if you hit the back of it hard with a rubber mallet sometimes the noise will go away
try not to hit the glass tubes
Cool. There was a time a couple of years ago when you could buy a ref75se and a ref5se for a combined price of between $10,000 and $11,000. That was a great value. Today that combo will set you back aproximately $13,000. If you are dead set on that direction, you might reach out to Paragon as they likely have some ref75se’s new in box for a little more than you are looking at preowned. It would have a warranty and it is an end game amp. I drove Wilson Sasha 2’s and Devore O96’s with mine and it was sublime. You will hear your Vandersteens at their very best. You will also have an amp that is far, far more capable than your speakers but thats ok. Buy the best preowned ARC preamp you can afford…a ref 5se, ref 6 or 6se…even a ref40 if you can swing it. You will have your amp/pre for the long haul. When you someday upgrade your speakers, the electronics will scale. You wont have a wonderful match but it will be very good. You wont have tremendous synergy or volume headroom but it will still be very, very good.
best wishes.
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I agree w ghasly Used to sell ARC. There should be no noise heard from that amp. Also, if you prefer clarity, reality, correct timbres and detail, Arc is tough to beat. If you like "beautiful, smooth and sublime and "weighty" or in other words distortion added to harmonic orders, you'd be happier w something else. It all depends on taste. Some people are bothered big time with the ARC sound and some people don't like spaghetti which is unfathomable to me. |
@baylinor That is DC offset caused by dimming the LED.
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