What's the greatest bargain in SET these days?


Hi, Gang,
I response to my recent review of the Reference 3A De Capo BE speaker, someone wrote that if you really want to hear them sing, you should try them with a SET amp, or words to that effect.
That got me thinking. The De Capo's are 92 db efficient, which (correct me if I'm wrong) seems kind of borderline for low-power SET amps.
In any event, right now I'm running mine with a pair of Manley Mahi mono-blocks. They are switchable from triode (20 watts) to "ultra linear" (40 watts). I run them in triode all the time, and in my room, the volume knob almost never goes past 9 o'clock; more would just be too loud.
All that said, what do you guys think of running the De Capo's with a SET amp? And if I did, what's the best bargain in SET's these days?
Thanks!
rebbi
Mrmb, Indiana has been a great place to live, work, and raise a family. People here are friendly and the cost of housing in particular is very favorable. It is not a glamorous location, but there is a lot to like here. I don't feel a compelling desire to leave. It is the draw of the southeastern mountains that motivates me. As long as I am able to hike, I suspect I am going to like my new home. At some point down the road, 10-16 years I hope, I will probably return to some location in the Midwest. Maybe somewhere else.

I have a window of opportunity. My health is good and I have the support of my wife and the financial resources to make the move. It would certainly be easy to stay here, but this is a dream I must chase, or I will regret it once the window of opportunity closes.

It is an experiment for me, much like moving away from Magnepans driven by 1000 WPC ss amps to monitors driven by 8 WPC SETs was an experiment. Hope this experiment turns out as well.
I have one, additional question for you SET amplifier experts.

What exactly is the deal with so many of these amplifier manufacturers touting the fact that they use "no negative feedback?" How is that supposed to affect the sound of the amplifier?

I'm curious about this because I have been recently, for the first time, actually, playing with the global feedback toggle switches on my Manley Mahi Power Amps. Each one features a three-way toggle switch, with which you can (even while the amp is playing) change the level of feedback: minimum, standard and maximum.

What I have found in playing with these switches confirms something that one of the online reviews of these amplifiers suggested: they have a tendency to shift the perspective on the performance. With "minimum" feedback, the performance is more "upfront" or "in-your-face." Oddly, imaging seems somewhat compromised on my De Capo's in this mode. Also, without messing with the volume control on my preamp, minimum feedback mode seems to make things a bit louder.

With "standard" feedback, it's like you've been moved to the middle of the performance Hall. Oddly, imaging seems to improve quite a bit, or at least, you have the perspective of being far enough away from the stage to hear where the different performers are located, as opposed to being close up or you might just be caught up in the wash of sound. It's actually the setting I have found, for most music, I like the best.

On the "maximum" feedback setting, everything seems a little flat, foreshortened and "squashed" for lack of a better term.

Now, of course, these are push-pull amplifiers, so I'm not sure how much of what I am hearing would be transferable to a single ended amp. But given that I actually like the way these amps sound a little better with moderate feedback, and try to understand how a single ended amplifier with no global feedback might sound.

Does that make any sense?

:-)
I haven't taken the time to read most of this thread, but I believe I can provide some insight into the points raised in Rebbi's post just above.

As you no doubt realize, global feedback affects the characteristics of an amplifier in a number of different ways. Everything else being equal, an increase in global feedback will reduce gain (as you observed), output impedance, and total harmonic distortion. It will, to some degree that may or may not be objectionable, increase transient intermodulation distortion, and certain odd-order components of the harmonic distortion to which the ear is particularly sensitive.

I suspect that the reason for the changed perspective you described was not due to the effects of feedback on the sonics of the amplifier in itself, but rather to the interaction of the amplifier's differing output impedances, at the different feedback settings, with the impedance characteristics of the particular speakers. Many speakers, including many two-way monitors such as your Reference 3A MM de Capo iA, have substantial impedance rises occurring somewhere in the mid-range. For example, see this impedance plot for the de Capo i, which rises to more than 10 ohms at around 2.5 kHz, while being close to 6 ohms in the mid-bass and much of the treble region.

Given that kind of speaker impedance characteristic, and everything else being equal, higher amplifier output impedance (resulting from less feedback) will result in at least a slight increase in emphasis of frequencies around 2.5 kHz, relative to higher and lower frequencies. While lower amplifier output impedance (resulting from more feedback) will not produce that emphasis, at least to the same degree. And from a subjective standpoint greater emphasis of the mid-range and lower treble is typically perceived as a more "forward" presentation.

Regarding your concluding question, about how your observations may extrapolate to a SET having no global feedback, I would be hesitant to draw any generalizations. Different zero feedback SET designs may vary dramatically in their output impedances (as well as in many other ways, of course), and will vary in the interactions of those impedances with the impedance characteristics of whatever speakers are being used.

In an ideal world an amplifier would be able to achieve zero distortion (of all kinds) using no feedback, and it would have an output impedance whose match to the impedance characteristics of the speaker is consistent with the overall voicing of the speaker that was intended by the designer. But of course in the real world tradeoffs always come into play, and the optimal amount of feedback will inevitably be dependent on some combination of the particular amplifier, speaker, system, room, recording, and listener.

On another note, I've been remiss in not yet extending congratulations to Brownsfan on his retirement. It's certainly proven to be a great institution in my (and my wife's) experience :-) And of course best of luck with the new locale.

Best regards,
-- Al
Rebbi,
Some level of NFB may be necessary depending on the speaker you choose. NFB will I believe result in a lower output impedance for an amplifier(and likely increase the damping factor, DF). This is advantagous for some speakers.Most SET amplifiers use DHT tubes which are inherently linear and don't require NFB as pentode tubes and transistors often do.Some speakers are designed to mate with the SET amplifier's higher output impedance and thus sound terrific. SET s have very straight forward simple circuits and many of their builders feel NFB will hurt the purity of these simple circuits.Most push pull pentode type amps aren't linear and will gain sonically with "careful" NFB use. It just depends on what you're trying to achieve and proper amp/speaker characteristics matching. In short a KT88 might need a bit of NFB, A 300b or 2A3 can get by without it.
Charles