Good SS Designers and their lesser known designs


Hi all

I am interested in learning more about very good amps and think one way this is done by looking at amp's designed by great designers first and then amp's that they designed but not under their own names.

1. Nelson Pass. Anything by Pass Labs. Question is what amp's by Threshold and which ones by Forte, as also which ones for Nakamichi and which ones for Adcom. Did he also do the HK Citation series.

Also, know the Nakamichi PA designs were inferior to the T'hold designs, how do the Adcom amps compare.

2. McCormack. Know he does the McCormack series and also modded a few other amps, Mac Mod 405 for eg. Any others.?

3. Jim Strickland. Did the Acoustat TNT amp's, believe also some Hafler TNT designs (not sure which ones), any others.?

4. Sanders of Inndersound/Coda. Which Coda lines and any others?

5. Other Designs/designers. Assume Muse belongs on this list as well as CJ MF series.

Shriram
shriramosu
Tim Isaacs is a respected name in the U.K. with regard to amplifier designs in the 70's and 80's. He designed a MOSFET output stage amp that played like Class A at lower power but slid into AB Mode at highest power - best of both worlds - high power when needed but low distortion and low heat output...
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Bruno Putzeys.  "With the invention of UcD and Ncore, Bruno Putzeys is probably single-handedly responsible for turning class-D amplification into the preferred way of building high-end audio amplifiers.  His designs are displacing class A and valve amplifiers in all the niches they held until now and are making truly audiophile performance available in very compact, energy-efficient products.

Putzeys is one of the world's top designers of a type of audio amplifier known as class-D. These ultraefficient models are already dominant in multichannel sound systems, portable media players, cellphones, car stereos, and computers. Lately they have made inroads into the ostentatious world of high-end audio, where a component can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Their success there is due mostly to Putzeys.

In 2001, while working at Philips Applied Technologies in Leuven, Belgium, Putzeys designed a compact, versatile class-D amplifier module that he called UcD, for ”Universal class-D.” Over the past few years, dozens of amplifier models, with prices ranging from US $500 to $8,500, have been built around Putzeys's modules, which are now manufactured by Hypex Electronics of Groningen, Netherlands. The amps have received mostly ecstatic reviews.

For Putzeys, the success of the UcD boards has conferred professional freedom that's pretty rare for a 34-year-old EE. In May 2005, he followed his modules to Hypex, where he is now the chief tech guru".


Please see Hypex Electronics and Mola Mola Audio Products.  
Dave Reich, founder of Classe’ Audio and designer of the DR-2/DR-3 Class A amplifiers, the DR-9, DR-15, and DR-25 class A/B amps, and the DR-6 and DR-7 preamplifiers. Later of Theta fame.

Dave
If you want to talk SS amplifier designs, I strongly suggest you look into the late Dr. Marshal Leach Jr.

His 1976 paper, "Build a low TIM Amplifier" codified the modern SS amplifier and set the standard for designs for years to come.

I write a little about him on my blog, here:

https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2016/01/introduction-to-georgia-tech-leach.html

Best,


E


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Andy Hefley designed the GAS Son of Ampzilla and Thoebe preamp after Jim Bongiorno left to start Sumo. This amp/preamp combination is still a formidable contender against today's multi-kilobuck gear! I am at this moment using this combination with a pair of DCM TW's (52779, 52780). Truly excellent sound!
Dave Gore for the Quatre Gain Cell amplifier.

When The Audio Critic's first issue came out - they had a amplifier show down.

Yamaha B2 V-Fet amp, Audio Research, Threshold, and others. The Gain Cell was their choice over the others. So Mr. Gore definitely deserves a place in this pantheon. (to this day that amp was one of the greatest bass amp I've ever heard. Liquid sounding and dynamic)
Oh yeah forgot Tim De Paravici, highly impressed with his care of details/quality, my exposure is through the quality of the recording on the album "Meeting by the River".

Think he did some Luxman designs, not sure what all amp's he did.

Shriram
Peter B. Noerbaek of PBN & Montana Loudspeakers. He is the designer of the Sierra Audio power amps: Whitney, Denali, Everest, and Olympus. Great SS power amps that can be ran in stereo or monoblock configurations. I currently use a pair of Denali's, as monoblocks in my system.
Jaybo's right. For price and performance David Belles is untouchable. His earliest products are sensational and he only got better.
Let's not forget Jon Bedini. Here is a designer of fabulous sounding amplifiers that eschewed half inch thick faceplates and other costly audio jewelry features and concentrated on honest sonics. To my knowledge, every Bedini power amp was/is great. State of the art performance at realistic prices.
david belles has rarely made anything less than incrdible ...the ocm line was his brainchild and are outstanding as well.......saul marantz was king of everything
Dale Pitcher, formerly of Essence and now of Intuitive Design. The first time I heard Essence SS amps I immediately sold all my tube and other SS amps and quit looking for the holy grail of audio. His carbon nanotube cables were recently reviewed here on Audiogon, and his speakers have won several Best in Show awards.
Peter Perreaux...original designer of the 1970's-80's amps and preamps. I had an Acoustat TNT that was powering my Acoustat 2+2's.The TNT was stolen (don't ask!), so I went to my dealer to replace it. He demo-ed a CD with loud transients and the TNT clipped his 2+2's at a moderately high listening level. He then hooked up a Perreaux PMF1850 to the Acoustats, played the CD louder and the amp sailed right through it. I bought it and used it on my 2+2's for over 15 years.
John Curl - Dennesen and Symmetry, to name two, although the products were not power amplifiers.