Hirsch
Why is there a chaplain standing over his wallet?
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2001
- Posts
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You knew this was only a matter of time, didn't you?
The stock tubes are Sovtek 6SL7GT's. Tim de Paravicini says that the EAR was designed for these tubes, and that the sound cannot be improved by changing them. What does he know? He just designed the thing. The EAR does sound pretty good with the Sovteks. My first experience was at the Headroom World of Headphones Tour. The initial sound was very peaky, with lean bass and a hopped up treble range. Bleh. An hour or two the story was different. The amp had a new clarity, and showed that it was indeed a high end amp...enough so that when opportunity to own one knocked, I opened the door.
There is a catch to tuberolling the HP4. 6SL7's come in two main sizes: short and tall bottle. However, the case of the EAR is so low that a tall bottle tube can't fit in the amp if you want to use the cover. Given the voltages that run in a tube amp, and the four cats I'd like to keep, a cover is a good idea. For the time being though, my audio rack closes with a glass door, and I run without a cover using a tall-bottle tube. All impressions are using the Sony R10.
There are going to be several posts, but I'm going to start by getting some of the crappiest tubes I've tried out of the way. RCA. Bleh. I've tried a couple of different types, and nothing good has happened. It sounds like something should be happening, but both the lows and the highs are recessed, and dynamics were poor. This is true of the regular RCAs. I also have a set of Hewlett-Packard 6SL7GT's that appear to be coin-base RCA's. Terrible tubes.
PhillipsECG 6SL7WGT (black base). The W in the type indicates a tube designed for ruggedness and low microphonics. These should have been very clean tubes, with a tendency to a bright high. Instead, they were ultimately nothing special. Cleaner than RCA's, but not by much. Again, the dynamics seemed to be compromised. This was not my initial impression, but was formed after listening to those tubes alone for a couple of weeks. It became very clear I could do better.
to be continued...

The stock tubes are Sovtek 6SL7GT's. Tim de Paravicini says that the EAR was designed for these tubes, and that the sound cannot be improved by changing them. What does he know? He just designed the thing. The EAR does sound pretty good with the Sovteks. My first experience was at the Headroom World of Headphones Tour. The initial sound was very peaky, with lean bass and a hopped up treble range. Bleh. An hour or two the story was different. The amp had a new clarity, and showed that it was indeed a high end amp...enough so that when opportunity to own one knocked, I opened the door.
There is a catch to tuberolling the HP4. 6SL7's come in two main sizes: short and tall bottle. However, the case of the EAR is so low that a tall bottle tube can't fit in the amp if you want to use the cover. Given the voltages that run in a tube amp, and the four cats I'd like to keep, a cover is a good idea. For the time being though, my audio rack closes with a glass door, and I run without a cover using a tall-bottle tube. All impressions are using the Sony R10.
There are going to be several posts, but I'm going to start by getting some of the crappiest tubes I've tried out of the way. RCA. Bleh. I've tried a couple of different types, and nothing good has happened. It sounds like something should be happening, but both the lows and the highs are recessed, and dynamics were poor. This is true of the regular RCAs. I also have a set of Hewlett-Packard 6SL7GT's that appear to be coin-base RCA's. Terrible tubes.
PhillipsECG 6SL7WGT (black base). The W in the type indicates a tube designed for ruggedness and low microphonics. These should have been very clean tubes, with a tendency to a bright high. Instead, they were ultimately nothing special. Cleaner than RCA's, but not by much. Again, the dynamics seemed to be compromised. This was not my initial impression, but was formed after listening to those tubes alone for a couple of weeks. It became very clear I could do better.
to be continued...