Tuesday, December 15, 2020
nos TDA1541 tube DAC
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Home Brewer: Silbatone 755 Cabinet DIYers Club
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| Left = JE Labs clone (by John Piro) Right = J-Rob's Silbatone original |
Altec 755As in Manila
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| Tango MCT999 MC transformer, JE Labs 5691 passive EQ RIAA phono + 76 > Tango NP216N line stage, JE Labs SE2A3 with Magnequest TFA204 OPTs (on the floor) |
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| Garrard 301 + Ikeda IT407 + SPU Meister Silver JE Labs SE300B deluxe mono blocks with Tamura F7002s on copper chassis |
Altec 755As in the USA

Nate Grindheim aka Redboy in Audiokarma and HiFi Haven is an avid DIYer. You'll find his meticulously crafted MC step up transformers and amps in those aforementioned audio forums as well as in his Flickr stream.
Nate says:
"My buddy Gary (aka ejfud) built the cabinets for me. He knew I had the drivers and got tired of waiting around for me to build something for them, so he took the initiative to knock a pair together for me. He's a good friend to have around.
These things are really wonderful. They have that amazing Tone (with a capital "T"!) that I'm after, and the sound... it's just right, and good. They make music.
I am excited to get some proper amplification for them. There's a pair of 6L6 IPC amps here with Peerless iron that I think will be a great match, but I still need to overhaul them."
Altec 755C in Manila
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| Garrard 401 + RMG309 + FR64S + SPU Aniversary, DIY preamp and SET amps |
Altec 755E + JBL 075 in Manila
Lafayette SK98/Pioneer PIM8L in the USA
If you want your DIY Silbatone cabinet project added to this exclusive club 😉, please leave a comment with your email address. I will reply to you directly.
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
John Linsley-Hood Class A Headphone Amp
!!!WARNING!!!
The voltages in this project are potentially lethal! Proceed at your own risk!
Since I didn't want to risk frying my headphones and classic speakers, I installed 2500uf @ 16V electrolytic blocking capacitors at each channel’s output. Then, I bypassed the electrolytic caps with hermetically sealed 4uf paper caps just like I did to the Nobsound NS02g.
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| Top trace = audio generator Bottom trace = amp output |
In spite of the DC blocking caps at the output, the square waves still show excellent bandwidth, transient response with no trace of ringing.
BTW, did I mention that it can also drive my Altec 755As in Silbatone cabinets?
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Moving Iron Cartridges: Grado, Nagaoka, Pickering/Stanton and Piezo/Sparta
This is the last installment of my series on magnetic phono cartridges, which commenced with early stereo cartridges followed by moving magnet cartridges. These cartridges were evaluated in the near-field and main system in the man cave. Tonearms used include the Syntec S220, Denon DA305, Fidelity Research FR54 and Grace G565, mounted on the Garrard 401, Realistic MKVIII, Rek O Kut B12GH + L34 and Thorens TD124 or MKII.
Grado
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| Grado GTE+1 + ZTE+1 stylus |
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| Grado Signature 8MZ |
The tonal curve I described above is still apparent in the Signature 8MZ but milder. The upper midrange/lower treble peak was refined and the frequency extremes more extended. In the process, however, micro and macro dynamics suffered. Refinement, detail and resolution improved at the expense of musical excitement.
I also noted a lack of air and spaciousness between instruments and vocals as presented by both 8MZ and GTE+1, which resulted in a drier and narrower sound field compared to the Nagaoka, Pickering/Stanton and Sparta S220.
Nagaoka
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| Nagaoka MP11 |
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| Nagaoka MP11 |
To my ears, the MP11 is the moving iron equivalent of the Denon DL103R. It has a sweet midrange, detailed and extended in the frequency extremes with a middle row concert hall perspective. Even if the presentation is more relaxed than the Pickering/Stanton models below, it still presents musically satisfying dynamic nuances.
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| Nagaoka MP110 body + MP10 conical stylus |
I couldn't detect any sonic difference swapping the MP11 or MP10 stylus between the MP11 and MP110 bodies. The DCR of the MP11 coils averaged at ~ 550 ohms while the MP110 ~ 600 ohms. Thus, I assumed that the MP11 and MP110 bodies are identical.
Sonically, the MP110 body (or MP11 body) + MP10 stylus = the moving iron equivalent of the Denon DL103.
Pickering/Stanton
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| Pickering XV15 + D400 conical stylus |
The positive attributes I noted about the Pickering 380 + Stanton 371 = Pickering XV15. Compared to the MP10/11, the concert hall perspective is more front row. The midrange is the most three-dimensional in this survey and comparable to the Shure M3/7D. Dynamically, this cartridge is the most exciting in this group.
The MP11/10 beats the XV15 + original conical stylus in terms of detail resolution. Perhaps with an original elliptical stylus, the detail and resolution in the frequency extremes will most likely equal or even surpass the MP11.
Note that the Stanton 680 is the same exact cartridge and the stylus are interchangeable between the two bodies.
There's a lot of SPU juiciness from this cartridge!
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| Pickering V-15 Phase IV + IV AM stylus |
The Pickering V-15 Phase IV was designed as the entry-level model in the Flux-Valve (moving iron) line up. I measured an average of 780 ohms DCR from its coils vs. 1200 ohms for its higher-end brother, the XV15.
Sparta 220S
This Sparta 220S cartridge came with one of my Syntec S220 tonearms. The Japanese OEM was identified as a Piezo YM-114 aka Hitachi DS-ST101 by wualta in Audiokarma. It's a very smooth-sounding cartridge with good detail and extension in the frequency extremes. Not as dry as the Grados, but like the 8MZ, it doesn't have the micro/macro dynamic prowess of the Nagaoka MP10/11 and Pickering XV15/Phase IV.
Coda
The Wrap
Moving Iron + Moving Magnet
Friday, October 16, 2020
Kutztown Radio Show Fall 2020
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| Pavilion 1 |
This was the first audio related event I've attended since the March 2020 lockdown.
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| Thorens TD124 MkII |
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| Dyna PAS 3 + ST70, ARXA turntable, Heath W4 amp |
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| H. H. Scott 710 + Gray 216 |
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| Garrard record changer, Harman Kardon tube receiver |
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| Weathers Turntable |
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| NOS pair of WE755A + full documentation |
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| If you need to ask how much for the pair, you can't afford it. 😆 |
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| Western Electric 597A, probably worth a kidney? |
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| Vacuum Tubes |
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| Pavilion 2 |
Friday, October 2, 2020
Fuji X-E3 vs. Sony A7II + manual focus lenses
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| taken by an Olympus E-P1 + Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f1.5 LTM |
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| Olympus E-P1 + Voigtlander Color Skopar 21mm f 4 LTM |
Except for a couple of digital point and shoot devices, my digital camera history only encompasses mirrorless interchangeable lens bodies starting with an Olympus E-P1 that I acquired in late 2009. This camera documented my trips to Shanghai and Bangkok.
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| Sony A7II + Canon 50mm f1.8 LTM |
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| Fuji X-E3 + Industar 69 |
Tish probably noticed my love/hate relationship with the Sony device. Before 2019 ended, she surprised me with a Fuji X-E3. The X-E3 is even slightly smaller and leaner than my beloved X-E1. Except for the touch screen, which manages to occasionally screw up my default settings, its rangefinder-like handling instantly felt familiar.
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| Fuji X-E3 + Meike 28mm f2.8, Provia film simulation |
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| Fuji X-E3 + Meike 28mm f2.8 Velvia film simulation |
The film simulations render beautiful OOC images, Acros and Velvia being my two favorites.
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| Fuji X-E3 + Industar 69, Acros film simulation |
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| Fuji X-E3 + 7Artisans 25mm f1.8, Velvia film simulation |
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| Fuji X-E3 + Meike 28mm f2.8 pancake |























































