Classic Solid State muscle...
Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2015 4:33 pm
For some strange and obscure reason, nostalgia seems (to me at least!) to fill the air when it comes to Halloween time...
And in this hobby, maybe it's because the Burlington HiFi shows put on by Cloney were always during the Bank Holiday weekends..
And so following on from this tenuous link (nothing to do with a certain set of speakers en-route from a more Mediterranean climate), I've started reading up on a topic which used to be of vital importance to me, but then waned after firmly going down the valve route a considerable time ago - that topic is classic American solid state muscle.
Now when I say classic, I mean the type of Krell FPBcx and Mark Levinson 334-6 models that were around during very early noughties.. And indeed if I remember correctly used to make appearances during the afore mentioned HiFi show.
The type that just kept doubling down into 2 ohm loads and and (at least in the case of the FPB Krells, but alas not in newer models) ran in Class A. And could thus heat the entire ground floor of an average house.
The type that some people used to consider the classic pairing with speakers that can at times present a difficult load. Such as perhaps Sonus Faber....
So just wondering if people have any, perhaps even many, experiences with these monster amps - specifically the likes of the Krell FPBcx and the huge ML334-336 range.
Also wondering what expected life span of the caps in these types of amp are. If the amp is at least 10 years old, then I guess it may well need to be re-capped - which is or isn't a major servicing cost??
I had started this reading up purely based on nostalgia but now wished I hadn't as genuinely very curious at this stage to hear what some of these classics sound like.....
My only real home experience with amps of this level of power was with a pair of CAM350's quite some time back. Driving B&W N802's. Incredible reserves of power. But at that time, the N802's didn't interact with the room so well. So overall impression was to move away from these speakers to others (Kharma's) which quite simply didn't need any of this level of power...
And in this hobby, maybe it's because the Burlington HiFi shows put on by Cloney were always during the Bank Holiday weekends..
And so following on from this tenuous link (nothing to do with a certain set of speakers en-route from a more Mediterranean climate), I've started reading up on a topic which used to be of vital importance to me, but then waned after firmly going down the valve route a considerable time ago - that topic is classic American solid state muscle.
Now when I say classic, I mean the type of Krell FPBcx and Mark Levinson 334-6 models that were around during very early noughties.. And indeed if I remember correctly used to make appearances during the afore mentioned HiFi show.
The type that just kept doubling down into 2 ohm loads and and (at least in the case of the FPB Krells, but alas not in newer models) ran in Class A. And could thus heat the entire ground floor of an average house.
The type that some people used to consider the classic pairing with speakers that can at times present a difficult load. Such as perhaps Sonus Faber....
So just wondering if people have any, perhaps even many, experiences with these monster amps - specifically the likes of the Krell FPBcx and the huge ML334-336 range.
Also wondering what expected life span of the caps in these types of amp are. If the amp is at least 10 years old, then I guess it may well need to be re-capped - which is or isn't a major servicing cost??
I had started this reading up purely based on nostalgia but now wished I hadn't as genuinely very curious at this stage to hear what some of these classics sound like.....
My only real home experience with amps of this level of power was with a pair of CAM350's quite some time back. Driving B&W N802's. Incredible reserves of power. But at that time, the N802's didn't interact with the room so well. So overall impression was to move away from these speakers to others (Kharma's) which quite simply didn't need any of this level of power...