Class "A" sound, as related to Stereophile.



It's all about the sound.

It's all about sound, not how much it cost; when I got into "high end", I knew right off the bat I couldn't afford it, but I had to find one thing for sure; how do the various components sound in regard to Stereophile's classes, or ratings? In order to know this; I had to acquire the ability to identify "Stereophile's" class "A" class "B" and class "C" sounds, and the only way to do that was: first, subscribe to Stereophile, and next was to go to every high end audio salon within driving distance; there were 5 well stocked "high end" salons within driving distance. (Since I didn't take my wife, that created some problems)

After a few years of subscribing to Stereophile, plus auditioning equipment that Stereophile recommended, I knew the sound of those recommendations, and I absolutely concurred with them; "If you want to hear the music, you got to pay the piper". While that's true, it's possible to get class "A" sound with class "B" bucks or less.

At this moment, I am looking at 8 capacitors that cost $25 dollars each, plus 2 mono blocks with an instant resale value of 6K. Once I take the covers off and go in with my soldering iron, these mono blocks are worth a resell of O; my mission must be a success. After a successful mission, the resell is still 0; but those mono blocks will deliver class "A" or "A"+ sound, and that's some sweet music.

I have to visualize and hear music in my head before I can modify a component to deliver class "A" sound; but that's the only way for me to get what has become a necessity.

The pressure someone is under when they modify, is great, but the rewards are glorious. On these mono blocks, they are too small for the huge capacitors, therefore I have to figure a way to make the case larger. My reward is "sound" with absolutely no relation to money. I often wander if someone with a fat bankroll can identify the sound, or only how much they paid for each piece.


Happy listening.

orpheus10
This who this whole "A", "B", "C" thing is utter foolishness. We don't listen to a component, we listen to a system and system synergy makes, or breaks the quality of the illusion. Rather than spend time, and money, switching boxes, why not just build a synergistic system?

Hey garretc,

I am sure that Dan Wright would be interested in your perspectives on hammers, nails, Scotts, and LaSalles.

Like Abe Lincoln said: "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."

Best to you garretc,
Dave

OK viridian, How do you build a synergistic system without listening to different boxes or different entire systems made by one manufacturer, preferably for extended periods of time in your own room?

Do you just let someone else tell you what you should like and take whatever they sell you home and tell all your friends how synergistic your system is?

Can you list these synergistic systems for us?  Can we buy any one or do we have to listen to them all to decide which one we like?

The Brits have been doing it for years. There is a wealth of collective experience both on their fora and in their print media on what constitutes synergy within a system.

 I think most of them could tell you that a Linn speaker sounds better with Naim amplification than a Dynaudio, for instance. They take a systems approach.

But if you're comfortable flipping appliances, by all means do so, as you said no need to let someone tell you what works well together better to reinvent the wheel every time You want to take a drive.
Everyone should know that capacitors don't live forever. As long as the replacement is done correctly then you should be fine. Often de-soldering the old caps is the most difficult part of the job. I may have to disagree that newer "better" caps are the best way to go, especially if they are in the signal path and not just a part of the power supply. The sound could change and not for the better.
Best of luck.