Description

Long story. Started back in the 80s with a Technics SLB2, Rotel RA840 anp and KEF Coda 3 speakers. My first real hi-fi bought with my own money. - fun
Dual 501/AT95 - fun in a splish splashy way
Thorens TD318/Miltec Aurora HOMC- not much fun - dull, rolled off and plodding - what do you expect with a hunk of MDF and leaf springs?
Linn LP12/K9 with Cambridge Audio integrated - better but not great.
Added a Cyrus 2 which was dreadful - brash and dry, sibilant and colored.
Added a Audiolab 8000C/P - no fun - dull and plodding.
Added Monitor Audio 352 speakers - lots of fun - lovely woody sound - captured the emotion in the music.
Swapped the preamp for a first model Croft Micro - utterly transformed. Replaced all resistors with Holcos and doubled up power supply and changed the ECC83s to Telefunkens. Replaced ECC82 with a Brimar CV5042 black plate.
Added a Croft Series 4 Power Amp - better.. until...
I added a Michaelson and Austin TVA1 with MO/GEC KT88s which blew the Series 4 away.
Added a Decca Super Gold - great when it was in the mood but the Ittok combo didn't work.
Added Ortofon X3 Turbo - better but lost something. At least it played without jumping.
Added bronze Quad ESL 57 - removed many veils but creaked and vibrated.
Added Leak Stereo 20 - I rebuilt this lovely but under-powered amp with new caps and Holco resistors.
Added Spendor SP2s - put some veils back up but at least I could listen without torment.
TVA blew up a KT88 - replaced precious MOs with a quad of GE 6550 - better bass, lost the magic midband. 
Also had a Rek-o-kut, Thorens 160, and cream Garrard 301 with a Grace 707.
Packed it all away for 10 years.
Added a $700 Garrard 401 to a $400 birch ply plinth/Jelco 750L arm and the old the Decca that I was going to throw away. - WTH? Amazing sound.
Added new Croft Micro 25 - swapped JJs for the Telefunkens that were in the old Croft - better - and then GE JG5751 black plates - way better. The sound came forward and the soundstage flattened a little but... the timbre/detail/color and blackness improved dramatically and the speakers disappeared.
TVA went dead. It's up on blocks waiting for a late night attempt to fix it... but the HT is dangerous on this beast. If anyone wants it, contact me.
Added rebuilt EICO HF35s - better - wonderful amps - fabulous.
Added black Quad ESL57s - added home-made 20" solid oak stands - no vibrations, no weirdness - just fantastic. Matching serial #s. 
I use $12 Belkin Gold interconnects (preferred to a number of $200-$500 cables) and 12 gauge UP-OCC in Teflon for speaker wire.
Garrard has rock solid stability, image, rhythm, foot tapping, delicacy - bells shimmer, speed - you can see the snares shake on the drum and see the color of the different notes.

UPDATE 10/13 - Got a John Wright Paratrace re-tip and the Decca is transformed. See post below 10/28/2013.

Replaced Croft Micro 25 phono preamp with the R version. While not a huge difference, there is a lower noise floor, better bass, more tonal color and a snapping into focus of the imaging. If you are running these amps with stock JJ tubes, you are not hearing them at their potential.

Update 12/2017 - Added Audio Grail Sable Garrard 401 and Jim Campbell PA slate plinth. Replaced oak table with metal and maple stand. See pics. AudioSilente idler - just do it - best $100 spent. Transformed. 

Update 5/18 - Upgraded Jelco 750 to TK-850L 12inch with Ammonite collar. Essential.

Update 10/18 - Upgraded the aluminum Audiosilente idler to the twice-as-heavy stainless steel Artisan Fidelity idler. Just do it. New heights. You will thank me.

Update 12/21/18 - Replaced platter with Classic Turntable Company 20mm oversized aluminum platter. Excellent improvement to bass - gone is the plummy boom, now tight and colorful. Increased focus all round and better speed stability is noticeable. 6/2021: Replaced platter with newer slightly heavier one fron PAC.

Update 6/19 - Replaced metal rack with 4 concrete blocks. I've never been happy with the metal stand. I had it lying around and it was better than the old oak table. The concrete is a huge improvement in sound quality. Huge soundstage, improved stability of images, tighter and more tuneful bass. 

Update 7/19 - Added JW rebuilt (with extended line contact) Garrott Bros Decca Gold Microscanner

Update 8/19 Added SPH grease bearing to 401 - significant improvement. Blackness, stability and excellent highs.

Update 12/19 Croft 25R. Replaced electrolytic reservoir cap with Clarity TC film cap and phono loading and stopping resistors with Vishay Z foil naked bulk foil resistors. Excellent upgrade. Cleaner, more transparent with voices sounding more human.

Updated 6/2/20 - Added SPH 12" carbon fiber tonearm to collection. Fine sounding. More relaxed and spacious than Jelco 850 but not as dynamic or detailed.

Updated 9/20 - Added Nobsound springs to turntables and amps. See my 'Springs Under Tuntable' post/thread. Improved 3D layering, blackness, speed and transparency.

Updated 9/20 - Added 65" 4K TV.

Updated 3/21 - Modified Croft phono preamp power supply to use tube rectified and regulated vintage Lambda 25 unit. 7851a power tubes. Adds a tube-like dimensionality. 

Updated 10/21 - Added Croft RIAA-RS (single box version from @tomic601) so I can switch between arms without unplugging. Replaced 4 x bulk foil resistors on phono input.

Updated 2/23 - Added Jelco 850L to System 2 401, added Decca Maroon with new line contact tip. Added SPH bearing to 401. Installed springs under speakers and sub.
Read more...

Room Details

Dimensions: 40’ × 25’  X large
Ceiling: 8’


Components Toggle details

    • AudioGrail Garrard 401
    Refurbished Audio Grail Sable Early Twin-spark 401 in 22"x17"x2" Jim Campbell Pennsylvania slate plinth. Precision Audio Components oversize aluminum platter, Artisan Fidelity stainless steel idler, SPH Aluminum/POM grease bearing. Feet are 3 x Nobsound springs on slate pods.
    • Jelco TK-850L 12" tonearm
    12" with Ammonite collar.
    • Jelco TK-850S 9" tonearm
    Added this for second cartridge.
    • SPH Carbon Fiber 12" tonearm
    SPH 12" tonearm
    • Decca London Gold Garrott Brothers "Microscanner" Decapod
    Refurbished by John Wright with line contact stylus.
    • Decca London Super Gold with Paratrace and Decapod
    I almost tossed this away once. Rebuilt twice by John Wright. Added Decapod in 2019
    • Decca Grey Export Garrott Brothers
    Grey Export Garrett Brothers line contact with a side-screw Decapod-like mounting. Checked and cleaned by John Wright.
    • Audio Technica VM750SH
    Bought this to see what a good economy MM sounded like.
    • Croft RIAA-RS
    Single chassis version. Select tubes. Bulk foil phono resistors. Thanks @tomic601
    • Lambda Model 25
    Tube regulated power supply with original PIO caps, RCA 5693 Red driver, Tung sol 7581A power tubes and GZ34 rectifier.
    • Croft Micro 25R
    3x Shuguang Custom 12AX7 LS in phono and buffer stage. 2x Telefunken ECC83 smooth plates in regulator. Vishay naked Z-foil resistors, Clarity TC reservoir cap., BLE Design OFC power cable.
    • EICO HF-35 monoblocs by Stu Remmington
    Rebuilt by Stu Remmington with 3 chokes/PIO caps/triode stage running Shuguang Black Treasure 12AX7LS and new Tung Sol 7581A which are fantastic. Psvane 6SN7 globes are illuminating.
    • Quad ESL 57
    Original pair of black Quad ESL 57. Consecutive #s. I have them on home-made 18" stands. I'm running them with the grills off.
    • System 2 - Garrard 401 birch ply plinth 401
    AudioGrail 401 in 5 sheets of 22 layer birch ply with 1/3" solid walnut top. 1/2" solid maple sides. SPH bearing, Audiosilente idler. 3 Nobsound feet.
    • Jelco TK850L
    On my second 401.
    12" tonearm
    • Decca London Gold
    Renovated Grey Export to Gold. New gold case, overhaul, and new line contact stylus.
    • Decca London Maroon
    New line contact stylus.
    • Ortofon OM-78
    Mono 78 65ųm spherical
    • Croft Acoustics Micro 25
    Telefunken ECC83 and Grant Fidelity Shuguang 12AX7LS.
    • Eico HF-35 monoblocs
    Recapped with 7581A power tubes, Mullard 10M /Bugle-Boy EF86, GE 6SN7.
    • Spendor SP2/2
    Still going strong after over 30 years on my second rig.
    • REL Acoustics S3 MKII SHO
    Impressive sub. Blows away previous Strata 3.
    • Clear Day solid silver Speaker Cables
    System 2
    • Neotech UP-OCC (DIY) Speaker Cables
    24" of 14 gauge cables - monoblocs under each speaker.

Comments 125

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Owner
@o_holter @scar972  Thanks for stopping by!

noromance

Owner
Thanks for stopping by @lalitk and @mmcgill829. Speakers are 63 year old naked electrostatics. Utterly transparent and musical.

noromance

Owner
Hey Dan, Glad to hear your SPH bearing install went well. Doesn't it sound like the music has been released? :-)

noromance

Owner
@tonydennison I don't even allow herself downstairs.

noromance

Owner
Hey Dan, Thanks for stopping by. I have the SPH bearing on both 401s and another in the wings for a third. I think it's a worthwhile upgrade. I found it made a bigger improvement on my higher resolution slate table. Biggest improvements in speed, detail, and soundstaging. As I said in a review, the original bearing sounds broken in comparison. Note that on the wood plinth, it seemed to remove a slight mid-bass bloom. So if you like a warmer sound, you may need to adjust. It's well worth investigating and it's relatively cheap.

noromance

Owner
Memoed from a PM...asking about the differences between ply and slate in my install and the 401 mods I implemented.
I have 2 x AudioGrail 401s in plinths. One is 50mm PA slate, the other is a non-hollow, 5 x 13layer Baltic birch ply with a 1/3" solid walnut top. The slate sounds more precise, less forgiving, faster, more detailed and transparent. Note that the slate one is on concrete blocks on concrete floor while the other is on a table. This is a solid upgrade in itself and the improvements below are in that environment. Mods to the slate 401 are: SPH aluminum and POM grease bearing, PAC mk2 oversized aluminum platter, Artisan Fidelity idler wheel. 3 x Nobsound springs feet. Each mod improved the sound quality by a significant amount.
  • Bearing - huge increase in detail and fineness, esp in the highs, cleaner and blacker.
  • Audiosilente idler (upgraded to AF) - simply makes the table sound more coherent and stable with improvements in detail retrieval.
  • AF idler - AS + increase in bass weight and slight increase in body
  • Platter - again, as with idler, simply makes the table sound more coherent and stable. increased sound stage and blackness, and solidity.
  • springs - way improved 3D and speakers disappearing quotient increased. I've always been a spikes man but no more. Springs under amps work well too.

noromance

Owner
@music_is_life Thanks. Appreciate you coming by.

noromance

Owner
@tomic601 I couldn't shorten the preamp power supply cable. Any closer and there is some hum induction from the power transformer. However, I did replace the wire per your suggestion. Not to silver but to my trusty solid core 12 gauge UP-OCC copper in Teflon.

noromance

Owner
Thanks Bill. Your own set up is pretty excellent.

noromance

Owner
Thanks @sourpuss123 . Appreciate you coming by.

noromance

Owner
Thanks Davey. It does sound pretty good. Clear, fast, clean, and transparent— not slow and syrupy like one might think of vintage tube.

noromance

Owner
Memoed here from a forum post.. On the subject of listening skills...I have never given it much thought. On reflection, it’s been a saga of almost 40 years. An evolution where I keep the good things and let go the things that do not work. Most of the record(!) is on my Virtual System. What isn’t there is the countless hours of tweaking, reconditioning tube gear, tube rolling, and building a reference quality phono preamp from scratch which would sell for $10k today. Each improvement removed a veil allowing the music to come through. Like that crystalline blackness of live music. Layers of depth, emerging 3D soundstage, transient speed, timbre of instruments, and most importantly, the color of everything.

noromance

Owner
Thanks @alan2

noromance

Owner
@sbank Thanks. Surprised the SOTA improved on the SP10 in obsidian.

noromance

Owner
A member asked a question:
I’m planning getting a 401 and still pondering between layered wood and slate for the plinth. I saw your comment about slate being cooler and monochromatic than wood. How about expressiveness? Overall you recommend slate to wood?
Answer:
Let's forget everything except for the ability for the table to extract detail. Meaning how low can we push the noise floor down so subtle information is not lost. Then you need slate. On springs. On concrete. Also, my 401 is modified somewhat and better than stock. So figure in the idler, bearing and platter at some stage. Do not over-tighten mounting bolts. Do not add damping under 401 to plinth. Use a 12" arm.

noromance

Owner
A member asked a question:
Do you still have your HF35 Monoblocs ? Would you recommend any mods to them ?
Answer:
Yes. 2 sets. One set was modified by Stu Remmington a few years ago. Not sure if he still does them. They are heavily modified. Rebuilt, in fact. There are 3 chokes in the power supply. The auto bias has been converted to fixed bias. The input pentode circuit has been converted to triode configuration. Then all the passive components have been changed for PIO/film caps, Vishay/Dale resisters. And the tubes are types that work best which I selected through experimental trial and error.
The other set are merely refurbished. i.e. New caps and tubes. 
They both sound really good. The Stu version responds to any change I make down the line. They are extremely detailed, sweet, colorful, and fast. FWIW, if you only replace the power supply caps for decent electrolytics, and the coupling caps to K40Y PIO caps AND use new Tung-Sol 7581A and GZ34 and a decent 6SN7, you will have a fine monos for relatively low money.

noromance

Owner
Ongoing phono psu work. Replaced the GE 6SJ7 with the military version of this. It's a red RCA 5693. It has a big reputation. Woot! What an improvement.  3D space and air. A hint of sweetness (not warmth) and more detail.

noromance

Owner
 Thanks @16f4

Replaced the rectifier tube in the PSU with a GZ34. That cleaned up the bass issue and tightened things up. Fitted a DPDT switch so I can toggle between SS and tube which is interesting. SS is cleaner and sharper and more neutral. So I go with that. Then I flip back to tube and play it again and now it sounds better! More presence and holography -more musical. But at what cost? I'm tempted to replace resistors and caps in the tube PSU and see if I can eek out more neutrality from it.

noromance

Owner
Thanks Jim. I'm still tweaking so I may do that. I'm going to add a switch to flip between power supplies. I may also replace old PIO caps.

noromance

Owner
Added a vintage tube power supply to my Croft phono preamp. It's replacing the transformer sand diodes. It's old and original. Tube rectifier and series regulator with OC3, 6SJ7, 2 x 6L6 (replaced with Tung Sol 7581A) Anyhow, it adds some heft and authority to the sound. More holographic, better detail and larger soundstage. More colorful. Very musical. Only negative is a bit more bass on heavier content than I'd like.

noromance

Owner
Thanks cymbop. Love you speaker array too. Big change from the Zu room!

noromance

Owner
 @frozentundra  Ha, Not that young! Not too old. The basement - too expensive but mostly disruptive. Where would I put everything while the work was being done? It's dry. Gets a little chilly in winter. Great in summer. Concrete - not as reflective as you'd think. Check out the "What's on your turntable tonight" thread for playlists. Thanks for stopping by. It does sound pretty good. Quad ESL57 are classics and often regarded as having the best midband of any speaker, ever.

noromance

Owner
Added a Samsung 65" 4k TV to the second system. Why have I waited so long? This may seriously challenge the vinyl experience!

noromance

Owner
@scar972 Back at you with the great gear. Amazing. How do you find the Jelco? I have a few.

noromance

Owner
Hi Anthony. Thanks. My walnut later model 401 neon works. It needs the 110v bulb. The original won't strike at 110v. My slate early 401 neon is disconnected for better(?) sound.

noromance

Owner
Hey Sub! Great to see your slabs! Your rig looks solid. Great room.

noromance

Owner
Added Vishay z foil resistors to Croft 25R phono preamp. Wow, what an improvement.  Clearer, faster, blacker, vocalist and instruments more fleshed out and more human. I'd like to replace more.

noromance

Owner
Thanks K4rstar! I may persue moew older vintage tables and arms some day and a Grey Research is on the wishlist as long as it works with my Deccas which it should.

noromance

Owner
Hi Dan, I sent you a PM.

noromance

Owner
Hi Rothwea. It's been one of my big upgrades. It's so cheap to undertake and no biggie if it doesn't work out. Not sure how it would work on a non-concrete floor. Main improvement is a feeling of solidity and stability resulting in better defined notes and blackness.

noromance

Owner
@jond Yes, they've settled down somewhat. However, I think if you think they're bright, they don't lose that attribute, the frequency response evens out.
@tzh21y - Thanks!


noromance

Owner
Added a black aluminum 20mm oversized platter to the slate plinth 401. Beautifully made. I did some listening tests before and after swapping out on a number of tracks (after all the tubes were warmed up for an hour.) Definite increase in bass control. I've been having some issues with a little bloom in the low end which have been tamed. Color, speed and focus -especially in the mid bass- is improved by a considerable margin. The sound stage narrowed a little for the first few tracks but seemed to be result of improved focus and increased stability of image placement. An upgrade, at around $750 inc s/h that puts a smile on the face.

noromance

Owner
Swapped out AudioSilente idler wheel (c. $120 shipped) for an Artisan Fidelity idler ($394 shipped). See review in forum.

noromance

Owner
I have been lucky to have obtained over the years a collection of 50s to 70s jazz and blues records. The recordings are wonderful (pre-digital) and full of life. Huge dynamics, see- thru transparency, colorful, detailed, quiet.

noromance

Owner
@jond Thanks for the feedback.  
The Croft is outstanding. I just wish it was tweakable but it is so tightly built, it is very difficult to swap caps etc. An OFC mains cord and Shuguang black 12AX7LS tubes elevated its performance far beyond stock.
I just added Psvane globe 6SN7 to the EICOs. Tremendous increase in detail and transparency. They are a little bright but not run in yet. 

noromance

Owner
Took the grills off the Quads.

noromance

Owner
Xposted from Analog forum.
Definitely reduces surface noise in my set-up. One thing that has become increasingly apparent is that older analog recordings are simply amazing. Much increased detail throughout the frequency range. I can hear plucked bass strings vibrating against each other where they are innocuous on the lesser arm. Tiny details like the metallic shimmer of a percussion bell are exquisite. For a relatively low-budget level phono rig like mine ($12k), this arm is transformative. If you are in the market for a Jelco 750 or 550, or indeed, a Rega, I implore you; spend the extra and get the 850. It is that good.
The cons:
1. The arm rest clamp is not great. It doesn’t grab the arm like a friction type. It simply rests on it unless you close it and the hard plastic feels cheap.
2. There is a very mild and barely detectable upper bass/lower mid dip in the response more like a slight veiling of that portion of the spectrum. After swapping out the arm stub and counterweight on my 750L for an Expressimo Audio brass substitute, and experiencing the improvement wrought by that, I believe the same rubber stub on the 850 is causing this coloration (note 3). Again, it is minor. I will follow up if EA bring out a brass replacement for the 850. I spoke to Brian there and at this time there is none available.
NOTES
1. It may also be not broken in yet as I only used it for 4 hours.
2. I have not played with VTA - too busy listening to my albums all over again.
3. I also have a standard 750L with which comparisons were made.
5. The arm looks better and bigger in the flesh than in pictures.

noromance

Owner
Xposted from Analog forum. Just received the new Jelco TK850L.
It is a drop in replacement for the previous model 750L. It retails for around $1100 from a few online retailers. However I got it from GEM Dandy's George Merrill who retails it for $895. I used the headshell from the 750. It looks like it’s the same one. I am running a Decca Super Gold with Paratrace stylus on an Audiograil early model 401 with an Audiosilente idler (just buy it) in a slate and maple plinth. Initial impression is that it is a solid improvement on the 750. Listening to Buddy Tate and Walt Davenport in Nice, France 1974. An improvement in soundstaging is immediately obvious as is speed of attack, or rise-time. Depth and width are improved. The music is more colorful. Trombone sounds more golden than I recall while the guy playing tuba sounds like he is huffing and puffing into the instrument. An added realism. Rim shots are faster and snares portray more insight into the rattles -the metal has color and feel...a mechanical quality. Percussion is much improved. Surface noise seems reduced, supressed even. Now playing Jay McShann and Janis Siegel, Ain’t Misbehavin’. Wonderful vocals and very dynamic with jump out of the stage piano fortissimo that I have never heard before. Highs better with oodles of detail but no harshness. More black space between notes... all of that. 
I could go on about the minutiae but I’ll stop. This thing makes music like I’ve never heard. It is a taste of the high end which is lacking in the 750.

noromance

Owner
Fitted AudioSilente idler.
See post.
https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/new-idler-for-garrard-401

noromance

Owner
After a few weeks with the slate plinth / "new" 401 (and new Jelco 750L with Expressimo Audio brass weight and stub), it's time to report back. First off, it looks great. After power up, out of the box, the slate version was a little 'cooler' sounding than the birch plinth version but not as much as I'd expected. It was also a little more monochromatic than I'd hoped, removing some bloom and color from the music.
I'd wanted to remove the big oak table from the system for some time, so, in a fit of gung-ho, did precisely that. I had the preamp on an old metal stand with spikes so I re-purposed it as a table for the turntable. Sitting it on the steel table directly (on cones), the sound was a lot cleaner and tighter (esp in the mid bass-bass) with darker silences but it was still a little colorless. Remember, it only had about 4 hours on it at this point. I had a 24" square of 4" maple lying around so I added that on top of the steel framed table with aluminum cones supporting the slate. Wow! The color returned. I love a neutral sound -I can detect systemic color in music as a coloration, smearing, dirtying... whatever, and can't stand it. This is not like that. It simply allows the color of the instruments to shine. Over the next 100 hours, the sound has opened up even more. Detail has increased on my test records. Bass is superb. It is amazing how good the bass is on old Quad ESL 57s. Instruments pop out of the sound-stage to a much greater degree than the old 401 rig. 

noromance

Owner
Update 12/2017 - Added Audio Grail Sable Garrard 401 and Jim Campbell slate plinth. Replaced heavy oak table with metal and maple stand. See pics.

noromance

Owner
I thought I'd add that my other pair of Eico HF35s monoblocs power the Spendor SP2/2 speakers on the end of a Sony DVD player. The sound is quite remarkable since I swapped out a Japanese sand amp. Tubes, man!

noromance

Owner
Hi. Yes, 12AX7. Fixed bias, 3 chokes, redone from ground up. Ground busbar, oil caps etc.

noromance

Owner
Ha! EICO HF35s rebuilt from the chassis up by Stuart Remington of Eicobuilders. It is the first time my rig has portrayed such holophonic imaging. The old amps portrayed good imaging from left to right-stage width- and decent depth and modest speaker disappearing tricks. These new amps have increased the perception of depth to fill the room. Instruments exhibit front to back presence as if they were in the room. I don't think I have ever heard so much information retrival before including shows. It was one of those rare "listen to my records all over again" moments. I do have some nice black plate tube installed.

noromance

Owner
Just swapped out my EICO HF35s for new power amps.

noromance

Owner
Thanks David. I had a look at the rooms and gear in your Big Horns+Sets+Vinyl system! Goodness!
I have been using the Belkins (black i think, blues are not made anymore I think) for ages and have no complaint.. but what you don't know. I recently swapped out my speaker cable for UPOCC and was impressed. Now, I'm wondering if using the same type of copper will be an improvement over the Belkins. I'm not a big spender on cable.

noromance

Owner
Thanks Salectric. Yes, the EICOs are magic. You are right-classic circuits, good components, old Deccas and old jazz vinyl beat much of the new reissued stuff .

noromance

Owner
Re Croft Micro 25R. Ended up with 2 x
Telefunken ECC83 in phono stage and 2 x
Telefunken ECC83 in the PSU regulator and
a GE triple mica black plate 5751JG in
the line/buffer stage. Magic. Don't
assume that the regulator tubes don't
make a difference. This amp is ruthless
in revealing differences between tubes.

noromance

Owner
Thanks Needfreestuff!

noromance

Owner
UP-OCC solid core copper for speaker cable

After reading about all these expensive cables and their extravagant claims, I decided to source most likely the same wire that goes into many of them.

I have my monoblocs underneath and therefore close to the speakers, so I ordered 8 feet of 14awg UP-OCC wire (with PTFE insulation) online. It is quite springy so I clamped it gently to the bench and cut it into 4 equal lengths. Assembling it into 2 x 24" speaker cables took a few minutes. I kept it running in the same direction, just in case. Be careful to gently slice the insulation and not to scar the copper.

Anyway, the improvement in sound quality was of a high order. Large increases in speed and transparency, more air, better definition of instruments, less coloration, backing voices I never noticed before etc. I urge folks to try this before spending lots of money on speaker cables. I don't bother with connectors as I feel they are another item in the way but that's your call. The wire was $6 a foot.

Available here:http://www.partsconnexion.com/wire_hookup_neotech_copper_teflon.html

See a photo of my cable here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/6iot28p0weuwytn/up-occ.jpg?dl=0

noromance

Owner
Hmm. ok, after more extended listening and comparison between the 25 and 25R, I have noticed that whereas the GE5751 worked a treat in the 25, they are lacking in the R. (I know about ht e gain)I went back to the ECC803S. While a tiny bit "steely", they offer more punch and air. With the same tubes in both amps, the R is definitely better. (I was getting worried there for a minute!)

noromance

Owner
Swapped out Croft Micro 25 for the R
version. It came with cryoed JJ ECC803S
which are decent enough tubes but don't
hold a candle to the vintage ones I
swapped in. See item for more info.
Compared to its lesser stablemate, the R
has a lower noise floor, slightly fuller
more colorful bass, more timbral
differenciation, improved focus with more
stable imaging and a subtle speaker
disappearing trick.

noromance

Owner
Hi Sunnyboy. Yes, amazing how bad it was!

noromance

Owner
The wife bought me a Boston Audio Mat 2 for Christmas... Quel suprise! Out of the blue. I think I might have mentioned something a while back. We had friends over but I disappeared into the basement clutching the carbon.
Anyhow, I put it on and played a familiar track by Joan Baez. I'd had a few single malts and it sounded fine, a little darker and quieter. It was late so I went back to the party and looked forward to some more serious listening in the morning.
After letting the amps and 401 warm up and making sure no one was using any lights with dimmers in the house, I settled down for some extended listening. First up was Leonard Cohen Famous Blue Raincoat with me listening for the intro tinkling bells that let me know what the system resolution is like. They weren't really audible. The song itself was darker than I remember with Len's voice having a full wooden tone. Joni Mitchell's Amelia is a dark recording and now it sounded darker, more reticent and I had to increase the volume over the normal setting. I listened to a bunch more and the same pattern emerged. Given that the Mat is higher than the standard rubber on the 401, I raised the arm and listened to a few more tracks, Carol Kidd, Robin Williamson, Puccini, Joan Collins, Julie Andrews before settling on Neil Young's Pocahontas from Rust Never Sleeps to try some detailed A-B comparisons. I moved the arm up and down and swapped mats and realized this was not going to work. The Mat simply robbed essential information from the system. Bass was muddy, air, timbre, color and fine detail were severely ameliorated. Swapping in the rubber was a relief as the music came to life and the tiniest of details like the rasp of rosin leaving a puff of dust could be heard on Paul Tortellier's cello on Saint Saens The Swan. One good that came of this was that playing with the VTA has brought the Decca up a notch to new heights of performance. Fine details are now jaw dropping and the musicality is breathtaking on the right recording. Not to disparage the Mat2 which is beautifully made but I cannot imagine how it gets such good reviews. Each to his own I guess.

noromance

Owner
Here is a clip which I took with my Samsung S4 phone:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1LS5iN3G54

noromance

Owner
Thanks for the update Dan. The extra weight has to have some effect on the bearing. Are you using the ceramic ball or another make? I read somewhere that the best are brass and you replace them as they wear.

noromance

Owner
Lespier, those AC3Xs look amazing. They ain't cheap! I did run the Decca on an Ittok years back but it was never really happy. I'd love to try it on a Decca International Arm but they're hard to come by. I just can't justify big expense with gear so I tend to look for the biggest bang for the least cost.

Hi Dan, thanks for taking the time to drop by! Congrats on all the work you've done on your rig. It's begging for some Sophie Electrics or TJ Mesh Plates.
One question: Do you notice or know of any issue with the extra weight of the copper and clamp on the 401 main bearing?

noromance

Owner
OK, after some delays in the mail the refurbished Decca Super Gold came back with a new Paratrace stylus (and tie cord).
Under the magnifying glass, the diamond looks very fine and thin after the rock that was there before. JW says it was 75% worn but honestly, despite using a magic eraser, it was playing pretty badly. Maybe the cord had stretched with wear - it was after all 25+ years old.
Anyhow, JW didn't return the mounting screws which was a bit of a pain as all the ones I had were a little too long. I had to add a brass nut between the bolt and the top of the headshell so the screw didn't punch the top of the can. The extra weight meant moving the balance weight a little further back on the arm.
There is one particular track that I use as a test for detail. Famous Blue Raincoat by Leonard Cohen has some tinkling bells that are barely audible (they brought them forward in the mix for the remaster) at the start of the track. With the old Decca, they were barely audible. With the re-tip, they are crystal clear and hang in space. This is a good start! Julie Andrews "Before I Gaze At You Again" from Camelot on RCA 1960 is three dimensional with wonderful richness, a palpable presence in the room. This is a very dynamic recording but there was no evidence of sibilance or tracking error despite what Julie could throw at it. Interestingly, I really didn't pay much attention to set up. VTF 1.8gr, VTA -dunno tonearm is parallel to the record. SRA, no idea. Azimuth, looks fine by eye.
Next up, Loudon Wainwright "Hard Day on the Planet" from More Love Songs. This is a great recording with acoustic bass, finger clicking and piano, sax, xylophone adding a dynamic snap to the driving vocal. I'd call it post-jazz-blues! Great air and space around the instruments. I'm definitely noticing much better out of the speaker sound stage. Increased depth and layering and ... big and, despite an increase in surface noise, a way lower noise floor. The music is released from the groove like I've never heard before. Now, on the increased surface noise, it's not like before, it's a higher frequency and "faster" noise. Before the refurb, it was a broad spectrum "slower" noise -much more intrusive.
Talk Talk "Happiness is Easy" from The Colour of Spring is a great analogue recording from the 80s. You've heard people say "I'm listening to my records all over again"? I'm hearing stuff I've never heard before. This is not a review about how much more detailed the retipped cartridge is. It is about how the music, the interplay of musicians, the timbre of a bass, the aching pain in Janis Ian "At Seventeen" and Loudon Wainwright "Hosptial Lady" has been released from the recording. There is no coloration that I have yet to pick up on. Yes, it is a tiny bit bright and a little congested on dense material like the emsemble pieces on the 1966 RCA Victor recording of Show Boat. But it's only out of the box. Nevertheless, William Warfield's Ol' Man River is ear poppingly good. What a recording! The bass vocal is in the room and the acoustic goes well beyond the speakers. This cartridge is a significant upgrade. What of the Ortofon? Not in the same league.

noromance

Owner
I came by a 1957 vintage (burnt in) GE tube and swapped out the Telefunken ECC83. Initial results indicated slightly better channel separation and initially more relaxed presentation with improved clarity on Miles Davis Kind of Blue on 180 gram. However after a few hours, it seemed the sound was creamier and less detailed. Worse, dynamics were flattened. Swapping back in the Tele brought the system back to life. Yes, the slightly "grey" Tele signature came back but so too did all the detail, air, fine treble and clean bass. Ripple by the Grateful Dead regained the warm emotion and all the voices at the end were identifiable. With the GE 5751, they were merged into one wall of sound.
My final recommendation for this amp is GE JG-5751 BPTM in phono and ECC83/12AX7 in the line.

noromance

Owner
Raytheon was a no go. Constricted and thin. A good tube just not a great one. The GE JG=5751 BPTM is simply outstanding. It's weird how tubes can make or break a rig. There's the possibility the NOS Sylvanias were never played and therefore never burnt in...

noromance

Owner
Swapped out the (phone tubes) GE 5751 BPTM for NOS Sylvania 5751 Gold GPTM.
Firmer and tighter bass, a little dryer than the GE which are very liquid. Definitely a bigger presentation with the music swelling more appreciably. The sound is a like the Telefunken sound. I always feel that grey plates have a slightly grey coloration whereas black plates seem to have a slightly darker presentation... like there are are blacker silences. There is a pretty stark difference between these tubes.

Sylvanias:
speakers disappear, I can't even imagine the sound is coming from the speaker.
fuller, more beguiling bass, upper bass and lower mids.
spittier dryer treble.
more pluck and snap on strings.
piano sounds more expansive.
treble not as sparkly as GE, less air, seems busy.
color, timbre not as delicate as on the GE tubes.

Switching back to GE:
everything seems a little smaller, quieter and way blacker. More musical,less hi-fi.
definitely more detail and air. I can hear the acoustic here much better.
Crystal Gayle on Waits - Is There Any Way Out of This Dream is simply more musical like a 300B SET. Wispy, breathy trumpet. Recording hiss is more audible.
Looks like the GEs are staying. They make me smile, the Golds would impress the those who like a bigger, rockier sound.

I'm going to try the Sylvania and Raytheon 12AX7 BPLP in the output of the preamp instead of the Telefunken ECC83. Stay tuned.

noromance

Owner
Changed description to include some historical info.

noromance

Owner
System edited: Added some fresh photos.

noromance

Owner
Iso, that's top class kit you have there. I was going to go the big speaker/SET route with Min's http://www.tubeaudiolab.com/
It seems like that is the final destination!

noromance

Owner
System edited: Added photo of the new old Quads on home made stands.

noromance

Owner
Isochronism, I have just added Quad ESLs. Photos and report coming soon!

noromance

Owner
Hi Dan,
How are you doing with the HF35s?
I love mine. They remind me of Leak Stereo 20s with better bass and better transparency. They are exceptional.
Brian

noromance

Owner
Thanks Dan. Lovely 401 you have there. You're right -I'm also thinking full range speakers like Altec 604s or Tannoys would be nice. I might try Jensens or something like them in open baffles. Another day's work!

noromance