the first really stable and reliable class AB amp, the Quad 303. Back in the sixties the early AB amps were blowing up left right and center, and people hanging onto their tube amps. The 303 really changed that and he ended production of the Quad II tube amps, despite uproar from the "Golden Ears!" There was uproar and still is. After his death the new Chinese owners put the Quad II tube amp back in production, which I think it still is. Which I regard as pandering to nonsense.

Now the original Quad 405, did have minor SQ issues. Its development was not a straight line, and the Quad 405 II was a definite improvement. However even so, if you look at the service manuals there are numerous iterations of the 405 and 405 II circuits. The large amps the 606 and his last the 909 where superb, with the 909 being his masterpiece. The big issue for me is the low heat production. So I can stack all those amps one on top of the other and not worry about the amps getting hot enough to fry eggs!

If I were starting out now though, I would be in the class D camp. However the downside is a huge part count and modern manufacturing techniques making repair pretty much impossible except by board change. That is a bit of lottery depending on availability.

Lastly I would address the crossover distortion at low signal of class AB amps. Yes, this has been solved but at a price. The price is heavier bias towards class A, and higher quiescent current and therefore heat production and reduced acoustic efficiency. There is likely a penalty there with shortened life due to heat stress in the output devices. There is never a free lunch.
 
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