Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 22, 2023 18:39:20 GMT
A few weeks ago Jason and I were talking about amplification. We decided that once his new listening room was complete i would visit with the Purify and the 686. Today was that day! Upon our arrival at Jason's we ( stevew) were greeted at the door of what had become a rather larger bungalow than the one that I previously visited. Inside the renovation work was clearly ongoing but the listening room itself looks to be mainly complete, and I have to say what a wonderful space Jason now has for listening to music in! The fit finish of the music room is beautiful and it creates a really relaxed atmosphere where one can sit and take the view overlooking the Peak District, whilst listening to some wonderful sounding vinyl. We decided to start off by listening to the Neurchrome. Unfortunately we didn't take into account the temperature that the 686 had reached in the car overnight, and the first few tracks we listened to sound rolled off in the HF and somewhat shut in. After a few tracks had passed the 686 started to show its quality, and as we listened to a few more tracks it started to showcase the wonderful work that Jason has done in the room with treatment. The 686 itself exhibited really good control of the low frequency and started to shimmer in the high frequency, but the mid-range still didn't quite open up to the amount I'm custom to. Perhaps if we'd given it a little bit longer to warm up properly it may have done so, but we were very keen to get the Purifi into the system. The Purifi went in and pretty much straight away demonstrated that this amplifier was far better suited to Jason speakers than they were my own. The higher quality tweeter and mid-based drivers were able to portray the benefits of lack of distortion, and boy..... the Purifi delivered! The sound was unreal. Jason played some tracks by a band called Go Go Penguin, which had low frequency levels beyond anything I had heard before. The sheer power, grip and control of those low frequencies made my rib cage vibrate! We also played some tracks by Leonard Cohen, who isn't somebody I would normally listen to, but with the Purifi in the system Leonard's voice and accompanying instruments created an image that clearly formed in front of me with uber precision. That sound and mental image will last in my mind for some years to come. The amount of control, lack of distortion, and transparency enabled the Vader's to go to the next level. A level that I haven't personally been exposed to before. The ability to hear inside of the recording to that degree was worth the drive alone. I think I described it as "Divine Clarity" which isn't far off. I think all three of us were looking at each other in shock and awe of what we were hearing at this point. We played on with tracks from Sera Una Noche, Sting, Robbie Robertson and more. The Purifi and Vaders delivered time and time again. Utterly wonderful sound. This was synergy. We of course had to try Jason's amplifier which is a Musical Fidelity of some description. It was quickly apparent that the Musical Fidelity was not at the races in terms of the two amplifiers that had gone before it. As we discussed at the time, we are not being completely fair to the Musical Fidelity because the Musical Fidelity comes from a commercial background, whereas the two amplifiers that went before it are of other means. A means that allows for top quality performance at DIY prices. We have said this many times in the past but to compare commercial items to the things that we can make ourselves is not fair and does create an injustice if we are to look at price alone. When components are made to a price or with consideration of profit margin there is always going to be a downside only my experience the downside is usually performance. The purify and the 686 are amplifiers built outside the realms of looking for profit. Instead they are projects of passion and are unbound by the restraints placed on commercial items. However the fact remains that the Musical Fidelity was not at the races with these two amplifiers in my opinion. It certainly couldn't be described as a bad amplifier, because it sounded ok....but it just wasn't in the same league as the 686 or Purifi. What Jason has achieved with his system now is something that I think he will struggle to improve on, without spending vast sums of money at least. Personally I cannot think of an amplifier that I have heard that will give him more overall than he has now, even in the DIY world ..... I can't think of anything. What we heard today was a system that stepped out from the norm, and pushed past what we understand systems can deliver. You think you know what I am saying, but I promise, unless you hear it....you dont. This is a system that achieves something that I haven't heard from any system before. With the Purifi in the chain, Jason's system transcended reproduction. We heard musicians playing with force, with touch, with emotion, with atmosphere, and with the sense of being in the presence of masters at work. Standing at the rear of the room with Miles Davis playing felt like we were in a jazz cafe, complete with atmosphere and life size musicians playing. Utterly surreal. The big takeaway for me today was the fact that this sort of system is attainable for way less than you'd think, if you have a room big enough, and treated well enough to handle it. All you have to do is be brave enough to try equipment that falls outside of the parameters of commercial. To try equipment with a brand name you may not have heard of, and to put your trust in people rather than companies/dealers. I would like to say thank you to Jason for putting that trust into us, and allowing us to form a small part of that special system with our own goodies. What I heard today was very special and I can't wait to revisit when Jason has upgraded his speakers.
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Post by gninnam on Nov 22, 2023 19:17:59 GMT
That room looks very cosy and the Arkes look small too
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Arke
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Post by Arke on Nov 22, 2023 19:25:28 GMT
That room looks very cosy and the Arkes look small too Thanks Andy. My wife thinks they look small too, so that's a big win. You're welcome to pop over sometime - it doesn't sound the same as the old room! š
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 22, 2023 19:53:43 GMT
That room looks very cosy and the Arkes look small too Thanks Andy. My wife thinks they look small too, so that's a big win. You're welcome to pop over sometime - it doesn't sound the same as the old room! š It certainly doesn't after today!
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Post by bluebeat13 on Nov 22, 2023 20:18:59 GMT
Wow, what an idyllic space to listen to your music. Congratulations on all the effort Jason.
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Post by robbiegong on Nov 22, 2023 21:18:48 GMT
Excellent write up and insight into the amps used, and then those gorgeous speakers and that room .......
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Post by Arke on Nov 22, 2023 21:23:27 GMT
Thanks for the wonderful and kind words Oli! It was a pleasure to welcome you and Steve today.
I need a bit longer to process what occurred today - I am still buzzing and can't quite believe what sounds we were hearing! I shall do a longer write up soon.
The system must've been pretty good if you actually enjoyed being subjected to Leonard Cohen! š
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Post by Arke on Nov 22, 2023 21:24:23 GMT
Excellent write up and insight into the amps used, and then those gorgeous speakers and that room ....... Thanks Robbie! You are very welcome to visit whenever you fancy a listen.
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 22, 2023 21:38:29 GMT
Thanks for the wonderful and kind words Oli! It was a pleasure to welcome you and Steve today. I need a bit longer to process what occurred today - I am still buzzing and can't quite believe what sounds we were hearing! I shall do a longer write up soon. The system must've been pretty good if you actually enjoyed being subjected to Leonard Cohen! š You are very lucky to have that system. My head was wobbling today š Crazy crazy sound.
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Post by stevew on Nov 22, 2023 22:48:31 GMT
Thanks for the wonderful and kind words Oli! It was a pleasure to welcome you and Steve today. I need a bit longer to process what occurred today - I am still buzzing and can't quite believe what sounds we were hearing! I shall do a longer write up soon. The system must've been pretty good if you actually enjoyed being subjected to Leonard Cohen! š Iām still trying to process what happened today. Little to add to Oliverās usual incisive descriptive powers. I feel privileged to have witnessed how artisan products can combine to result in stratospheric resolution and pure music. Congratulations Jason.
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 22, 2023 22:59:19 GMT
Thanks for the wonderful and kind words Oli! It was a pleasure to welcome you and Steve today. I need a bit longer to process what occurred today - I am still buzzing and can't quite believe what sounds we were hearing! I shall do a longer write up soon. The system must've been pretty good if you actually enjoyed being subjected to Leonard Cohen! š Iām still trying to process what happened today. Little to add to Oliverās usual incisive descriptive powers. I feel privileged to have witnessed how artisan products can combine to result in stratospheric resolution and pure music. Congratulations Jason. Fabulous wasnt it. Lunch was cracking too š It's always a great day out.
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Post by stevew on Nov 22, 2023 23:04:32 GMT
View from the back row.
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Post by zleepy on Nov 23, 2023 6:40:42 GMT
What a fantastic looking room! Apparently fantastic sounding as well . Very interesting to read about your listening sessions! It seems the Purifi has some serious synergy going on with the Vaders. That's interesting to me, since I thought the Purifis' biggest strength is the bass control. Since the Vaders have active bass, even a low power amp should do well with amplifying the rest of the drivers. Might it be a question of which amp has the lowest distortion? It seems unlikely to me that one could perceive a difference due to distortion when both amps have vanishingly low distortion numbers. Interesting stuff! But again, that room... just fantastic! /Karl
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2023 7:15:24 GMT
What a fantastic looking room! Apparently fantastic sounding as well . Very interesting to read about your listening sessions! It seems the Purifi has some serious synergy going on with the Vaders. That's interesting to me, since I thought the Purifis' biggest strength is the bass control. Since the Vaders have active bass, even a low power amp should do well with amplifying the rest of the drivers. Might it be a question of which amp has the lowest distortion? It seems unlikely to me that one could perceive a difference due to distortion when both amps have vanishingly low distortion numbers. Interesting stuff! But again, that room... just fantastic! /Karl It was the control, I believe. The Purifi has wonderful grip and control of the LF, slightly more than the 686 and abundantly more than the musical fidelity. Thanks to that grip, the rest of the frequency range seemed less affected by the LF, creating a cleaner overall presentation which allowed for the cleanest and most vivid soundstage I've heard. The Purifi is also very punchy and the LF hits hard, but it's fast as f#ck with it, so there was no overhang, no boom and no bleeding. Once we had that control....the systems performance improved vastly, and I mean vastly. The LF performance of the Vader's is not only controlled by the Hypex modules. There is some bass done by the accompanying amplifier and it was probably that grip of those drivers that made all the difference. Jason would be able to explain that in more detail, but that's my guess.
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Post by pete on Nov 23, 2023 9:05:01 GMT
Really wonderful write up. Sounds like you had an amazing day and we have a system that goes to yet another level.
Congratulations Jason wonderful room which allows the music and systems within it become more than the sum of their parts.
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Post by stevew on Nov 23, 2023 10:20:06 GMT
What a fantastic looking room! Apparently fantastic sounding as well . Very interesting to read about your listening sessions! It seems the Purifi has some serious synergy going on with the Vaders. That's interesting to me, since I thought the Purifis' biggest strength is the bass control. Since the Vaders have active bass, even a low power amp should do well with amplifying the rest of the drivers. Might it be a question of which amp has the lowest distortion? It seems unlikely to me that one could perceive a difference due to distortion when both amps have vanishingly low distortion numbers. Interesting stuff! But again, that room... just fantastic! /Karl Spot on with your observations on the synergy between the Purifi and the Vaders. I have no idea how it works. It just does. We commented at the time about how this system would stack up against esoteric systems costing vast amounts of money. This system would take some beating at any priceā¦ and thatās not just in my humble opinion. I have to say that obviously the Vaders are the star of the show, and what they are able to do finally revealed by the Purifi. At the same time I had to remind myself several times that this is a vinyl system at present. What Angus and Oliver have done with the front end is awesome. The SP10/heavily modded PMAT 1010/Ortofon combined with the Avalon pre/phono is sublime. Jason has pulled of a huge feat in designing the front of the Vaders so that their size is not emphasised. They really do need some room.. But give them room and they are world class.
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Post by Arke on Nov 23, 2023 11:35:35 GMT
Once again, a massive thanks to Oli and Steve for taking the time to travel over and join me for a day of tunes and some amplifier comparisons. I have spent some time processing what we heard and trying to gather my thoughts - there was a lot to process and, as ever, unpicking why certain synergies occur can take some unravelling.
Before yesterday my amp was a (John Sampson upgraded) Musical Fidelity A3.2cr power amp. Itās certainly a very decent and capable amp, but it is definitely the weak link in my current system (Cadenza Black, AT1010 Phonomac mk8SE arm, SP10 Panzerholz, Avalon phonostage, BT2 pre and Troels Gravesen CNO4/ARKE Vaders). It has served me well for a few years and certainly seen off various retail amps at many times the costs. It is, however, not on a par with the best the bespoke/DIY amp market can offer! Having already compared it to a 686 on two previous occasions I know my current MF amp is very outclassed. Some may be wondering: āWhy donāt I have a 686 yet?ā. After all, the 686 is an incredible amp and has proved itself in many systems on this forum and beyond. This may take some explaining and some unpicking of my experiences over the past few listening occasionsā¦
The first time I compared the 686 to my MF it was a revelation! It was the first time Oli visited and on that day we essentially listened to Oliās system on my Ekta speakers (now Oliās Ektas). The synergy in my old room with the Ektas was sublime! The previous music room had some very unruly room modes and the iron grip and incredibly refined bass of the 686 was frankly perfect. Bass was perfectly balanced for the room and speakers.
Fast forward to Oliās (and the 686s) next visitā¦ Still in the last room (about 5m x 3m), but now with the Vaders. The 686 was again impeccable and completely outclassed my MF amp - my MF sounded veiled, lacklustre and congested in comparison. BUTā¦! Yep, thereās a BUTā¦ Why didnāt I love it? Something about the 686 and Vaders wasnāt pulling on my heart strings and I couldnāt put my finger on it. My head could pick no fault, nothing was āwrongā but something wasnāt ārightā. The upgrade to the 686 was about a 3x cost increase and although worth it in my head something wasnāt right. This has confused me for some time and it wasnāt until yesterday that things became a little clearer!
As you know from above, Oli and Steve visited yesterday, and Oli brought his 686 and a Purifi amplifier. Oli has been writing about the Purifi for a few weeks and it has certainly done some good things in his system, but it hasnāt (in his room/system) dethroned his 686. It piqued my interest, not least because of its relatively affordable price - not as pricey as a 686 and only slightly more than my MF amp. Due to our house renovation, I certainly donāt have enough spare cash to justify a 686 (or beyond) at the moment - perhaps in years to come. I didnāt, however, expect the Purifi to be the amp for me. The Vaders have class D plate amps driving the 12ā bass drivers and I do not think class D will be the best solution for the Mid/HF top enclosures. Most people seem to like class D on the bass, but other amps are generally preferred on the Midrange and HF. So, what about yesterday? What did I think?
I shall try not to repeat Oli too much, he has already explained things very well - here is my perspective. We opted not to do quick succession AB comparisons ā instead we listened to an amp for an hour or so and tried lots of different music - we all got to hear music familiar to us. The 686 kicked off proceedings and spent about an 1.5hrs in the system. It was a fantastic listen - very precise, clean and transparent and the bass was incredibly tight and well controlled. The bass definition was incredible and itās ability to unravel multiple bass lines in complex passages was fantastic. Separation, tone and balance were (for me) very good - nothing stood out as too prominent. However, it still wasnāt giving me the emotional response I was cravingā¦ Something wasnāt quite right. Yes, it bettered my MF in every respect, but I wanted more and didnāt know what.
As the listening session progressed I started to realise what was missingā¦ Big caveat here! This is not a criticism of the 686, but more of an issue of synergy with my room, my speakers and my personal taste in music/presentation. When we played Robbie Robertson - Somewhere down the crazy river (a favourite test track of Steves) it sounded great, but I wanted a little more drive, weight and slam in the drums. They were incredibly well controlled and defined, but just lacked a little weight and believability. We also played Miles Davis - All Blues, I love Jazz so my next amp needs to nail Saxophones, drums, double bass and piano. Again, the 686 did a sterling job, but again (IMO) it lacked a little bit of low end energy I craved. All blues is punctuated by a cymbal strike which starts after a minute or so and continues through the piece - it is almost hypnotic and sounds wonderful as it sparkles and shimmers in the right channel. In my new room the clarity now is sufficient to hear the cymbal strike reverb and echo around the listening place and it is sublime! The 686 (perhaps still too cold) didnāt quite present this cymbal correctly for me - it had all the detail, but lacked a little shimmer, air and magic. Hard to describe, but it wasnāt there. Perhaps after a few more hours it wouldāve nailed it? Maybe the 686 takes longer than other amps to come on song. As always, bake offs are never perfect and the ideal is to use a particular component for weeks or months before making any final decisions. A favourite test track of mine is a live recording of Damien Rice and Lisa Hannigan singing āWoman like a Manā live. Itās a track with real drive and energy and some sections are very layered with lots of information. This is a great test of any system and most systems fall short and fail to properly unravel the complex passages. The 686 again (IMO) lacked a little low end energy (with the Vaders in my room), the bass guitar was clearly audible but needed a little more weight to underpin the track. The track was extremely enjoyable but somehow lacked a little something to make it truly special.
After 1.5hrs hours of 686 we stopped briefly to make tea and then tried the Purifi. Many of the tracks were the same and we listened again for about 75-90 mins. Something was immediately different and more ārightā for me! The BASS, the BASS and the BASS! As Oli describes above, the bass is SO important - it is essential to underpin the track and add body, warmth (just the right amount) and texture. Anyone who has heard a PROPERLY AND PERFECTLY integrated sub will know what perfect bass does. The bass isnāt necessarily more prominent or dominant, but it should be realistic and tangible. Perfectly balanced bass pays massive dividends through the frequency range above - suddenly everything sounds right! Instruments not playing any bass frequencies sound fuller and more fleshed out, vocals have more body, soul and emotion. Even cymbal strikes and HFs seem to sparkle and shimmer more - they arenāt just there, but they have a presence and context in the recorded space. This all sounds like rubbish until you actually hear a perfectly integrated sub switched on and off. With the ārightā bass the soundstage is deeper, wider and everything within it comes alive. For me, this happened with the Purifi - bass synergy had arrived and everything else fell into place within an effortless realism. It was a sublime and rare experience. The 686 is incredible, but in my room/system that bass balance wasnāt quite right. As many know, the Vaders are fully tuneable below 100Hz, so perhaps some further work would help. Sadly we didnāt have a few days to tune everything for every amp.
We listened to many of the same tracks and everything just fell into place with the Purifi. With Robbie Robertson - Somewhere down the crazy river the drums had more presence and weight, they were more believable and tangible. Once this was improved, the guitar and vocals came alive a little more - it just sounded right. Miles Davis - All blues was more live and alive - I honestly donāt think the Purifi was bettering the 686 at midrange and HFā¦ The Purifi with my speakers, in my room was nailing the bass. Not just nailing it, but producing better bass than I have ever heard anywhere! So deep, so controlled and so visceral - highly addictive. The Purifi just unravelled Damien Rice and Lisa Hannigan playing āWoman like a manā live. The complex passages were effortlessly layered and presented in a wonderfully coherent soundstage. So much more was easily audible and you could pick and choose what to follow. Listening became relaxing and more effortless. The Purifi was excelling (IMO) at everything we threw at it. We listened to side B of Morphine - Good, it was just fantastic! Drums and bass guitar had a real presence and the presentation of the recording space was just wonderful. The vocals and Saxophone were so right and everything just hung perfectly in space and sounded effortless. I love the double bass, drums and piano and the Purifi played GoGo Pengiun with absolute aplomb. The drums and double bass had such presence and a really believable quality. Getting the lower registers so right paid dividends with the piano - it sounded so full and tonally right, lower registers had real weight and energy. On the GoGo Penguin track āWashā the bass is absolutely jaw dropping - the gut wrenching, super controlled bass was phenomenal! I believe the double bass is bowed and then processed somehow (in a synth?) It sounds like a bowed double bass on steroids - incredible depth and texture. We listened to various tracks (Regina Spektor - Love Affair and one of Oliās records) and the double bass was just perfect.
So why did the Purifi do so well (IMO) in my room and on my Vaders? Well, my speakers are certainly in a minority as they have active bass below 100Hz. Due to this, and the many hours of tuning, the bass response is abnormally flat compared to most speakers in most listening environments. Room constraints and room modes are a fact of life - I have measured many speakers in many rooms and all (passive) speakers in rooms have accentuated frequencies within the bass frequency range. Yes, there will be exceptions, but Iāve not heard/measured any yet. In most environments, the additional bass lift can be very welcome - some people love a bass lift at 40Hz or perhaps a little more energy at 80-100Hz. It certainly isnāt a bad thing and the ear/brain tends to compensate extremely well. Due to weeks of tuning and up to 350mm of bass traps in my room, the bass has a good foundation to start. Perhaps the room was overdamped for the bass presentation of the 686? I know in other rooms the impeccable control of the 686 can really help to tame some room modes - it certainly did with my (previous) Ektas in my old music room. The Purifi keeps the impeccable control, but somehow adds more presence and energy in my room. This, in turn, has noticeable and not insubstantial gains throughout the frequency range. Pianos, guitars and vocals have more body and presence, HF is more alive and shimmering.
Why did a class D amp work so well on my Vaders yesterday??? Surely, as mentioned above, the ideal may be class D on the bass and something else (less āclass Dā) on the midrange and HF? Well, with the Vaders it aināt that easy! Yes, they are two enclosures and the lower does ONLY bass, however, the upper enclosure does not ONLY do midrange and treble. The upper enclosure (tweeter, 6ā mid/bass, 8ā mid/bass) is effectively a 2.5 way speaker. Neither the 6ā driver nor the 8ā driver have a high pass filter in the crossover. Both mid/bass drivers are allowed to go as deep into the bass frequencies as they can. Due to the enclosure designs they are rolled off naturally at a higher frequency than most ported bass systems. The 6ā driver is in a sealed enclosure so it rolls off naturally below 100Hz - it is definitely involved in the upper bass and has some influence (albeit small) in the mid-bass. The 8ā driver is in a ported enclosure with aperiodic tuning (the port is stuffed with acoustilux), so it rolls off naturally from around 80 Hz, but still has a reasonable influence in the mid-bass. Both the 8ā and 6ā drivers add definition and (a little) extra weight in the bass frequencies. The 12ā driver is definitely doing the heavy lifting, but the upper enclosure has a big influence on the bass. This is why I believe the class D is still shining on the Vaders. That extra bass control, grip and presence is paying dividends on the upper enclosure. Getting the bass right has got everything right.
Is the Purifi better than the 686? NO! In my system, in my room, YES. However, I believe the outcome will vary greatly from one situation (room, system and person) to another. In Oliās room with his system (and Oliās preferences) he prefers the 686.
Will I still have the Purifi in a year or two? Probably not! Donāt get me wrong, it is amazing and certainly the best option for me at the moment. I simply do not have the funds to better it - if anyone can offer a better option for Ā£1k Iām all ears! For now Iāll be listening with a huge smile on my face and may well change when something better presents itself (and funds allow).
Thanks for reading my rather long report!
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Post by misterc on Nov 23, 2023 12:10:24 GMT
Nice work Jason look a great place to relax and listen to music.
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Post by macca on Nov 23, 2023 18:19:18 GMT
Why did a class D amp work so well on my Vaders yesterday??? Surely, as mentioned above, the ideal may be class D on the bass and something else (less āclass Dā) on the midrange and HF? Well, with the Vaders it aināt that easy! Yes, they are two enclosures and the lower does ONLY bass, however, the upper enclosure does not ONLY do midrange and treble. The upper enclosure (tweeter, 6ā mid/bass, 8ā mid/bass) is effectively a 2.5 way speaker. Neither the 6ā driver nor the 8ā driver have a high pass filter in the crossover. Both mid/bass drivers are allowed to go as deep into the bass frequencies as they can. what is the rational for this? It makes no sense to me. Even with the natural roll off your still feeding those low frequencies to the drivers and that's surely going to compromise their performance in the frequencies they are supposed to reproduce? I guess Troels has a reason or justification, do you know what it is? Your room looks fantastic btw
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Post by Arke on Nov 23, 2023 19:11:22 GMT
Why did a class D amp work so well on my Vaders yesterday??? Surely, as mentioned above, the ideal may be class D on the bass and something else (less āclass Dā) on the midrange and HF? Well, with the Vaders it aināt that easy! Yes, they are two enclosures and the lower does ONLY bass, however, the upper enclosure does not ONLY do midrange and treble. The upper enclosure (tweeter, 6ā mid/bass, 8ā mid/bass) is effectively a 2.5 way speaker. Neither the 6ā driver nor the 8ā driver have a high pass filter in the crossover. Both mid/bass drivers are allowed to go as deep into the bass frequencies as they can. what is the rational for this? It makes no sense to me. Even with the natural roll off your still feeding those low frequencies to the drivers and that's surely going to compromise their performance in the frequencies they are supposed to reproduce? I guess Troels has a reason or justification, do you know what it is? Your room looks fantastic btw Hi Martin. As with everything, there is never a 'one size fits all' solution. I believe Troels decided these drivers will perform better without any high pass filter in the XO. He belives (I am supposing) that the benefits of no high pass filter components outweigh the downsides of the drivers doing mids and bass. Either way, I just choose what sounds best to me. They sound better than any other 3 way speakers I've heard so far. You're welcome to come for a demo sometime.
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Post by gninnam on Nov 23, 2023 21:34:57 GMT
Just finished reading all the comments from the 3 Amigo's and very interesting it was too. So, you are now the proud owner of the Purifi amp I assume so enjoy the good times as they say
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Post by Arke on Nov 23, 2023 22:37:25 GMT
Just finished reading all the comments from the 3 Amigo's and very interesting it was too. So, you are now the proud owner of the Purifi amp I assume so enjoy the good times as they say I certainly am. I'm sure I'll better it one day, but for around Ā£1k it'll be hard to beat in my system. I shall always be exploring options and keeping an open mind. For now, I think limited funds will mean it's around for a while. Loving the bass atm!
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2023 23:48:20 GMT
Just finished reading all the comments from the 3 Amigo's and very interesting it was too. So, you are now the proud owner of the Purifi amp I assume so enjoy the good times as they say I certainly am. I'm sure I'll better it one day, but for around Ā£1k it'll be hard to beat in my system. I shall always be exploring options and keeping an open mind. For now, I think limited funds will mean it's around for a while. Loving the bass atm! I wouldn't rush to shift the Purifi. Your system took on a whole new lease of life the second we played that first track with it in the system. There isn't even any benefit in going for the more powerful modules as they are not needed with your speakers. Simply incredible sound. Still wobbling my head at it.
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Post by antonio on Nov 24, 2023 2:19:23 GMT
Pleased everyone had a good day out, and Jason improving his system with the Purifi. Let's not forget there was no Townshend isolation under the speakers, and I know Jason was keen to go in that direction as and when funds allow. The room looks excellent, especially with the view you are faced with when listening to music.
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Post by stevew on Nov 24, 2023 13:10:15 GMT
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Post by gninnam on Nov 24, 2023 21:18:50 GMT
Like the lights
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Post by Arke on Nov 26, 2023 22:13:18 GMT
Pleased everyone had a good day out, and Jason improving his system with the Purifi. Let's not forget there was no Townshend isolation under the speakers, and I know Jason was keen to go in that direction as and when funds allow. The room looks excellent, especially with the view you are faced with when listening to music. I'll sort the Townshends one day Dave. Hope you are well.
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Post by antonio on Nov 27, 2023 2:10:06 GMT
@arke Absolutely fine, thanks Jason. As for the Townshend's, 'Rome wasn't built in a day'.
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Post by stevew on Dec 1, 2023 15:53:48 GMT
After a busy week, Iām just playing catch up with a few words of my own on the visit to Jasonās.
My formative years for listening to music, began in the early to mid 70s. Brilliant music coming from the likes of Floyd, Led Zep, Van Morrison, Lindisfarne, Focus, The Who, etc etc
Whenever a new album came out however, me and my friends always reckoned you had to listen to it at least 2,3 or even 4 times before getting āinto itā. Of course in the digital age, this luxury or indulgence fell away and instant gratification was required.
Now Iāve particularly found difficulty with this way of appreciating music with different systems. Instant gratification became just listening to one track and then swiftly moving on. Itās not a great way to enjoy music. In fact Iāve often gone long periods of not even bothering to listen.. just lost that feeling of being āgrabbedā.
However just occasionally Iāll hear music through a system that despite not being familiar with the music, it can cut through and engage me. Much like it did after āgetting intoā an album as an 18 year old.
So when I first heard the Ektas in Oliverās system, I was immediately taken by that feeling of being drawn into whatever was being played. I ordered the Ektas from Jason pretty much straight away. Hell, I even got Oli to build me a 686, having experimented with a few other amps. Addiction is a serious thing but Iād got addicted to being drawn into the music.. Itās paid off.. Iām drawn into all sorts of familiar and not so familiar music these days. Particularly on vinyl.. Iām still chasing the dragon digitally.
So when Jason said he was auditioning amps to pair with his Vaders in his new music roomā¦ Christmas came early. Weāve seen the room so no need to explore further.
Listening to the Vaders driven by the 686 was rather wonderful. The low frequency stuff can be felt, but not overpowering that is sometimes the case. The LF underpinned everything. The soundstage and dynamics superior to that which I experience in my basement system. Jasonās system demonstrates a musical coherence that just sounded ārightā.
I have a favourite test track, which despite having played several million times, I still adore the music. Itās Somewhere Down the Crazy River by Robbie Robertson. Produced by Daniel Lanois, and itās a swampy atmospheric beautiful piece of work. Robbie sings the chorus, but the verses are spoken word ā¦in his drawling deep gravelly voice. The production lets all aspects of the musical elements shine through. So hearing this through the Vaders with a 686 was a revelation (compared with my system and room)
So cutting to the chase, when the 686 was replaced by the Purify I was interested to hear this track again. What I heard was a tad mind blowing. I was an 18 year old again (ok I know, I know.. it wasnāt produced until I was 30 but you get the picture). Totally absorbed. It wasnāt just all the detail and soundstage the 686 had produced, but that was there but much much moreā¦a degree of separation of everything that enabled you to listen in far more detail to all aspects of the music enveloping the room. Done with dynamics and finesse combined. Robbie Robertson was breathing those lyrics from the heart..(is that physically possible?- I know what I mean)
This was all rather unexpected. Physically the 686 has a much bigger case than the diminutive Purify. So itās gonna sound better right? Well, not with the Vaders. The small little box was blowing the doors off. Not literally.. Maybe itās another case of system synergy.. I leave the technical rationale to those who can. Iād tried out some Nord monoblock NC500 class d amps in my system which sounded decided average compared with the Neurochrome 686. Maybe I expected something similar. Nothing could be further from the truth.
That feeling of wanting to carry on listening to a track continued with all the music played with the Purify. In fact it made me want to explore some music even more (Morphine/Good). Stunning stuff.
If you get the chance, let Jason show you whatās possible.
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Post by stevew on Feb 25, 2024 17:11:23 GMT
Saw this and thought of youā¦. Jason (lol)
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