Parallel SET with sufficient power


Hello all:  I'm looking to move back into SET land after 15 years. I have a pair of KEF Reference 3's at 88 dB sensitivity which I'd like to keep, so I'm considering a parallel Single Ended design with at least 30 WPC. I do like the '300B sound' so friends have recommended the 6C33c tube in parallel to deliver 30-40 WPC. I've read some very positive posts on Audio Mirror and Wall Audio of Germany was briefly mentioned. Smaller boutique like companies give me some concern as most of these fine designers or engineers build amplifiers in their spare time, and quality control may be compromised.  I'm not a huge fan of 211 or 845 sound but these amps are another option.  Thanks for allowing me to think out loud and I do appreciate all opinions!

normie57
I have a pair of Lampizator 211 mono's that run a pair of 211 per side in parallel, and I can confirm that Al and Ralph are tipping you off correctly.  My 211's boast 85 watts of a tube power, but when I tried them on a speaker that dipped down to 4 ohms in the lower mid - bass range, it resulted in an anemic balance.  It isn't so much about watts - - it's about proper impedance matching to achieve proper frequency response and tonal balance.
 My 211's boast 85 watts of a tube power, but when I tried them on a speaker that dipped down to 4 ohms in the lower mid - bass range, it resulted in an anemic balance.
This could very well have been the output transformer, being 8ohm. If it had a 4ohm tap it could have been a different story, also Lampi may use no or very little negative feedback this will also have a bearing if it can drive a lower impedance as well. (having feedback lowers the output impedance) 
The amp I linked to from reading on the web has user adjustable negative feedback (which lowers the output impedance) as well as 4ohm taps.

Cheers George 
@georgehifi , there’s more to it than that... generally speaking, SETs behave as power sources rather than voltage sources (which might be your typical solid state amp). The reason to go this route is to avoid the brightness and harshness often associated with loop negative feedback (harshness and brightness is after all a coloration and not one that is particularly pleasant).

Because no feedback is used, you can’t rely on the Voltage Paradigm for flat frequency response, and the 4 ohm tap may or may not help (likely won’t, as the speaker may be looking for +3db worth of power in the woofer section, and merely moving to the 4 ohm tap won’t get you that).

There are speakers that are designed to work with amps of higher output impedance (and no feedback): Merlins, Coincident, Audiokinesis, Quad 57 and Quad63, Classic Audio Loudspeakers, Rogers LS35A, Lowthers, PHY, Festerex, most horn speakers and many more.
Sorry Ralph I was talking about driving the OP’s speakers with two low 3ohm impedances around 50hz and 150hz, my experiences and measurements on the same amp a 4 ohm tap output tap has a better chance of driving a speaker that dips to 3ohms in the bass as the OP’s do at 50hz and 150hz, than an 8ohm tap on that same amp.
Also if on that same amp the global feedback is increased, it will drive it even better again as it lowers the output impedance even more. But may not sound as "euphonic".
Sure there are spl limits with a 45w set/ or push pull just as there are with a 45w solid state

Cheers George
George, are you sure that TubeGuru amp actually has a 4 ohm tap?  I couldn't find a rear panel photo, but I would interpret this photo, which is one of those shown for that amp at the TubeGuru site, as suggesting that it may have only a single output tap.  Also, the website description states "Output Impedance: 4-16 OHM," which could very conceivably mean that there is only a single output tap, with those numbers being the limits of the range of speaker impedances that tap is recommended for use with.

Regards,
-- Al