purk
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2001
- Posts
- 11,082
- Likes
- 3,995
I think his KGSS is definitely not stock so it should be better sounding than the original KGSS. Still I don't think it is comparable to the KGSSHV and BHSE for that matter.
Also think and the headphone the kgss was meant top go with, the original 007, A headphone that tends toward dark, shocking that that amp would make the 009 too bright..
Also think and the headphone the kgss was meant top go with, the original 007, A headphone that tends toward dark, shocking that that amp would make the 009 too bright..
Haha yes, that particular sequence of events with InnerFidelity/Tyll definitely got some of us to turn our heads sideways! Very stupid.Yeah I thought that was really silly. Praised the SR-009 as one of the best headphones ever with the BHSE, but then basically turned on all electrostats completely based on some sessions with a KGSS. So now anyone who reads the later articles and reviews of Innerfidelity will think that Stax is outdated and too bright/has treble issues, especially his Utopia review where he compared it to Stax just based on memory with the KGSS, painted all electrostats with one brush by suggesting they are all "too bright", giving the impression to users that the Utopia is better but I would suggest it's like a poor man's SR-009 except costs more... Very disingenuous and misleading.
Tonal differences depend on the specific KGSShv variant. But the Carbon leans maybe a little to the bright side - not quite as much as the brightest KGSShv, though.How would one describe the incremental sonic benefits between the KGSSHv and the Carbon?
Thanks for posting this! It is, frankly, what I would have suspected, but it is nice to get a real mafia confirmation !-)As far as I know, Kevin Gilmore has never designed his amps to be voiced towards one headphone or another, he designs them to be neutral. Which only makes sense, as he has no idea what headphone his amps will be used with.
What the Carbon beats all variants on is: bass slam, soundstage, and detail. It is quite noticeable. The BHSE gives up some of that bass slam and soundstage for the tube midrange and a more neutral tone.
Tonal differences depend on the specific KGSShv variant. But the Carbon leans maybe a little to the bright side - not quite as much as the brightest KGSShv, though.
What the Carbon beats all variants on is: bass slam, soundstage, and detail. It is quite noticeable. The BHSE gives up some of that bass slam and soundstage for the tube midrange and a more neutral tone.
As far as I know, Kevin Gilmore has never designed his amps to be voiced towards one headphone or another, he designs them to be neutral. Which only makes sense, as he has no idea what headphone his amps will be used with.
You're good, trust me. Those areas are a little better on Carbon, but the BHSE is no slouch, and personally I slightly preferred the BHSE overall.A few more words on Carbon vs. BHSE? I am quite into bass slam, soundstage and detail, AND really like the sound I am getting from my BHSE, AND have no experience with the Carbon.
Yes, the Carbon is definitely an apex for solidstate ampliflier. It slams hard with plenty of dynamics and punch, however, mine still lean toward the bright side. I prefer the tonal balanced of the BHSE overall over the Carbon but agree with @mulveling that the Carbon also has larger soundstage and depth cues.