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Melquiades Amplifier
Topic: Re: Starting the project

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Posted by Antonio J. on 11-03-2005

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I'm in touch with a reliable technician who is going to build the Melquiades monoblocks for me. He has suggested some changes which I'd like to comment, he's having trouble to find some of the parts. I hope you can help with this:

- Regarding C2 the 2000uF/450v cap, he suggests to replace it with 5 x 200uF/200V by Mundorf (he can get them for a good price, probably better those five caps than a single 2000/450). I'm not sure about this replacement, it could change completely the sound or maybe not, but he says 450V is quite a lot and maybe not really necessary. My knowledge is 0 so advice is needed.

- C10> He suggest using three caps of the same type, the Mundorf HV 200uF/200V.

- C3 (electrocube) to be replaced for a Mundorf silver in oil 3.3 uF. In his opinion the Mundorf is the best cap for that application.

- He can't find wire-wound non inductive Vishay/Dale CW or RW resistors. He can get some other non-inductive resistors, but not exactly those. He not either can find the VR1 trimmer which he says is very "exquisite". I would be very thankful if you could address us to some reliable provider of the Vishay/dales or suitable substitutes.


- Delay Timer There's nothing specified about the circuits. He has his own design, but he doesn't know if it would meet the requirements. Hence some description or schemes about the timer's circuit are needed.


- Binding Posts = He suggests using some heavy Monacors since those are the ones he used in some other projects, but maybe you have experimented with others and find them more adequate. 

- RCAs = he uses Monacors too, but maybe other make are better.

Thanks for any comments, I'm willing to have the Melquiades built and learn what it can do.

rgds

Antonio

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-03-2005

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 Antonio J. wrote:
- Regarding C2 the 2000uF/450v cap, he suggests to replace it with 5 x 200uF/200V by Mundorf (he can get them for a good price, probably better those five caps than a single 2000/450). I'm not sure about this replacement, it could change completely the sound or maybe not, but he says 450V is quite a lot and maybe not really necessary. My knowledge is 0 so advice is needed.

Nope. This cap should be 450V as it will be 400V in it during the amp operation. Get any 450V cap of any brand and do not worry about the “quality” of C2.  What defiantly do not do is peruse the audiophile grade caps like Black Gate and the rest garbage. Do for any commercial grade: Cornell Dublier, Nichicon, Nippon Chemi-Con and many others. Do not worry about the cap brand at this point

 Antonio J. wrote:
- C10> He suggest using three caps of the same type, the Mundorf HV 200uF/200V.

I would keep the C10 above 250V. it all depends what operation voltage you select. Keep the C10!50V above the plate voltage and you should be save. I do not know anything about the Mundorf caps, it presumable you European brand.

 Antonio J. wrote:
- C3 (electrocube) to be replaced for a Mundorf silver in oil 3.3 uF. In his opinion the Mundorf is the best cap for that application.

The C3 is superbly important cap and it will highly affect how the amp sounds. I personally do not like any oil-based capacitors. They might in some way behave OK in speaker level placations but form my point of view they are not useable as coupling capacitors. Most likely he will charge a fortune for this silver in oil cap. I did pay that fortune trued them and I do not use them. Still, I never tried the Mundorf brand.

 Antonio J. wrote:
- He can't find wire-wound non inductive Vishay/Dale CW or RW resistors. He can get some other non-inductive resistors, but not exactly those. He not either can find the VR1 trimmer which he says is very "exquisite". I would be very thankful if you could address us to some reliable provider of the Vishay/dales or suitable substitutes.

It is fine, use whatever resistors he/you fine appropriate and convenient. The parts selection is suggested but some parts are no critical.

 Antonio J. wrote:
- Delay Timer There's nothing specified about the circuits. He has his own design, but he doesn't know if it would meet the requirements. Hence some description or schemes about the timer's circuit are needed.

No requirements in there. Let him use any reliable 10-15A relays. I personally us the Magnecraft time delay that I tested and found perfectly acceptable. If you wish I might hive you the model number.


 Antonio J. wrote:
- Binding Posts = He suggests using some heavy Monacors since those are the ones he used in some other projects, but maybe you have experimented with others and find them more adequate.

I do not know the Monacors . Years ago, When I built external crossover for Trios I bout all existing in US Binding Posts and it turned out that the most famous hi-fi brands were the most horrible. The best were the “Superior Electric” the cheapest looking but the most transparently sounding binding posts.

 Antonio J. wrote:
- RCAs = he uses Monacors too, but maybe other make are better.

I do not know. I do not think that this is critical for this amp. Let him use whatever he trusts.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat

Posted by Antonio J. on 11-03-2005

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Dear Romy,

Thanks a lot, I've forwarded to him your answers, let's see what he says. I have tried Mundorfs in some critical places in the integrated tube amp I'm using now and they are pretty good, expensive, but not at the level of those Auricaps, Hovlands and Cardas caps. They're made in Germany. I'd say they have no sound of their own, nothing like the "highs silkenization" the teflon caps do, or the muddiness some polypropilene add. I've not tried other "in-oil" caps so I don't know what could they do you might dislike. I have suggested him to use the Electrocube and when the amp is working, trying if possible the Mundorf in C3.

By now we're at the "price quotation" point, he's finding the materials and we'll see how much the thing takes to be made.

Regards,

Antonio

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-03-2005

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 Antonio J. wrote:
Thanks a lot, I've forwarded to him your answers, let's see what he says. I have tried Mundorfs in some critical places in the integrated tube amp I'm using now and they are pretty good, expensive, but not at the level of those Auricaps, Hovlands and Cardas caps. They're made in Germany. I'd say they have no sound of their own, nothing like the "highs silkenization" the teflon caps do, or the muddiness some polypropilene add. I've not tried other "in-oil" caps so I don't know what could they do you might dislike. I have suggested him to use the Electrocube and when the amp is working, trying if possible the Mundorf in C3.

By now we're at the "price quotation" point, he's finding the materials and we'll see how much the thing takes to be made.

Antonio,

Audio people unfortunately behave very Moronic while they assess and evaluate components for their audio and partially it related to the capacitors. Most of audio people use initially faulty and dead topologic decision and then the try to ornament the dead sound of their components with idiosyncratic sounds of the specific passive elements. Thos freaks would tell you day and night about sound of different pars or the detractively of the conductors or about the thousands other extraneous things. Ironically if those people see an element that in context of a proper application demonstrate neutral sound then those people find it “not impressive enough”, without the understanding that the real impressiveness should not derive form the sound of passive elements. The  Auricaps, Hovlands, Cardas (especially the Hovlands) and many other caps, although they are the famous hi-end brand in reality the are horrible capacitors that are very far form musical or sonic neutrality. My suggestion of the Cube 950 was not accident but my chose among over $2.500 worth bundle of capacitates that I have trued. You may built the milk around whatever you wish but if you ask me then I would suggest the Cube 950.

Yes, if you need the "price quotation" point or the leads to source whatever you might need for the Melquiades then I will be happy to assist.

The Cat


Posted by Antonio J. on 11-03-2005

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Hi Romy,

Probably my evaluation methods are still quite moronic, but I think I'm learning to listen to what matters in the music. I had some experiences with a friend using several caps in a preamp he built, and also in the integrated I'm using. I understand for "neutral" something that doesn't take your attention to "the sounds" and just allow you to focus in the meaning of the music, the interpretation, the musical details of the performance... the things that my inner I loves doing at a concert hall. I don't go there to listen the beauty of timbre of the violins or how the bass spreads along the hall. I suppose you get what I mean.

Those Mundorfs are good, they don't enhance anything, just don't add garbage and let the music flow compared to any other "boutique" cap we tried, which usually add "detail" or "air", "spaciousness", "bass depth" and that kind of audiophile-sounds-stuff. They're MKP covered with a fine layer of silver and all embedded in oil (of course it's not the electrolitic ones). The builder advices them because he can get them at a much better price than "average Joe", more or less the same price than other good industrial grade caps, but in his opinion are way more reliable made to match very tight tolerances and last a lifetime. In any case he's willing to do whatever I decide.

Regarding the C2 thing, He said that I misunderstood his proposal, what he says is using five double 200uF+200uF cans (400 uF each cap), which are rated for 500V (not 200 as I misunderstood) to get the 2000uF needed for C2, but having lower ESR and ESL than using a single 2000uF/450 or 500V cap. I'll do whatever you advice, using smaller caps paralleled to get a certain value has some advantages compared to using a single one, but this might have other advantages that you'll probably know better. He says the cost of a single big cap is higher than using his solution, but again he'll do what I (you) say. The same goes for C10, he would use three 200+200 (400uF/500V) to get the 1200uF/450V needed.

I think we'd need some supplier to find the VR1 trimmer and some of the other resistors. As I said, he can use some low inductance ones instead of the Vishays to keep the budget low, but he can't find all the values, being the most difficult the trimmer.

Regarding the delay timer, he says that using the Magnecraft pre-built timer is overkill at 120 USD and he can design and build an equally suitable circuit for way less money. I suppose he's skilled to do that.

Well, let's see how much is it going to be, I hope it's something I can afford ;-) Certainly the Lamm's where way too expensive for me hahahaha.

Thanks a lot Romy, this is being quite funny and we didn't yet started. Regards,

Antonio

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-03-2005

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 Antonio J. wrote:
Regarding the C2 thing, He said that I misunderstood his proposal, what he says is using five double 200uF+200uF cans (400 uF each cap), which are rated for 500V (not 200 as I misunderstood) to get the 2000uF needed for C2, but having lower ESR and ESL than using a single 2000uF/450 or 500V cap. I'll do whatever you advice, using smaller caps paralleled to get a certain value has some advantages compared to using a single one, but this might have other advantages that you'll probably know better. He says the cost of a single big cap is higher than using his solution, but again he'll do what I (you) say. The same goes for C10, he would use three 200+200 (400uF/500V) to get the 1200uF/450V needed.

Sure, if the 500V rated then he can do whatever he wants.  What is important for sound in this chain is do not have C1 larger then 100uF.  The amount of C2 I feel still be too little with 400uF but he can measure the ripples and add the values accordingly if it necessary and if the noise will be the issues. 

 Antonio J. wrote:
I think we'd need some supplier to find the VR1 trimmer and some of the other resistors. As I said, he can use some low inductance ones instead of the Vishays to keep the budget low, but he can't find all the values, being the most difficult the trimmer.

Di not over abuse yourself with the VR1, it is also not really critical, put a chap trimmer in there. You always after you make the amsl will be able to replace it.

 Antonio J. wrote:
Regarding the delay timer, he says that using the Magnecraft pre-built timer is overkill at 120 USD and he can design and build an equally suitable circuit for way less money. I suppose he's skilled to do that.

Sure, if he wishes to design and to build the 12A/220V time delay circuit with heavy-duty dual silver sealed contacts, with led indication (very comfortable to use those LEDs externally), unlimited time adjustability, play and play applicability, protection circuit, with no sonic influence (tested!!!)… and addition all of it for $35 then certainly let him do it.

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/pdf/Delay.pdf

BTW, if you wish to turn it on manually then you would not need any delays… It I were you then I would do it without delay to test that that I like how the amp sounds….

The Cat


Posted by Antonio J. on 11-04-2005

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Hi Romy,

The builder insists that using five 400uF caps mounted in parallel to achieve the 2000uF required in that position should give some measurable benefits over using a single 2000uF cap. I really don't know if a single "big cap" can work faster or more efficiently than five smaller caps to get the same amount of stored current. What do you think? Did you perceive beneficial musical results using a big one instead of several smaller ones summing up the same value? Price will be the same using either option, but the builder thinks that performance wise it's better to use several smaller caps paralleled.

The rest of parts are being found and the budget for the work will be known soon. VR1 will be replaced for a similar value trimmer. Some chokes will be wired by a local builder, Lundahl refused to make them. The delay circuit probably will be made by the builder and will have 3 leds showing the warm-up process of the amp. There's also the chasis thing, which will be made into a conscious badget.

Regards,

Antonio

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-04-2005

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 Antonio J. wrote:
but the builder thinks that performance wise it's better to use several smaller caps paralleled

If he thinks this way then let him to do whatever he wishes. Still, I assure you that Sound of the Milq dose not derive from this way of thinking.

 Antonio J. wrote:
Some chokes will be wired by a local builder, Lundahl refused to make them.

Make sure that the chokes will be able do not buzz with the high ripple of the input choke application. Most of them do, and partially at high currents. Also, do not use the Lundahl chokes for input. They did not sound good when I tried them.


Posted by Antonio J. on 11-04-2005
Hi Romy,

I've forwarded your last comments to Luis (the builder). He's a technical guy and for engineering minded people there are some things that seem hard to understand, they tend to think that better measurable performance is more desirable than some subjective perceptive benefits. That's why it's important to me to know if you have tried yourself the C2 configuration with the multi-cap arrangement or if you just decided to go directly for a single big cap. I know C2 is in a critical position to provide "fuel" to the tubes and it might have a quite different result using one configuration or another. I don't want that a wrong decission in something that could be crucial, spoilt the final result.

The handmade to your specs chokes should be good, Luis has ordered chokes before to this manufacturer and said they were excellent and he's using them into his own designs. It looks like L1 is going to be from Lundahl. Good enough?

Regards,

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-04-2005

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I bought the Lundahl chokes for L1 and was not able to us them and they were insultingly sharp. For the L1 you would need more henries and more DCR, the higher DCR will sound better and the “bad” and “cheap” Hammond chokes worked very fine.  You might go even for 20-25H of L1 and do not use the R23 bleeder. Whatever you do will be fine, juts keep input choke with at least triple critical inductance, a small following cap, the plate supple ~400V and ripples after the C2 responsibly low. If you Luis (the builder) is wiling to crate a federal case around his section and experiments with C2 then it is fine. But you will be eventually very surprised how irrelevant it really is. Put ANY cap in there and let it work. Then if you wish you can excrement with better or kinkier cap or play with bypassing it…  Really, Antonio, this not the subject that you need my help as the C2 is not something that responsible for the Milq sound. Do whatever you and your builder feel comfortable.

The Cat

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 Romy the Cat wrote:
I bought the Lundahl chokes for L1 and was not able to us them and they were insultingly sharp. For the L1 you would need more henries and more DCR, the higher DCR will sound better and the “bad” and “cheap” Hammond chokes worked very fine.  You might go even for 20-25H of L1 and do not use the R23 bleeder. Whatever you do will be fine, juts keep input choke with at least triple critical inductance, a small following cap, the plate supple ~400V and ripples after the C2 responsibly low. If you Luis (the builder) is wiling to crate a federal case around his section and experiments with C2 then it is fine. But you will be eventually very surprised how irrelevant it really is. Put ANY cap in there and let it work. Then if you wish you can excrement with better or kinkier cap or play with bypassing it…  Really, Antonio, this not the subject that you need my help as the C2 is not something that responsible for the Milq sound. Do whatever you and your builder feel comfortable.

The Cat


Hi Romy, I'll pass your comments about the Lundahl L1 to Luis, we'll try to get the Hammonds. I didn't mean to make a serious matter of the C2 issue, I just wanted to know how important is its implementation for the final result, but I'm sure the "sound" of the Melquiades comes from other causes than the brand of the components or certain "local" solutions.

The R23 (I read your other post about it) should be supressed in any case or only if we use a higher inductance L1?

Regards,

Antonio

Posted by Antonio J. on 11-05-2005

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Hi Romy,

The builder regards VR1 more like an "offset to 0" adjuster than a bias control for the 6E5P since its working range is quite narrow. He asked me to know from you if along the 6E5P's lifespan it needs further adjustments at VR1 or if a single initial adjustment is enough. He wants to know it in order to make the VR1 easily reachable from the top of the chasis as VR2 should be, and also make the meter able to measure DC offset at VR1 or just making it simpler by forgetting about VR1 once is correctly set. At this point I believe he's drawing the plans to fit the parts into some print board. He's going to use a digital display since it's cheaper and more available than the nice analog meters you sported.

He has been looking at the circuit and believes that in the case some DC offset appeared for whatever reason at that point, it is going to be delivered backwards to the signal source. In your case and mine, the preamp. Have you experienced some problems for that? Does your preamp have any "backwards" protection to avoid any DC coming back from the Melq?

Just one more question, did you remove R23 from your Melquiades?

Regards,

Antonio

Posted by Romy the Cat on 11-05-2005

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 Antonio J. wrote:
 The builder regards VR1 more like an "offset to 0" adjuster than a bias control for the 6E5P since its working range is quite narrow. He asked me to know from you if along the 6E5P's lifespan it needs further adjustments at VR1 or if a single initial adjustment is enough. He wants to know it in order to make the VR1 easily reachable from the top of the chasis as VR2 should be, and also make the meter able to measure DC offset at VR1 or just making it simpler by forgetting about VR1 once is correctly set. At this point I believe he's drawing the plans to fit the parts into some print board. He's going to use a digital display since it's cheaper and more available than the nice analog meters you sported.

The VR1 has nothing to do with the 6E5P lifespan. The VR1 cancels out DC voltage at input. You will need to adjust it as frequently as you change the gas tubes, means practically one in a few year of even… never. Sometime the DC voltage will be running away within 10mA but it is ability irrelevant and not important. In the Super Milq I put the VR1 under the chassis behind a miniature hole that if I want I would be able to reach by a small screwdriver. Last time I measured my DC at input it was July… I have no needs or motivations to do it again. Pretty much if I you any DC voltage at input then you will be hearing the switching of volume in your preamp. Since the switching in preamp I not auditable then you should not worry about the DC at inputs and you will adjust it one when you bult the preamp and then only if you change the gas tubes.

 Antonio J. wrote:
 He has been looking at the circuit and believes that in the case some DC offset appeared for whatever reason at that point, it is going to be delivered backwards to the signal source. In your case and mine, the preamp. Have you experienced some problems for that? Does your preamp have any "backwards" protection to avoid any DC coming back from the Melq?

Nope it is not a big deal. Your preamp is capacitance coupled or transformer coupled … my is direct coupled and even so it does not care about the DC at output. Believe me or not but I operated it even without the V1 and it was fine. Sine you set 0 zero Volts at input then you will be juts fine.

 Antonio J. wrote:
Just one more question, did you remove R23 from your Melquiades?

It does not mater. Since you have more then triple critical inductance then R23 is not necessary. I believe I do not use it in Milq. In the super Milq where C2 is 5.600uF and C1 and C2 sit on the different chastises I believed I used the R23 to shunt the large caps and to let it to discharge the bi cap. Still, it is has no relation to sound and I have no idea why keep asking me about it. Your technical guy knows very what bleeder resistor does in this case and let his to make this decision.

Rsg,
The Cat


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Thanks for the answers. The R23 was my personal interest, not the builder's. As you cleverly noted he knows very well what happens into the circuit, but it's my ignorance who needed to know. Sorry if I annoyed you ;-)

I think we'll leave VR1 reachable, I have had some experience with 0A2 tubes and I guess I'll have to try some pairs until some perform as they should. By the way, I found some european Valvos, maybe I can get another pair for this project.

Thanks and regards,

Antonio

Posted by AnonymousUser on 06-22-2006
hello Antonio

I am thinking of launching into building or rather having buitl by a techie friend a pair of melquiades. Could you tell me more about the cost of building a pair of these amps? then how do they compare to other amps? I mean are they really better than such well-known amps as the lamms, wavacs and tenors to name but a few as rommie clearly states?? I am located in france and would appreciate help/feedback before leaving what I have for this project.

gilles

Posted by Antonio J. on 06-22-2006
Hi,
The tech guy asked for 2800 euros for a monoblock pair, and his project wasn't really the same what Romy and Dima designed, it had some modifications that I wasn't sure wouldn't spoil the results. On the other hand my speakers aren't as sensitive as required for the Melquiades, I was afraid that being below 90dB they would stress the tubes into a working point that wasn't good for the 6C33P best results. Then I decided not to build them until I can have more sensitive speakers that I can afford and fit into my room. Since those speakers don't seem to exist, I don't know when I'll be in a good position to have a pair of Melquiades built. I'm sorry for being not more helpful.

Rgrds,
A

Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-22-2006

 AnonymousUser wrote:
I am thinking of launching into building or rather having buitl by a techie friend a pair of melquiades. Could you tell me more about the cost of building a pair of these amps? then how do they compare to other amps? I mean are they really better than such well-known amps as the lamms, wavacs and tenors to name but a few as rommie clearly states?? I am located in france and would appreciate help/feedback before leaving what I have for this project.
Gilles,

I understand your frustration. I do not think that anyone would be able to answer your question about the Melquiades’ performance vs. other amps. I have at a dozen or so people who heard Melquiades. The perception was different, mostly positive (when it was in my home) but frankly speaking none of the people who head Melquiades I might considers were serious listeners who were able for sensible audio critique and analyses.

I would not be trying to convince you that Melquiades is worth to pursuit as in order to do so you should be familiar what is the weight of my words. 

Also, looking at the circuitry you or your technical person would not be able to assess the sonic potential of this amplifier as the amplifier designed according slightly different methods and technical folks frequently are no equipped to understand them.

If you have sensitive enough loudspeakers or relatively small room and if you contemplate to use 6C33C then make your own SET. No mater what you do you would need a good out transformer. If you get the Amorphous Lundahl LL1627 for instance then it would be very versatile amps that you would be able to use in many applications with this tube. You might use any other amps of your choosing but be prepared that the cost of the OPT will be a half the amplifier cost. (The Lundahl LL1627A is ~$600).  If your have a transformer then it would be very easy for you to assemble a Melquiades prototype, driving it from lab power supply (still do use the Melq’s gas tubes – this is essential, also be very careful with negative supply as it should be superb quietly). If you do not like what you hear then you would not invest many efforts or money into the project. At In this case your would be able to write at this forum that Melquiades is crap and I am a pile of BS and then go for another 6C33C as your have most of the compo net are ready to be reused.

I personally do not think that you would be able to find such a phenomenally sounding driver as 6E5P or would be able to push our of 6E5P more interesting sound then it is done in Melquiades but I have open mind, will be learning about your views, and do not mind to help you in your evolution in this forum if you give some limited fate to the Melq.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


Posted by AnonymousUser on 06-23-2006
hi romy

I am not fgrustrated but trying to gather information before making a decision. I sen you an email from france and I own electrovoice patricians in a large room, about 100 square metres
my question is is your amp real better than say the lamms or tenors and other much praised amps in the audio community

gilles

Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-23-2006

 Anonymous Gilles wrote:
I am not fgrustrated but trying to gather information before making a decision. I sen you an email from france and I own electrovoice patricians in a large room, about 100 square metres my question is is your amp real better than say the lamms or tenors and other much praised amps in the audio community
Gilles,

I did not think that me semantic Romynism “frustration” you would take too seriously, although to manage sound in 100 square meters room should create quite a few frustrations in audio life.

EV Patricians are quite fine loudspeakers, they are boundary loaded with all following consequences and around 105 dB sensitive, I do not know how “live” your room but still I would have difficult time to assess if it would be fine for 100 square meters room. Melq is 15W and approximately 20dB gain. My concern is not with advising you how the Melq would perform vs. Lamms or Tenors (I know those amps very well) but if you have enough power to drive a 1700 square feet room.  You see, Melquiades uses fixed bias  (for sonic reasons) but the 6C33C with fixed bias might behave peculiarly at high grid voltages. To drive1700 square feet you would/might need to drive the 6C33C quite hard. So, I do not feel comfortable to suggested you anything that I have no reasons to suggest …

If you got for prototype and I proposed you above then you would be able to assess the result yourself. In case if you feel that you more power then your could always replaces the Melq output tubes with more powerful triode (211, GM70 or whatever you prefer…) The Melq driver stage will drive those tubes and if the output stage and it’s power supply would be done properly then the Melquiadenization effect should not be hurt, as a dominating factor in the Melq sound cames from Melquiades’ driver stage

Rgs,
Romy the caT


Posted by AnonymousUser on 06-27-2006
hi romy

sorry for the delay but my computer is down! I would like you to tell me squarely why your amp sounds to your ears better than the lamms tenors and the likes! what is if you prefer the impact of yur driver stage compared to all those mega bucks amps -and yes I knoiw it is just your opinion
I understand your reservations concerning the power : I run an 845 amp at about 16-18 watts and it is enough except on the most demanding passages!

Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-27-2006

 AnonymousUser wrote:
Sorry for the delay but my computer is down! I would like you to tell me squarely why your amp sounds to your ears better than the lamms tenors and the likes! what is if you prefer the impact of yur driver stage compared to all those mega bucks amps -and yes I knoiw it is just your opinion.

Well, let take out of consideration the faulty concept of “mega bucks amps”. There are no such a things as mega bucks amplifiers. When we imply the mega bucks amplifiers we mean the mega bucks performances not the mega bucks price because the mega bucks price is absolutely irrelevant and mostly misleading. 

Let looks at the prices first. The Lamms SET and Tenors as near $30K retail with street price of a half of even less. In addition the Lamms SET and Tenors have has own positive for consumer glitches that drive the prices down: Lamm has new version of ML2.1, which many idiots out there admire and are willing to buy. This is great as it drives the prices for  the older and way better performing ML2 down as now the older ML2 is not “current version”. There are few other reasons why the Lamm’s prices for ML2 are down from where they might be. The same is with Tenors: the marketing foolishness of this company drove them out of business and nowadays the Tenors worth very little. So, now much from those $30K the Lamms and the Tenors are actually cost and worth? Knowing how both of them built and ho both of them marketed and distributed I surmise that they are in $2.500 range. Add the manufacture markup, add the cost of the marketing, cost  of advertising, cost  of the industry bribes and fees, add the cost of support and warranty fixing, add the 60% mark up in the distribution chain and you would end up with those $30K.

Now about the worth of those amps regardless of the price.

ML2, the old production, from my point of view is the most interesting SET out there, regardless its price. Ironically it is relatively cheaply made and by limited menace and intentions but it delivers very serious results. Does it have sonic limitations from my point of view? Yes it does. How critical those limitations would be for you? I do not know. I personally did not heard any single installation and did not meet any single person who was credible from my perspective was able to describe me his dissatisfaction with ML2 limitations, or at least name them justifiable in context of the results of his playback. Whoever I have seen who were bitching about ML2 were form my perspective people who did not take advantage of even of 70% of the ML2 capacity. It doe not mean that ML2 is perfect, but it means that it’s capacity is way beyond the average Moroninty of audio person that I typically was familiar with over the years. How Melq better then ML2? If you let me know squarely what dissatisfied you with ML2 then I will squarely let you know if the Melquiades would be able to deliver in this specific dimension a more interesting result.

Tenor, is a different story. It is OTL, that should be sufficient enough to describe it’s sound.  Tenor, was made in Canada, the amp was nothing special: the typical sharp and expedited OTL sound. When it became available I had them and spent a week with them. I find them quite fraudulent in harmonic department and good for nothing else but jazz, not the best jazz I have to add. However, ay the time when Tenor ump showed up at the map Lars Fredell (who pretty much put Lamms on market) got beef with Vladimir Lamm and therefore he decided to declare Tenor as his new sponsored Messiah.  (It is know that the audio-idiot do not buy Sound but buy the crap the they were told). What Lars forgot to mention in this propaganda session during that time that during that first year he was a distributor of Tenors in US. Ironically, he really believed in the Tenors but once again: running 87dB sensitive Verity vise and driving them with ML2 was a summit of reviewing idiocy. Lars juts did not know anything better… later on the Tenor was picked up by a number of the worst scams and the most primitive spices in the industry (Jonathan Tinn,  Mike Lavigne and the rest alike…)  Regards the publicity that the Tenors temporary had it is not really interesting amplifier, with very pure sound not to mention the problems in operation. The Morons at Audiogon drool about it but there is a reasons why I call them Morons…

Regarding the rest amplifiers, I do not know what you heard. It would be foolish for me to clime the Melquiades is better then this or that amp. I might make some claims from a very specific perspective of the very specific performing characteristic. So, far I like what Melquiades does. I am in a way a whore and have no loyalty to anything. If tomorrow I discover another topology or another product that does better I would discard my former views and embrace the new. So far I am comfortable with Melq and I have no motivations to search for another amp of other amp perfomance. It might not say a lot to you of course...
 
If you read the Melquiades history in this site than you might learn that Melquiades was initially meant to overcome some very specific imperfection (from my point of view) of ML2’s Sound. Melquiades does it very-very well and take it way beyond. If you have a dissent speakers and Lamms and Melq in the same room then it will be no contest. If Melquiades would not be able to do it then I would not removed my two pairs of Lamms out of my listening room.

Still, the biggest question is not if the Milq is good but if you would be able to take advantage what Melq or old ML2 are able to do. You see, there is not a lot of harmonically properly sounding amplifiers out there. Most of then or too sharp (musically) or too slow. “Different “ (acoustic) harmonic signature with maintaining this signature across dynamic range and frequency range is something that distinct old ML form most of the other amps. I learned it form ML2 sound and I was trying to do the same with Melq. The difference between old ML2 and Melq that Melq dose it many times quicker, with more dynamic, much-much more articulation (and partially in bass), with better extremes but still preserving the very same acoustic harmonic signature. In addition Melquiades has that “resilient viscosity dynamic” (courtesy to the 6E5P in the given application) that I find is quite uniqe.


 AnonymousUser wrote:
I understand your reservations concerning the power: I run an 845 amp at about 16-18 watts and it is enough except on the most demanding passages!

Well, as I told you that if you are interesting in Melq then get a prototype of the Melq first stage and drive with it your 845. I’m not a big fun of the 845 and I have no idea what transformer you use in there with it but I suspect that you will get some feeling of the Melquiadinization. Still, if you feel that 845 is “enough except” then I would not go for 6C33C. The 6C33C is much more delicate tubes and meant for quality sound, not for wild power. Do not forget that driving Patricians in 17000 cu feet to way out of the reasonable intention of those loudspeakers and you are somewhere in DJ mode. The large rooms is very different story and require very different method of handling.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


Posted by AnonymousUser on 06-29-2006

hi romy

 

just a few words since we are leaving on saturday for a month off; I am no DJ listener : the patricians shake the rafters with 18 watts but  I am still trying to improve their sound since I have heard them w<ith a transcendent T8 and to all of us listeners on that day the t8 was way way better; for the lamms very hard to come by in france and anyway $8000, thier street price i think is too much money for me!! I will get back to you in about a month and see what we ca   n come up with
thanks for your time and advice anyway; always pleasant to chat with knowledgeable people....


Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-29-2006

 AnonymousUser wrote:
the patricians shake the rafters with 18 watts but  I am still trying to improve their sound…

Hm, shaking rafters is not good sign at all and it is said very little about the subject I was taking about. There is differents between power and gain. Lamm has 2dB more gain then Melq (Lamm has 2 stages). Also, Lamm use regulated 6C33C. Although I’m against the plate regulation but in case the 6C33C the jury is still out. Undoubtedly the plate regulation does damage sound, including in the Lamm, but it also have some benefits. Also, Lamm is not 18W but slightly more, according to the Atkinson’s measurements, I think he claimed 22W or something like this…

Still, it is not about the power only. Even 5W might “shake the rafters” but the question how they do it and what happen with sound when the output stage operate with high grid voltage. I do not think that anyone would be able to make this decision for you or give you an estimate, at least I won’t. If you want a cost effective solution but wiling to try to ride in the Melquiades wagon then do what I proposed you: build the Melquiades’s input stage and then drive with it your 845-based output stage. Then, after and if you get some perspective to the Melquiadesation you might go for more 6C33C- the more advanced sonically from my prospective but less powerful tube in your case.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


Posted by Romy the Cat on 01-18-2007

 Antonio J. wrote:
Regarding the delay timer, he says that using the Magnecraft pre-built timer is overkill at 120 USD and he can design and build an equally suitable circuit for way less money. I suppose he's skilled to do that.

What a disappointment - my fav relays areevaporated! I was recently sourcing parts Zaratustra II amp. It needs 8 time delay relays. I past, during the Melquiades project I bought a half doses of them and was listing if they were sonically transparent The Magnecraft’s  TDR series relays  (~$36 each) turned out to be absolutely perfect, with no effect to sound at all, and I love to use them, cutting a lot of unnecessary corners. In fact TDR series have many other very cool features in them and considering a complete absents of any sonic consequences they were perfect, really perfect.

I was trying to get 8 TDRSOXB relays but Mouser gave a delivery time of 104 days (!!!!).  It looks like they move production in China and they did not make them for a while… what a hell of a disappointment! I wasted quite a lot of time and efforts to find them and I do not want yo go over it again…

The caT

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