Showing posts with label DIY Audio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY Audio. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2022

SRPP SE2A3 Circuit Redux

Back in the late 90s, I dismissed the hi-mu/low-gm SRPP input/driver because I found that the circuit had a tendency to sound tiring over extended listening. However, my memorable encounter with the Morikawa SE2A3 amp owned by my buddy Jose was haunting. I had to revisit this circuit just to make sure I left no stones unturned. 

Earlier this year, Steve of Angela Instruments shipped me the "shop mule" SRPP SE2A3 amp for a check up. After replacing the leaky coupling caps, the amp was as good as when I delivered it to the shop over two decades ago.  

My hotter operating point = slightly more power compared to Prof. Morikawa's SRPP 2A3 amp.

!!!WARNING!!! 

The voltages in this circuit are potentially lethal! Build at your own risk!

Click here if you'd like to try the SRPP 45 triode circuit.

Use a Hammond 302AX power transformer instead of T1 + T2 A&B


Click here to see the "cleaner" 10kHz square wave from the Morikawa SE2A3 amp

In spite of the 10 kHz square wave spike from the budget Hammond 125ESE output transformers, it was a very refreshing musical reunion with the Angela SRPP 2A3 amp. 

During its residency in the man cave, the amp powered my back up Altec 2-way system above, Altec 755As and Altec 755Cs in Silbatone cabs below. It was totally devoid of the listener fatigue I previously ascribed to the circuit. Even with the brightest and harshest software and/or hardware thrown into the listening chain, I couldn't induce the unpleasant quality which bothered me in the past. 

Then it dawned on me that I started doubting the SRPP's musical abilities when my Altec 2-way project commenced. Sorry SRPP, it wasn't your fault...😟


YMMV!😉






Friday, April 22, 2022

MC step up transformer redux + Hashimoto HM-7

When I ordered this pair of MC step up transformers from Mr. Isao Asakura of tube-amps.net (highly recommended👏) for my cousin's system, he suggested the use of high-quality 24-gauge stranded copper wire. I also took note of his MC step up page, in which he discussed his chassis mounting experiments.

Taking the cue from my buddy Nate aka Redboy at HifiHaven.com, who’s a prolific audio DIYer and MC step up builder, I ordered a cast aluminum project box + 24-gauge stranded tinned copper wire from Amazon.

Hashimoto HM-7 - specs

Upon inserting the freshly mounted and wired HM-7 into my hifi set up, my Tamura TKS83 and Altec 4722 sounded comparatively hard and mechanical...🤔

I had to retrace my steps.

Tamura TKS83

Those who are familiar with my Homebrewer article in Sound Practices #17 will remember that the TKS83 was mounted on an aluminum plate + wooden base while the Altec 4722 + others were on plastic project boxes. These were also wired using 99.999% 19-gauge solid-core silver wire + Teflon sleeving, Kimber TCSS or a combination of both. 

In hindsight, whether commercial or DIY, all the Japanese MC step up transformers I've seen in the metal or in MJ Radio Experiment and Stereo Sound Tube Kingdom magazines, were always housed in all metal enclosures or chassis.

Altec/Peerless 15095A + 4722

Before doing further listening comparisons, I remounted all my MC step up transformers on cast aluminum chassis and used 24-gauge tinned stranded copper for wiring. Since we're dealing with very delicate signals at tenths of a millivolt, very fine strands of high purity copper wire + maximum shielding make a lot of sense!

Hashimoto HM-7

After the playing field had been leveled, the Hashimoto HM-7 no longer outclassed my beloved MC step up devices. However, I'm pleased to say that the HM-7 sound falls somewhere in between the detailed and dynamic TKS83 and the organically rich and spacious airiness of the classic 4722!


Alas, these cast aluminum boxes weren't available when I started experimenting with microphone transformers as MC step up devices in the late 90s. Otherwise, I would've used them since I love the industrial vibe of unfinished aluminum!



Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Begin the Beguine 2022


A well worn 78 rpm shellac disc of a Cole Porter classic recorded in 1938 by Artie Shaw spinning on a Gray Research HF500 turntable + a GE RPX cartridge amplified by my DIY je2a3 mono integrated fitted with a Hashimoto H203S output transformer driving a GE A1-400 speaker in a "vintage DIY" tuned pipe enclosure by Raymond H. Bates from Audio Magazine May 1955.

GE "single stud" RPX + 3 mil sapphire stylus
in a Karmadon slide shell


Cheers to 2022! Hopefully, it will be a much better year for all of us!



 

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Budget MC SUTs: Sony HA-T10 vs. Shure Mic Transformers

Way before I knew about SPUs and DL103s, I experimented with an entry level Audio Technica AT31E MC cartridge. Since my NAD 3020 didn't have an MC input, a pair of Sony HA-T10s were recommended at the same discount NYC store. I mounted the cartridge on a Grace G707 which was perched on a "molested" AR-XA. The sound was very different compared to my Grado GTE+1 - quieter background, more detail, deeper and wider soundstage, albeit less midrange presence and warmth.

I moved on to a Grado Signature 8, 8MX, MZ and lost track of my Sony HA-T10s. I probably loaned them to an audio buddy who forgot to return them. During a moment of nostalgia, I hit the BIN button for a pair @ a little over $100, shipped! I've listened to them with all the MC cartridges pictured above and they make pretty nice sounds! 

However, I can only justify the price I paid because of sentimentality. To my ears, the Shure mic transformers below are mucho better performers at ~ $40/pair + some DIY. Remember that HA-T10s were mass produced MC step ups, not limited production transformers using exotic nickel/amorphous/Finemet materials. Thus, sellers asking $200-400/pair are greedy!
 

Through the years, eBay sellers have benefitted from my blurb about Altec 755s, 32 horn, 414 woofer, 4722/15095, GE RPX, Gray Research tonearm + clones, Shure M3D and M7D, etc. Now I doubt if any Sony HA-T10 seller will even link to this upload.😆

Let me just say this to Shure microphone transformer sellers - as good as they are, once you break the $100/pair barrier, you've got tons more competition. So if you've got business smarts, be reasonable!😎




Saturday, June 5, 2021

morrison micro 2A3, reimagined + Kasuga Wireless KA6625ST output transformer

Joe Roberts' piece, "I Never Met a 2A3 Amp That I Didn't Like," from Sound Practices Issue 15, is very persuasive. I built jc morrison’s micro 2A3 amp soon after I received the issue via snail mail fresh from the printers in the mid '90s. After rereading the article in ‘07, I got inspired to make a Radiotron SE2A3 variant.


!!!WARNING!!!

The voltages found in the following circuits can be lethal! Build at your own risk!


jc morrison's micro


That '90s morrison micro build used the Angela Universal Power Transformer with a 760 VCT @ 200 mA (very conservatively rated) HT secondary + a GZ37 rectifier for each channel. The thought of my 2A3s broiling way over the plate dissipation was daunting. Even if Chinese 2A3s were only $10 a pop then, my finger tips tingled in anticipation of a fireworks display each time I flipped the toggle switch on. But the sound through Audio Note UK 3K output transformers was delicate yet exuberant, with a touch of mystery! 

Since my Altec 755As in open baffles required more power, or so I thought then, the power and output transformers were expropriated for the classic JE Labs SE300B project. 


Fi "X" by Don Garber
from a Sound Practices ad


 In 2017, I had wanted to build a 6SF5>2A3 amplifier tribute to the Fi "X" in memory of Don Garber 😢 but a busy schedule got in the way. 

During the March 2020 lockdown, I was motivated to review my audio DIY to-do list which led to a long-overdue parts bin inventory. I turned up a 700 VCT @ 150 mA power transformer pulled from a junked Scott 99D mono integrated. This iron is not a stranger since I've used a pair in my PP2A3 mono-blocks in the olden days. I dug up a couple of 6C8G grid capped/octal based twin triodes as well.

6SL7 vs. 6C8G 
transconductance (gm)= 1600 umhos (both)
gain (mu) = 70 vs. 38
plate resistance (Rp) = 22,500 vs. 44,000
max. plate current (each plate) = 2.3mA vs. 3.2mA

Despite the equal transconductance, the 6C8G isn't a drop-in equivalent of the 6SL7. Aside from the different pinout, the mu and Rp are lower. When the triode sections are paralleled, the Rp is closer to a medium mu/gm triode like a 76

morrison micro, reimagined by JE Labs

This 2-stage direct coupled circuit is a reimagined morrison micro using a 6C8G front end. The paralleled triode sections draw about 3.4 mA and the 510 ohm cathode bias resistor is bypassed with a 100uf @ 16V cap to maximize input sensitivity. 

Chinese 2A3s typically sell for $100 a pair nowadays

Each 2A3 is AC heated by a Hammond 166M2 (2.5V @ 3A) filament transformer. The operating points are well within the modest specs of the Scott 99D power transformer.


Output Transformers


The fullest potential of an amplifier circuit can't be realized if it's inhibited by a mediocre output transformer.


Hashimoto H203S

Transformer design can be a contentious issue. Audio forums contain at least 30 years' worth of intense arguments amongst gurus with regards to winding techniques and materials - EI laminations, C-core, double C-core, silicon steel, nickel, amorphous or nanocrystalline (aka Finemet). Unfortunately, there have been no definitive conclusions and the debates continue.

James 6123HS

Despite my limited knowledge of electromagnetic induction, I've done lots of serious listening evaluation of various transformers + a bit of basic testing through the years. My ears developed an affinity for the design ethos of Japanese transformer companies like Hashimoto, Nature Sound, Noguchi (now General Transformer, Co. Ltd), TamuraTango, etc. I also lament the now-defunct line of James budget and mid-priced output transformers from Taiwan, which sounded akin to their neighbors to the north.

Nature Sound NS70SE

I don't think the skill and expertise is unique to the Japanese. My empirical mind tells me that they just improved upon what they learned from reverse engineering classic American and European audio equipment, analogous to Canon and Nikon copying and innovating upon Leitz and Zeiss cameras and lens blueprints post WWII. 

Tamura F7002 Permalloy

The transformer art is also not lost stateside. Based on my very positive experience with custom-wound nickel plate chokes from Intact Audio's atelier, my hunch is, dave's output transformers are probably wound to similar standards since he's had ample exposure to Nature Sound, Tamura and Tango iron due to his long association with the NY Triode Mafia scene. 

Tango/Hirata NY15S 

Regrettably, I haven't had much luck with budget-priced heavy iron. The ones I've tried usually present my 'pet peeve' tonal curve: boosted upper bass, recessed midrange, a spiked upper midrange to lower treble, followed by a sharp roll off in the top end. To some ears this kind of voicing sounds captivating. But to be honest, it's a musical disaster to mine. 😞  


Budget Output Transformers 
Noguchi PMF-10WS, Edcor GXSE15-16-3.5K, Noguchi PMF-15WS

When I can't afford a top of the line Sumo-sized output transformer, I compromise on full power at the bottom end and settle for a well-designed Bonsai-sized iron with a gradual and smooth roll off beyond the audio band. It's an insurance that my midrange will sound clean due to musically consonant upper harmonics. 

Noguchi (now G-trans.co.jp) Finemet

So far, all the Japanese budget transformers I've tried have not failed me in this regard. Some even exceeded my expectations, like the entry-level Noguchi Finemets above.

Kasuga KA-6625ST


For this project I used the Kasuga Wireless KA-6625ST. This is an entry-level output transformer, which is less than half the size and weight of the Audio Note UK 3K from the 90s. Weighing in at a lean 1.1kg, it can be configured  to reflect a 2.5K, 3.5K or 5K primary Z via the multiple secondary taps. 3K-3.5K has become my de facto load for the 2A3 and 300B, only because my ears prefer it. 

Alas, these transformers aren't available in the USA. But if you happen to be in the vicinity of their Akihabara store, you can pick them up for about $82 apiece.

Kasuga KA6625ST Square Waves
L > R: 100Hz, 1kHz, 10kHz

Although not musically definitive, the square wave pictures presented above indicate good circuit and transformer behavior. Considering that there's no corrective negative feedback loop in this DC SE2A3 amp, it hardly pales (except @100Hz) in comparison to the 100Hz, 1kHz and 10kHz square waves from the classic push-pull EL84 (with negative feedback correctionDyna ST35 amp, renowned for its fine sonic quality and wide bandwidth ultra-linear output transformers. 

4.34V rms squared/8 ohms = 2.35W

The amp puts out 2.35W at 1 kHz into an 8 ohm load before clipping (lower trace) with an input sensitivity of ~ 1.2 V rms (top trace). If memory serves me right, I measured about 3W per channel from my '90s morrison micro build. About 20% of power was lost due to my cooler operating points. 

Sonic Palate



Connected to my Altec 753Cs in the main system or the Altec 755As in Silbatone cabs in the near field system, the DC SE2A3 amp doesn't have the body, complexity, intense richness, dynamic impact and bandwidth of my Bordeaux-like heavyweight amps which employ lower Z driver circuits + top of the line Japanese OPTs. Instead, it reminds me of the sweet and fruity flavors, earthy spices, color, subtlety and finesse from my White Burgundian Simple 45, which was the main reason I was forever drawn to this archaic method of building amps!


Enjoy the music!🍷



Saturday, May 1, 2021

Hi-Fi for the Deck: Rpi3B >TDA1543x4 DAC > Simple Triode SE6V6 amp > EV Sonocaster


Spring and Fall are the best seasons to enjoy food and drinks on our deck. To complement the beautiful atmosphere, I assembled an e-z to set up and dismantle hifi system!


Music Source



This stack consists of a Raspberry Pi 3B loaded with Volumio music player/streamer tethered to a Signstek USB to SPDiF converter which connects to a Muse TDA1543x4 Non-OverSampling DAC.



Volumio offers a wide choice of radio stations streaming MP3 files up to 320 Kbps. The Radio Paradise channel has even started broadcasting FLAC files. 👍


Amplifier



In the late 80s, I built my first amplifier from scratch using transformers from a cosmetically challenged Dyna SCA35. I used this paraphase circuit from the Dynaco Transformer Catalog with a 6SL7 driving a pair of push-pull 6V6s. Musically, I preferred this amp to my then highly modified Dyna ST70 and pair of MKIVs.


with 6F6Gs courtesy of John Piro

Since I always had reservations about the 1626 triode's musical abilities, I converted the JEL Darling Style amp to use triode connected 6V6s. Wow!👍

!!!WARNING!!! 

The voltages in this circuit are potentially lethal! Build at your own risk!

Input sensitivity = 0.3V, no need for a preamp
This amp also does a good job of driving my collection of orthodynamic headphones via adapter.


Triode connected 6V6s mimic directly heated triodes much better! 🎻🎸


Speakers



This pair of Electro-Voice Sonocasters came from the flea market. I guesstimate the sensitivity to be in the mid 90s dB @ 1W @ 1M. Driven by 1.4 triode watts per channel from the SE6V6 amp, I sure won't be annoying the neighbors. 🤣



The 8" drivers are unmarked but look very much like MC-8s - not quite an Altec 755C or Pioneer PIM8L in terms of refinement or realism, but not too shabby either + a lot more rugged!




Happy Listening!🍻




Saturday, April 3, 2021

Lar Retro-resto Shure M65 Phono Preamp


Hamingredient inspired chassis 😉

In the early 2000s, I tried to unload a half dozen or so of my used/test good Telefunken 12AX7s on eBay. The buyer promptly requested for a return claiming that they didn't test well in his TV-7. Was that a sign...? 😉 
So instead of re-listing, I stashed them away. I had forgotten about their existence until they showed up during a 2020 lockdown clean-up spree. 

Shure M65

I met my buddy Lar through Audiomart in the late '80s. He's a trained sound engineer and audio hobbyist who shares my passion for the classic Austin Mini.👍 We hang out and talk shop at ham radio festivals, audio and radio shows. He's firmly committed to tube phono circuits employing active RIAA EQ and posts his projects at Audiokarma and Lenco Heaven.

Shure M65 schematic

The classic Shure M65 "chrome cutie" (as Lar fondly calls them) is one of his favorite platforms for modification. Keen eyes will notice the similarity of this topology to the phono section of the classic Dynaco PAM-1 and PAS-2/3 tube preamps, albeit operated at a lower B+ voltage and with AC heated filaments.

One channel shown

The 0.47uf ceramic disc input coupling caps, C1 and C2 + the 1M shunt resistors, R3 and R4 are discarded. Likewise, the 100k positive feedback resistors (R11 and R12) are eliminated, which I also used to do to my Dyna PAS preamp hacks. IME, this procedure improves transparency. The most significant performance upgrade is Lar's recomputed RIAA EQ capacitor values (see the above schematic) tweaked for flatter response.

I didn't have a Shure M65 but had enough parts to clone one so I could put my rediscovered Tele 12AX7s into good use in the midst of Covid-19 lockdown.


This one chassis configuration sounded fine on first turn on but had an annoying low level hum I couldn't eradicate. 


After trying all possible grounding schemes, I yanked the power transformer out and built an outboard power supply. Problem solved!


My power supply is slightly more sophisticated than the stock M65. The full wave rectified B+ is filtered by a 20H/20mA choke followed by a 47uf/450V cap, which splits to separate left and right channel rails with additional decoupling and filtering. The tube filaments are DC heated. 

1 kHz
stock RIAA EQ

Using the stock RIAA EQ capacitor values, lower frequencies sound bloated with a noticeable treble boost as noted in the Shure M65 literature, which is also visible in the above 1 kHz square wave.

1 kHz
LAR modified RIAA EQ

The 1 kHz square wave is squarer and the phono preamp sounds so much better with Lar's tweaked cap values!

I don't think I was ever able to derive this level of musical satisfaction from any of my past 12AX7 phono efforts using active RIAA EQ. I believe the sonic purity stems from the simplicity of the circuit itself. The Dynaco PAM-1 and PAS-2/3 circuits have an additional cap after the negative feedback RIAA EQ tap + elaborate switching and a balance control in the PAS, all of which can cause veiling. 

In spite of the Shure 5000 ohm output impedance spec, this is still a relatively high output Z device. When connected directly to the 10k ohm input of my Nobsound NS-02g amp, the loss of extension at both frequency extremes was discernible. It sounded best driving a 100k ohm load using low capacitance cables, 3 ft. long, max! 


This phono preamp synergized very well with my favorite magnetic cartridges with conical stylus - Nagaoka MP10, Pickering XV15, Shure M3D and M7D, amongst others. So after a couple of months of enjoying the Lar mod M65, I decided to build it on a nicer (if a bit cramped 😁) cast aluminum box with two pairs of inputs.

Instead of boring you with audiophile adjectives, I'll just say that my RCA passive RIAA EQ octal sounds effortless and airy, while the EAR 834P derived loctal is detailed and dynamic and the Lar retro-resto Shure M65 is sweet and alluring! 


This phono preamp is a most welcome addition to my tools for enjoying LP reproduction. I highly recommend following Lar's phono preamp adventures at Audiokarma! 

Bravo Lar!👏