2 channel for Revel F30's


Hi,
I'd like to add some used 2 channel electronics to my home theater set-up to drive my Revel F-30's. I'm curious about tubes, but have no experience. Budget is $1,000 - $1,500.
Any suggestions would be welcone.
Thanks,
Bill
billc1022

Showing 3 responses by aball

My neighbor had a pair of F30s for a while. They were his front HT speakers but he also used them for 2 channel music. In my experience during the many hours I spent at his place is that they need a lot of power to get the bass right. Tubes would be a very nice compliment to their tweeter but your budget doesn't really allow for enough power - unless you only listen at low volumes and only like acoutic and jazz music. I assume since you have F30s that neither of those situations apply to you exclusively.

He tried a few amps with them and the best results came from an unexpected contender: The McIntosh MA6500. That integrated, despite its modest power rating, is really potent and could put out the most beautiful bass we heard from those speakers. It bettered some Classe and McIntosh separates in this regard. But F30s, if correctly sized for your room, can use 300W per channel easily IMO and a 6500 is just out of your price range anyway. I would suggest you look at a Musical Fidelity A308 integrated. It will be a very good compliment to the F30s in basically all aspects.

Arthur
Hi Bill,

If you want tubes, I would say you need at least 100W to keep your amp (and speakers) happy. The Cary V12 would work but the amp alone is your entire budget.

Another local hifi buddy of mine has a Cary SLI80 and although it is quite powerful, I wouldn't personally use it in triode on F30s for anything other than acoustic vocals. In UL mode, it would probably be fine as long as you don't want a night club ambience. It is a great tube integrated that is sensitive to the tubes you have in it, so you can tailor the sound very easily to your liking. It would be a good starting point.

Arthur
One man's loud is another man's soft. It is all relative and loudspeaker sensitivity is barely 10% of the story.

Also, don't forget we are talking about logarithmic scale! Human brains tend to make everything linear but that isn't reality. "A little louder" can cost an extra 75W of power surprisingly easily. Do some dynamic range power calculations and/or live with McIntosh power meters for a while and you'll see what I mean.... I did both with Revel F30s and I can tell you, power is necessary for these speakers if you want to get the most of their ability.

Arthur