will
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Unchilled,
So many variables playing into what makes a tube great in a system or not, I am not generally one to recommend tubes. But I can try to characterize them in relation to others in my room. My mostly tube setup is extra resolving and fast, really good revelation of complexity in space contributing to being naturally musical. Relatively neutral, it is big, lucid, and dynamic, but with lots of open space, its timing expanding complex detail in space and contributing to its "alive" feel. Showing everything clearly makes balancing all musical qualities with tubes easy in ways, not much getting in the way of the tube sound qualities. But with recordings so variable, it is also a little demanding to pull the ultimate balances with realistic immediacy and beauty across recordings. Finally, tubes all balanced as an average, gain tuning is my friend for an optimal room tune, and for adjusting for individual recordings.
For the sound that sort of always pulls me in, I need a power tube that is resolving, fast, spectrally balanced and giving the right speeds across the spectrum... I can like an artfully done euphonic tube... one that does "warmth" sweetly, slowing/darkening without feeling too draggy, while retaining a lot of fine detail, like the Linlai 845-TA does here. But still I have not been able to totally love that tube, especially across recordings. Musically beautiful with the right company to open/speed it up, for my needs it still goes a little far to feel real, a little too sweet/warmth affected for me, and especially low down, too slow... Alternately, both the DG and Horizon are faster and more "alive" here, and so far, I can tune either into the beauty that leaves me pretty amazed and entranced. They are different for sure, but both are close enough to my baseline needs, similar enough that sometimes I can find supporting tube combos that work well with both with some gain tuning to adjust for each. But for the deeper magic, typically I need to play with drivers, inputs and other component tubes to dial each in fully.
I have been listening to the Linlai 845 DGs lately, so set up to support their amazing resolution of fine detail in space, and to compensate for a slightly soft/thick feel mids-down in this setup.
The Horizons on the other hand are more evenly neutral, spectrally and in speed top to bottom... There is lots of space to show musical complexity and speeds with fast clarity. Harmonic complexity is quite good, but less differentiated than the DGs, they are more focussed/concentrated. Contributing, the design somehow causes the sound to emerge with a pronounced articulation, unusual clarity and space in and around the edges... like sounds are rising out of a more notable emptiness. Especially not having as much very fine detail as the DGs to expand textures, decays and space, softening edges... Along with the Horizon's relatively even and spacious speed, having less "warm" fullness, they are notably clear tubes here, which can be too intense with the wrong tubes elsewhere. That said, I seem to need more harmonic complexity than most, and they do have good harmonic revelation with enough hints of smooth warmth to let me forget about analyzing them in the right company. And with good spectral and speed balances, I really like their low end speed, the Horizon's bass tighter and faster than the DGs in direct comparison, allowing bass complexity to show easily.
Alternately, the DGs, not unpleasantly, fill in more of the space. Overall "warmer" here, to me this is not overstated, a good warmth that does not sacrifice fine detail or feel affected. Once tuned to compensate for being fuller/slower mids down, within their subtle warmth and exceptional fine detail complexity, they show time really nicely, feeling more relaxed in their sophisticated musical expressiveness. This is not a slow "relaxed." It sounds to me like really good revelation showing good timing without smearing, supporting a clarity of complexity, and associated, timing that feels like it slows things down while enhancing harmonic and dynamic complexity. Along with a subtle euphonic sweetness that is not in my face, but comforting, once tuned, these tubes are impressive to me.
Whereas, the Horizons, once tuned, are also exciting tubes to me, leaning more toward actively "alive," their open lucidity enlivening them and me.
Both give a sound I really like, but with different flavors of musical expression.
I would say their absolute clarity mids up is similar, but guess the hanging filaments and other design considerations of the DGs contribute to their exceptionally well developed fine detail complexity (once the long burnin is through). Causing textures and decays to differentiate beautifully, their clear but sweet complexity of harmonic information makes them more textural and nuanced than the Horizons. Still, with the Horizons, especially once I have a tube set that pulls a little more warmth and complexity, the overall clearer Horizons also give convincingly authentic and refined fine textures, decays and space. The complexity is more concentrated, contributing to their "alive" sound, though to me, not adversely focussed, still having a seductive harmonic complexity.
So which "is better" ...they both can be tuned/balanced well in this system, and both do really good things with the right company and gain tuning.
On that, 1st, a reminder that I do not use my pre stages for volume. I prefer the volume on amps, being pretty neutral. Where, at least with the pre stages I use, I don't find their adjustments particularly neutral. Along with their tube tuning flexibility, they can adjust the signal tone, lucidity, density, complexity, dynamics, weight, etc. So I use the amp gains as volume when they have them, and the pre stages as signal tuners to refine the many balances that make music captivating.
With the DGs fuller/slower lower end, I tend to choose supporting tubes and gains adjustments that can sort of "push though" the slight bass softness without losing too much complexity. This might be as simple as, in the ZR2+, using a little more articulate 12AU7 in the place of my usual fav Mullard that is open and very complex, and running the tighter tube a little hotter, and articulating everything top to bottom. Or maybe a more powerful GE JG 6829 in the place of the 12AU7, turning down the ZR gain knob to near unity, a different setting with the higher gain from the tube. The signal being stronger and more focussed, it activates the amp with more clarity and dynamic complexity, in this case, with luck, tightening up and articulating the low mids down without making the mids up too intense.
Or, with all else pretty good, I might keep the same ZR2+ tube and run my ZBIT a little higher in the blend, the slightly higher gain on the ZBIT strengthening the DAC signal, making it more dense, dynamic, and lucid to a point. With this, I might also turn down the input tube gain knobs of my CSP3+ and run the main gain a little higher. Keeping the same basic sound qualities present, in my setup this CSP adjustment can subtly shift the whole toward a little less bass weighting in the spectral balance, making the sound more open and fast. And since the main gain is set in the upper ranges (pretty high voltage going to the amp), the signal remains optimally dense, lucid, and dynamic, and can end up especially good with subtle gain tuning with the ZBIT and ZRock2+ to refine balances.
With the Horizons, being "bolder" and clearer feeling tubes, I tend to choose supporting tubes that subtly warm the Horizons with increasing textures, decays... complexity. With that, I might run the CSP3+ and/or the ZRock2+ with just a little higher gains, balancing toward a just so amount of more weight, fullness and bass in the spectral balance. Or I might change the more articulate straight bottle solid plate Telefunken RGN-1064 rectifier in the CSP3 to a Philips or Telefunken mesh plate globe of the same type to increase complexity while softening articulation....or shift to a little warmer but also complex 6CG7 for CSP3 power tubes.....
All that said, I just put in a new Musical Paradise MP-DX DAC, which has a big isolated power supply, lots of caps, 4 output tubes (6N1Ps) and caps, connectors, etc. Even with just a few hours on it, I am impressed that in many ways it is pretty close to my well burned in, highly modified Gustard x20pro, so encouraged. But the Musical Paradise current state, having only bypassed the stock caps with some Miflex copper/oils and Mallory M150s, it is a little draggy and masked, making it warm/slow enough that I am, if anything, wanting to clarify the Horizons a touch. Makes sense, lots of parts unresolved and needing burnin. And it is good enough now to be excited to see where it can go with burnin and tuning, changing pretty quickly just a few hours in. I imagine that most, if not all of this will pass into more and more refined dynamic beauty as things open and speed up with burnin. Also, this DAC is easy to tune with filters, with output tubes and output caps... and the rest looks relatively easy to access for soldered modifications.
So I am excited... But I just wanted to convey this recent experience of how easily the "qualities" of good tubes, or cables, or whatever can be adjusted by other things... impressions of how "good" this or that is so system/room influenced.
Also I hope this writeup points to how close my needs are, everything effecting everything, and no longer having changes that are very subtle in this system. With most masks and limitations removed... what might have once been smaller things, more fully revealed, can be big now.
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