Description

I am an electrical and mechanical engineer who's been in this hobby for 26 years now.  Our system is entirely dedicated to our love of music and we listen critically every day. Our 1500 CDs and SACDs, and countless digital files comprise just about every type of music you can think of.  We also use Tidal streaming extensively these days.  I believe that achieving highest quality sound is primarily dependent on setup execution, and not on component cost.

The Nanos are extremely efficient, making concerns about amplifier power irrelevant, and, most importantly, guarantees that nothing is ever lost in translation. Their resolution is so clear, so musical, and so right, that music entrances me for hours on end. Now that I've experienced their sound of life, I don’'t think I could ever go back to conventional speakers.

I own a wide variety of amplifiers because the Nanos allow each one’'s personality to shine through, and getting to know them in otherwise the same system (speaker/room/human) is great fun and highly instructive. It has given me the opportunity to expertly hone my hearing and to delight in a new sound experience every month or so when I change amps. There is no one best amplifier anyway; just like there isn’'t one best musician.

I find that high value is an elegant guide to attaining my desired result. I also feel that a huge amount of experimentation is needed to establish a true reference point.  Here is a list of past equipment I've had in my little music room that has led me to what I have today:

Audio Research Reference 3
Lavardin IS Reference
BPT BP-1 Signature Plus
Devialet Expert 120
Aesthetix Calypso
MBL 1431 
Nordost El Dorado
Nottingham Analogue Spacedeck
Nottingham Ace Space tonearm
Dynavector Karat 19A mk2
Audio Research SP6-C1
Threshold S/150 mk2
Acoustic Research XA
Finale Audio 2A3M-FFX
McIntosh MX110Z
LTA Berning ZOTL10
McIntosh C48
Triode Labs 2A3 SET
Wyred 4 Sound STP-SE
Audio Research LS26
Kora Flash
Primare Systems A30.1 
Marantz PM6004
Kora Galaxy
Kora Eclipse B/C
Triode Labs 2A3S
Rogue Stereo 90 with 6550
Ayre C5xe mp
Finale Audio F168R 6BM8
Transcendent Mini Beast OTL
Pass Labs XA30.5
Conrad-Johnson Classic I
McIntosh MC452
BC Acoustique A3
Atoll IN-100
Wright Sound WLA12A
Tom Evans Linear A
Classe Delta CA-2200
Plinius SA-50 Mk3 
McIntosh C46
McIntosh MC122
Audio Aero Prima Mk2
Unison S2K
Cairn Fog v3
Kora Titan monoblocks
Cairn Fog v2
Ayre AX-7e
Kora Eclipse version A
Kora Galaxy Reference (x2)
Cairn KO2
Pass Labs Aleph 30
McIntosh C42
Kora Eclipse version C
WAVAC MD-300B
Kora Eclipse version B
47 Labs Shigaraki 4717  
Focal JM Lab Electra 926
Reference 3A MM DeCapo i
MIT AVt 1 non-biwire
Monitor Audio RS1
Innersound i-Pre
Zu Birth
McIntosh MC202
KEF iQ10
NAD C720BEE
van den Hul Orchid XLR
Rega Apollo
NBS M/S II
MIT MI330S3 RCAs
Sony SCD-C333ES
Cayin CD-50T
QED Silver Anniversary XT
Gutwire Basic 2
Van den Hul First Ultimate mk2
QED Qunex 1
Cary SLP-98
Triangle Antal ESw
Kimber Select KS1121
B&W Nautilus 804
MIT T2 biwires
Rogue Audio Magnum 99
Kimber Kable 8TC
Belles GR8 passive
Energy Connoisseur C8
Monitor Audio Silver RS6
MIT AVT2 biwire
Primare CD31
MIT Shotgun S3
Sony SCD-XA777ES
Pro-Ject RM 6 SB, Blue Point #2
McIntosh MC7100
Cambridge Audio 640C
Audio Research LS3b
Classe CP50 (x2)
Epos ELS3
California Audio Labs Icon MkII
Omega Loudspeakers TS1
Music Hall CD25
McIntosh C712 (x2)
Sony ST-550ES
McIntosh MA6500
Consonance CD2.2
Guerrilla Hyper
DH Labs Q10
McIntosh MC2125
Jolida 302b
Conrad Johnson PV10a
Marantz SA-8260
Odyssey Stratos
Arcam CD72
Sony SCD-CE595
McIntosh MC7200 (x2)
Classe DR10
Paradigm Reference 100.2
Elac 101
Triangle Comete ES
Classe CA200
Nordost Flatline Mk2
Nordost Solar Winds
Kimber KCAG
Atlas All Cu Navigator
van den Hul Orchid RCA
Bryston 4B
Adcom GFA-545 mk2
BAT VK-3i
Jolida JD100
Yamaha TT-400U
Krell KSA100
Krell KAV250
Conrad Johnson MV55
Kora Explorer 90SI
Granite 657
Jolida 1701A
Totem Acoustic Hawks
3A Master Control
Kora Explorer 150SB
Myryad Z140
Klipsch Heresys
van den Hul The Second
van den Hul D352
van den Hul Mainsstream
NAD C740
Rotel RCD-1072
Signal Classic cables
Read more...

Room Details

Dimensions: 33’ × 20’  X large
Ceiling: 8’


Components Toggle details

    • Avantgarde Uno Nano speakers
    German ultra-high-efficiency speaker with full dynamic range. The active-design approach and ideal sensitivity maximize dynamic headroom in the most natural and logical way possible. The result is music is never lost in translation. It's the most incredible sound I've ever heard from a speaker. So alive and so clear! They make most other speakers sound like "cones-in-a-box" by comparison. Having the lowest possible distortion allows the personalities of each amp to shine through like no other speakers in my experience. Avantgarde manufactures everything either in-house or locally for their speakers. This has become a rare thing these days, but it's critical when making top-level equipment since it allows them to fully optimize every component, as well as the sum total. And not only that - they offer impeccable customer service too. Their entire business model achieves the goal of combining precision engineering with a wholistic understanding of gestalt and purpose. The end result is priceless.
    • Velodyne DD-15 subwoofer
    Finally got a subwoofer. Ever since I'd left my little room at my old house, I'd noticed my bass wasn't as fleshed out or as deep since I now have insignificant room reinforcement. But the Nanos were good enough that I was able to overlook it until the right deal fell from the sky. And now it has. Bought a Velodyne Direct Digital 15" with a 1250W switching amplifier and man what a difference it has made! Everything is better, all the way up to the treble. It is a terrific addition. The Nanos have two "subwoofers" already but the speakers are designed to sound "of a piece" rather than "two horns with a sub." This is to preserve the speed needed to have a smooth midrange transition. So now the DD15 does the heavy lifting and its graphical interface for optimization of the sub is brilliant. My response is perfectly integrated, and it sounds like it.
    • Tom Evans Audio Design Vibe preamplifier
    TEAD's preamp, considered to be the world's best by a couple 6moons reviewers. All I can say is that after going through 16 preamps, the Vibe is the only solid-state piece I've fallen in love with. The TEAD Lithos regulators allow for huge bandwidth and huge dynamic range that yield equally superlative sound. It's an amazing design that only Tom Evans seems able to come up with in a simple and elegant way. Mega-detailed, mega-transparent, and mega-musical.  It's so good that it sounds completely different with each amplifier I hook up to it.  I've never had a preamp like this before.
    • Tom Evans Audio Design Pulse power supply
    Optional power supply for the TEAD Vibe preamp. One box houses Lithos regulators and capacitor banks while the other box houses a custom-made 70VA transformer that Tom and his team designed for this preamp. I've opened it up and was surprised to see so many parts in both boxes! Very very complex for what is badged as a "simple" power supply. It's no wonder it costs so much. I also think it looks much nicer than the new Pulse 2 supply.
    • Kora Electronics Crescendo tube preamplifier
    French-made, fully-balanced, single-gain-stage vacuum tube preamplifier. It was designed for use with Aries monoblocks, and what a wonderful combo they are, but this preamplifier is unbelievably good with all my amps, whether run balanced or single-ended (a rarity). The Vibe is killer solid state, but there is something very special about the sound of this preamp. It balances extreme clarity and resolution with a friendliness and sophistication that is unique in my experience. It's such a shame that so few people will ever get to know this design. This is the second one I've owned - I kicked myself for years for selling my first one, and I thank my lucky stars I found another!  Current tubes: pair of 1957 Raytheon black plate 12BH7
    • Kora Electronics Aries hybrid monoblocks
    Totally unique French design using a 12BH7 to feed 2 HEXFETs in single-ended parallel. On paper, it looks like it'd never work, but in fact these little amps sound magical. What is special about these amps is their wonderful coherence and the accuracy of their timing. They have an ease about them and yet the treble information is all there. Jazz suits them perfectly. I call it "Kora Coherence" because all the Koras exhibit this trait no matter how different the design - and Kora has made quite a range of designs, unlike 95% of hifi companies. They were true hifi artisans and these little monoblocks make that imminently clear. Current tubes: 1960 GE gray plate 12BH7A.
    • McIntosh MC152
    After a bad experience with the MC452, I decided to give McIntosh one last chance.  It is hard for me to get by without blue eyes after all these years, and I will forever remember the sound of my MC7200.  I came to the conclusion that the phase irregularities of the 452 might be due to the fact the circuit is optimized for a power level above what my speakers require.  After all, it's very hard to perfectly balance so many transistors, especially at low-power outputs.

    It turns out that reducing the transistor count by 75% does the trick!  The 152 is by far the finest solid-state amp I've had in my system.  It's incredible.  It's smooth and rich, yet fast and delicate.  It's really rare to find an amp that can combine such clear resolution with enveloping musicality, but this one does it better than any I've experienced so far.  The 7200 has been resurrected - and this time with autoformers!  I'm in love with this little amp.
    • Unison Research S2 SEP
    Italian single-ended pentode amp using EL34 tubes. I recently recapped the entire thing with upgraded capacitors, and optimized the operating point for even better performance.  It basically runs as a "mostly-triode" amplifier with lower plate current.  The sound has gotten even more musical, without hurting resolution whatsoever, and as a bonus my tubes will last much longer.  Downside is that now it only makes about 4W (instead of 10), but my speakers don't care.

    This amp loves to boogie!  Tons of fun to listen to and get this - it has the most potent bass of any of my amps!  It can shake the walls if the recording has enough extension. It often feels like my favorite amp since it is unfailingly musical with terrific detail and a deliciously smooth presentation.  It's similar to the F138FFX but with an even bigger soundstage and more nuanced image separation. I want to point out too that it has foil-wound output transformers - the cheap transformers in the new versions of this amp don't even come close to this level of quality.  Current tubes: Psvane 6CA7 TII, NOS Philips 6189W.
    • Rogue Audio Model 88 amplifier
    I recently stumbled upon this most incredible amplifier.  It is actually a Tempest integrated but I'm running it in "preamp bypass" mode so it acts like a regular amplifier (Stereo 88 version 4) since the preamp is passive.  It sounds phenomenal with my solid-state TEAD Vibe preamp (it doesn't really get along with the Crescendo for some reason).  

    It clearly sounds best in triode mode, 30 Wpc, and I'm currently using my preferred EH KT88 in it, and 8 Ohm taps.  My comments relate only to this arrangement.  The pentode mode lacks microdynamics, and the treble is crude in comparison.  It's a completely different amp in triode.

    Simply put, this is the only amp that truly rivals the 152.  Resolution is as good, though restitution is not, but then dynamics are surprisingly similar, and it makes everything sound so alive!  Not the finest in soundstaging, but everything else is superb.  One of the cheapest amps I've ever owned, and yet in terms of "hifi," it's nearly the best.  What a find!

    PS, I tried a Rogue Stereo 90 just to see, and even after I had optimized the circuit and run in a new set of tubes, it just didn't have the magic of the 88.  It runs the tubes too hard and everything falls on its face in the vain attempt of making it barely more powerful.  The 88 is way better.
    • McIntosh MC240 push-pull amp
    The classic 1961 MC240 needs no introduction. After 50 years of use, it naturally needed a complete overhaul so I spent two solid weeks rebuilding it to perfection by replacing all the capacitors, diodes, rectifiers and bias resistors with proper parts, and tweaking all the voltages to exactly match specification. It is no surprise this amplifier is a legend when you hear it play music. It's warm and relaxed with tremendous inner detail. Full tube sound at its finest. Current tubes: quad of TAD 6L6GC-STR, pair of GE gray 12BH7s, pair of clear-top RCA 12AU7s, trio of Electro-Harmonix 12AX7s
    • Finale Audio F138 FFX
    This amp uses one EL84 per channel in pentode mode with tube rectification, pure Class A. I have optimized its design for my speakers to get unbelievable performance gains over the stock design.  In this new configuration, it only puts out about 3W (instead of 6) but sounds like 500W - its bass can shake the walls!  It sounds the way I'd hoped my McIntosh MC452 would have sounded.

    I got a full suite of fancy Hashimoto magnetics because the heart of a tube amp is its transformers. It's so coherent, so rich, so detailed, so musical - it really has zero drawbacks now that I've modified it. Forget SET - SEP is where it's at.  It doesn't quite have the resolution of the Tempest/88 or 152, but it has wonderful musicality similar to the S2 that's augmented by the clean treble extension the EL84 is famous for.

    Currently using: 6P14P-EV, EH 12AX7, 1969 Mullard Blackburn GZ34 rectifier.
    • Electrocompaniet AW60 FTT
    Giving solid-state another try, this time a 60W amp from Norway. It is very revealing and exposes the different recording styles in a very clear way. The highs aren't quite as nuanced as my tube amps, but for solid-state, it has a very impressive soundstage and liquid midrange that isn't easy to find at any price. It's no wonder their flagship models are so revered - these designers really know what they are doing.
    • McIntosh MCD301 sacd player
    The CD player that has it all: body, dynamics, tone, subtlety, extension, potent bass, natural midrange and airy highs. It allows the performance of the music being played to come alive like no other sources I've heard, whether vinyl or CD based. It has psychedelic imaging and a walk-in soundstage that I still can't believe to this day.  I recently A/B tested it against an Ayre C5xemp and it was no contest.  I don't understand why the C5xe is so loved by reviewers because in my system it sounds constricted and small in comparison to my 301.
    • Cambridge Audio CXN (v2)
    This streamer sounds bright and thin, but I designed my 6N6P vacuum tube buffer for it that fixes everything and results in incredible resolution combined with fantastic soundstaging.
    • DIY tube amp for iPhone/Macbook using 6N6P
    A lot of people feel the aural inadequacies of music files are because of inferior DACs. This, in fact, isn't the big problem. Even expensive DACs are actually cheap parts. The big problem is a weak power supply in the device that makes the sound anemic. Making high-current drive is big, bulky and expensive - 3 things that are not conducive to MP3 players. So I took advantage of knowing this to improve the sound of my Audioengine D2. I designed a tube output stage for it based on the rare (i.e., cheap) Russian 6N6P, as a cathode-follower buffer. This circuit makes it a transconductance amplifier which does nothing to the voltage (it's already sufficient) but boosts current drive a huge amount to correct this characteristic inadequacy. It took a good bit of tweaking to get the most of the design but the outcome is shocking. The amount of microdynamic detail and decay of the notes that was 'restored,' or whatever, is really amazing. Downloaded music files have gone from terrible to sublime. It's made a believer out of me and my friends (for whom I've had to build similar ones :).
    • Piega P-4L mkII ribbon speakers
    Fantastic Swiss speakers that have an aluminum cabinet. Effortless sound and shockingly powerful bass from such a small tower, which makes it perfect for TV room use. It's very hard to beat a ribbon tweeter when it comes to articulate highs. These little speakers revolutionized the TV watching experience. I've placed them near the back wall so the bass is just right - I've had people ask where the subwoofer is, but there isn't one!
    • Emotiva Stealth DC-1 DAC preamp
    Really slick design with analog input and fully-balanced circuitry to match the Cairn KO2. I use its built-in DAC for iTunes, Bluray, and DirectTV. Warm and inviting sound that is clear and composed. Hope to score a Cairn Nitro with DAC board eventually to replace it.
    • Cairn KO2 Class A/AB solid-state amp
    French-made fully-balanced solid-state amp that now drives the Piegas in the TV room. Super powerful, fantastic build quality, terrific soundstaging, a bargain on the used market, can be switched between Class A and AB (10W versus 100W), and has an "auto-on" feature that is super handy for the TV room.
    • I.C.E. Model 473-3 AC line filter
    CM and DM noise filter. None of the audiophile frills and hooplah - this is electrical engineering at its finest. It filters out a massive bandwidth and cannot restrict current flow. $4,000 performance for $80. Everyone should have one of these. I have one feeding each system.
    • MIT Z-strip with circuit breakers
    8 outlets with single-cap parallel filtering and circuit breaker protection. I really have this for the circuit breaker as the filtering is minimal compared to the ICE.
    • van den Hul, Blue Circle, and MIT power cords
    A variety, each with a job and purpose. I particularly love the BC power cords and want to get more of them.
    • van den Hul and Cardas interconnects
    AJ van den Hul and George Cardas are the cable wizards of the world, in my opinion. They truly understand what they are doing.
    • Cardas speaker cables
    It's really hard to beat George's cables, but eventually I want to get van den Hul speaker cables - if I can ever figure out which one to get!
    • DIY rubber eraser cable lifters
    Found these very-soft erasers at a craft store for $2 each. One thing is for sure about their performance - I can't feel the vibration on the cables with my hand anymore!
    • Dedicated power circuit with hospital outlets
    it makes a difference...
    • VTI BL503 and BL404 audio racks
    My audio racks, super nice for the money. They are the best deal going, hands down. I got the silver poles, silver caps and black shelves. Price is for both racks.

Comments 185

Showing all comments by agear.

View all comments

Arthur, I still remember and enjoyed the sound of the Kora stereo amp that my friend loaned to me.  If they were not a danger to deal with and hard on tubes, I would consider owning them.  What a shame they went away.  I do enjoy my 300B amp from Trafomatic out of Serbia and the new Sofia blue tubes.....

agear

Arthur, with the right combination of medications, the equipment list will shrink  and the endless fiddling will subside.  Trust me.  I'm a doctor.

agear

I know Arthur. The local guy who is a fan (and x-over guru) said changing the bias is a pain and not "safe" for a novice. Lethal voltages. That being said, and being a red blooded audiophile, I still want to hear it again....:) He has fixed a lot of high end gear over the years, and said the Kora stuff was quality work and well engineered. Its a shame they are no longer around!

agear

Arthur, I still love the Viva. I would like to snag my friends Kora stuff and take it for another test drive. During my previous demo, I used the Galaxy on a much less efficient of speakers (Fried reference). My current speakers are 92dB efficient into 8 ohms....

agear

For the confused and casual observer, I am merely trash talking. Arthur's system thread is one of my personal favs....:)

agear

05-31-15: Aball
I can't take all the credit for the photos. Most of them were taken by my partner....

Now that is truly disappointing. So all you are bringing to the table at this juncture is technobabble with brief interludes of the audio philosophe....

agear

05-17-15: Oranfoster
Of course your system is awesome BUT, so is your photography! Congratulations.

Yes, the photographs are exquisite by audiogon standards....but also his use of language....Arthur is a silver tongued devil misleading the ignorant bystander with his densely crafted technobabble....

agear

ABaller doing what Aball does best....

Where is your sub crossed over?

agear

Arthur, I am glad you have resurfaced and are up to your old tricks. You are the Tasmanian devil of Audiogon. Never still.....

agear

06-05-14: Aball
Hey Andy - so it sounds like you got the Intuitive Design speakers. How do you like them so far?

So far so good. They sound fab. Dynamic, fast, horn-like and completely holographic. Still doing some amp rolling. I would love to have access to your collection. Too bad you don't live in Charlotte. I also picked up an Auralic Aries and a Lampizator L7. Best digital I have heard to date. Things are rolling or at east appear to be.

agear

Arthur, they have been sitting in the garage since last week. I have been too busy to set them up. Hopefully this weekend or the next. Paradoxical behavior for an audiophile I know but I am just sideways with work....

agear

I agree Charles. I have talked with Bob at Profundo (a scholar and a gentleman) and if Dale's stuff was not in the picture, those Austrian speakers would be close to the top of my list.

agear

Or could it be that he's simply the real deal? That makes more sense to me.

Smells like narcissistic personality disorder

The guy who turned me onto the Viva lives in Norway and has your speakers. I too like push pull. I had a TRL ST-100 and it had that breath of life grip on my previous speakers. I sold it in the name of child safety and then wandered back to something even more dangerous ...:/

For a SET, the Viva gets pretty close and is surprisingly bombastic. My new speakers are much more efficient and it should mate well. Time will tell.

agear

B_limo, an entertaining thread indeed. Aball has inherited his Mother's french flair and we are never bored with the fluidity of his system changes. Never awkward, purposeless and somewhat desperate like the rest of us in the midst of system changes. Could it be that he simply hides that behind well crafted prose?

agear

Arthur, my Neodio (greek for new god) went bye-bye. I now have a Viva Solista which sounds better in my system.

agear

Arthur, you're a PhD like my Dad. You make your living "contemplating." :/ I am glad you get my humor. A lot of self-serious philes are humorless and get angry when you poke fun at them.

Regarding plasma tweeters, I have heard them applied in the Lansche speakers and of course Acapellas.....

agear

Arthur, I agree about the plasma tweeters. They are stunning. I have NEVER heard better high frequency reproduction. The problem is mating them with mere mortal drivers. Tricky. A full range plasma speaker would be something....

Arthur, I truly enjoy your ramblings. You are able to elegantly and seamlessly patronize us with a certain French flair shall we say....

agear

Climbing mount resolution in audio does not bring us face to face with flesh and blood musicians but recordings. Harmonic rightness is thus hit and miss. Furthermore, the relative degree of "distortion" in a given system is enormous particularly at the level of the speaker and room interface. Notice that speaker manufactures rarely publish specs. Arthur, you are an engineer. Isn't it amazing that speaker design has evolved so little in the last 50 years? I rue the day when a true breakthrough technology appears that will lat waste to our carefully crafted and expensive audio rigs and we will all look like the fools that we are....:/ ,

agear

System edited: Continuing the buying spree

Aball, I think you have a problem.....

agear

I have thought about OTLs as well. I lusted after the Joule Rites of Passage but was afraid of the heat. I did try the 140W Atmaspheres. They did some things very well and I can understand why people like them. They were not the right match for my speakers at the time.

agear

Arthur, we had conversations in the past about the issue of "headroom" in context of higher sensitivity speakers. You told me that the Mcintosh, despite being "overkill" for the Duos, was able to better recreate the explosive transients of live music. I did similar experiments when I owned the Emerald Physics CS2.7s which were 100 dB efficient. I preferred, at the time, high powered SS (TRL Samsons...300 watts) to low powered SS (First Watt) and SETs (Agape labs 8W). I wonder what specific parameters are in play other than simply speaker sensitivity, watts, listening distance. and SPLs produced.

The image no longer gelled and timing issues
crept up.

Regarding timing errors, I can reference some interesting verbiage that I just harvested on the Goldmund site:

"In order to eliminate time distortion— an unnatural delay of higher audio frequencies relative to lower ones— Goldmund amplifiers have a bandwidth of approximately 3 MHz, roughly 100 times that of a typical audio amplifier. Through a Goldmund amplifier, a 20 kHz tone is delayed only 100 ps relative to a 20 Hz tone. This is a performance no other audio amplifiers can match."

Dale Pitcher at ID has created high bandwidth SS designs as well which I owned (Coordinate Monoblocks), and it was the finest and most organic and correct SS I have owned. I would try to buy his older Essence SS amps used if I could but cannot find nor afford them.

agear

It's like circuit designers who build amplifiers that end up having a certain degree of their own personality built into the sound. How does that happen?? The million Dollar question

I have had that same thought. Like looking like your spouse after so many years of being married. Spooky.

You and I tend to prefer the path less traveled...

and the pain that often comes with it!

They remind me of the Goldmunds and, for a tiny fraction of the price, encompass most of their design concept. If Dale's purported personality comes through in his design, you're in for a treat.

Yes indeed. They are VERY similar. I had forgotten about Goldmund. There is something to time alignment and serious mechanical grounding that transforms a speaker. Dale has been at it for over 30 years as well.

agear

Debussy said that "music is the space between the notes."

Beautifully poetic. Another way to say that is "music is the space between your ears where the notes go...."

It's like those people who have to
do something because they don't know what else to do. Eventually all that
fidgeting gets annoying.

and Audiogon is their parallel universe....

In all seriousness and in the spirit of which you speak (I agree with your sentiments 100%), I recently purchased a Viva Solista integrated 22W SET amp from Italy. Its an experiment I wanted to try since my next speakers from Intuitive Design are going to be 8 Ohm and 93dB efficient. One of the main flag waivers for this amp is a Danish dude who also owns your speakers. Its a great little amp with dynamics, bass and yet with a subtle SET sweetness

agear

Arthur, your aesthetic sensibilities, both demonstrated in the subject and the photography, are also stellar. Your pics are a pleasure to look at. Ciao....

agear

I am although I still dream of tube gear in my weaker moments. Does not work with our inquisitive 19 m/o ....

agear

Beautiful new room Arthur. Bravo again.

agear

I don’t appreciate the failure to realize that it took
thousands of late nights working very hard to get what I
have today. Getting here didn’t fall from the sky, nor did
it come from illicit gains.

You missed the humor in my jab. Audio is a neutral domain. It does not matter if you are a trust baby or slaved in the coal mines after hours to pay for your equipment. My surgical training lasted 10 years, and I was paid less than $2/hr due to 120+ work weeks. I still managed to "moonlight" in ERs and other facilities to make extra dough which was used to buy my first audiophile grade system. So there....

BTW, did the equipment recycling you benefitted from involve one company in particular? A french company perchance?....yuk, yuk, yuk...

agear

Odds are this is the best system ever assembled by a grad student

Touché. Very suspicious for a grad student to be rolling high dollar equipment like that. My father's students had Bose if they had anything at all.....

agear

Arthur, you are an audio kleptomaniac. Wonderful system and room where everything looks aesthetically correct. Very elegant and very French. I have always liked the idea of a multiplicity of component or systems to suit the mood.

Your musings on the amp/speaker interface make perfect sense to me. I have owned amps and preamps in the past with extreme bandwidth and you can "hear it" in the ebb and flow of the music.

agear