Description

Read more...

Room Details

Dimensions: 18’ × 12’  Medium
Ceiling: 8’


Components Toggle details

    • Linn LP12 Turntable
    A legendary turntable worthy of its acclaim which has been in my system since 1998- 26 years!  Though may not be the very best by current standards, yet still provides incredible heights of musical satisfaction. In many ways my most satisfying source component. Given a good recording, a deep black background, startling dynamics, and organic 3D soundstage are all present. This is a final purchase! Outfitted with an Ekos 2 arm, Kandid cartridge, Karousel bearing, Keel subchassis, Trampoline 2 base and Radikal 2 power supply, in a fluted walnut plinth. What remains from my original purchase in 1998 is the plinth, top plate, outer platter and dust cover.
    • McIntosh MR 78 FM Tuner
    Legendary tuner that lives up to the hype and made better with Richard Modaferri's current updates. Very sensitive, but not just for DX'ers. Very musical and quiet when fed a good signal and very flexible to boot. Hard not to be thoroughly satisfied with this classic vintage tuner. I can see why this is considered one of the 3 greatest tuners.
    • Auralic Aries G1 Streaming Transport
    This very engaging streaming transport, connected to my DAC using Audioquest Carbon AES cable produces a vivid, bold, nuanced and alive sound that has a stable soundstage that is wide, tall, and relatively deep, all as the recording permits. A massively impressive ability to be detailed and yet without any hint of being harsh or grating. The user interface, using Lightning DS is fine, but not the ultimate in flexibility.  This streamer and any streamer is the golden ticket the discovery of new music. I still love my LPs and the sound of vinyl, but I would not begrudge anyone who decides a streaming platform  with a good streamer/DAC combination is the way to go. Makes me wonder what an Auralic Aries G2.2 or G3 is capable of.
    • Sim Neo 260D CD Player
    Nicely made CD player/transport which I use solely as a transport. The internal DAC, which I’ve tried a few times, is also quite capable, producing both detail and warmth without being bright or harsh. Offers a lot of versatility but admittedly, nowadays, I don't use this component much. Connected to my DAC via an Audioquest Carbon SPDIF cable. I wish Simaudio had provided a BNC audio output (a common omission among CD players).
    • Bricasti M1 DAC
    An astonishingly good DAC, updated with Bricasti's MDX board and latest firmware. While I am not going to say it  sounds "analog" I will say it just sounds like music with no need to add a qualifier such as "it sounds good for digital"- it sounds great- period! This DAC never disappoints and since its introduction many DACs have come along, but for someone looking for a great DAC that does complete justice to the music, this is a final destination. Bricasti offers excellent customer support to boot.
    • Pass Labs XP15 Phono Preamp
    Quiet, flexible and dynamic. Does the job very well, and surpasses my prior phono preamp, a Pass Aleph Ono. Cartridge load and gain settings on the back are inconvenient but in all fairness, it is a "set it once and forget it" thing.
    • Pass Labs XP20 Preamplifier
    Simply the best preamp I've ever owned- I like this preamp better than a Conrad Johnson Premier 17LS2 I owned in the past, and that was a great preamp. Very flexible, quiet, dynamic, and has enough inputs for a typical stereo setup. It really is true- a great preamp can make or break a system.  Yet another final purchase.
    • Pass Labs X250.8 Power amplifier
    Power and subtlety- says it all. I ran tube amps for many years (Conrad Johnson and Rogue)- with the Pass gear I don't miss the tubes. On a side note- this amp has the best binding posts I've ever seen. Solid connection, impossible to over tighten and never loose. Only one caveat- won't readily accept spades over 14mm wide (I filed the outer edges of my spades a bit to get them to fit properly). Best get someone to help you move this amp around as it's very heavy. It may sound tiring to hear- another final purchase.
    • Revel Studio 2 Speakers
    Beautiful full range speakers. Solid, delicate, full range and great imaging. Really does not need a subwoofer, but a friend gave me a subwoofer (McIntosh PS112), so of course I'm running a subwoofer. Never tried bi-wiring the speakers. I know some people knock Revel speakers for not having much 'character'. Good! I prefer a speaker that speaks the truth and does not editorialize and these speakers do not suffer from any dynamic compression at any realistic listening levels. Offer great microdynamics as well.
    • McIntosh PS-112 Subwoofer
    Old school sub gifted to me by a friend, lacking any auto setup features; new high performance subs are better, but this does the trick for me, and the price was right. Dialed in just right, this gives my Studio 2's the illusion of an even firmer grip on the bass. I don't think my Revel Studio 2's need a sub, but adding this sub has made a very good speaker system that much better. Plus it's fun.
    • Ohno Continuous Cast (OCC) Copper cables Interconnects and speaker cables
    OCC copper cables are to my ear the most natural sounding cable material available. If your system is very resolving, it's worth it. My interconnects between sources, preamp, power amp and headphone amp and speaker cables are  exclusively OCC, from Audience, Acoustic Zen and most recently, Neotech. The only non-OCC analog cables I am running are Blue Jeans interconnects to my subwoofer. I am not convinced OCC cabling to my subwoofer would make a difference as I've never noticed the performance advantages of OCC interconnects are at the lower frequencies.
    • Digital Interconnects Audioquest Carbon AES/EBU and SPDIF
    I run an AES/EBU cable from my Aries G1 to my DAC and a SPDIF cable from my Neo 260D to my DAC; both are Audioquest Carbon cables.
    • Bottlehead Single Ended Experimenters headphone Amplifier 2.1
    Built this up from the kit- not my first Bottlehead build, and none of my Bottlehhead builds are quite stock. This is a very good headphone amp, and easily capable of sweetly driving a pair of power hungry Hifiman HE560 planar headphones. Can also be used with no modification as an integrated amp for very high efficiency speakers (I've tried it that way and am convinced the real forte for this piece is as a headphone amp). A satisfying build and terrific sound. Not used much as predominantly, I don't listen through headphones.
    • Solid Steel, Sound Organisation & VTI Equipment Racks
    I have two Solid Steel racks and one Sound Organisation rack all from the 1990's. What these racks have in common is that they are one piece all welded structures. They have served me well for decades and come from an era predating 4 and 5 figure racks. My amp sits on a nice VTI amp stand which was reasonably priced and is perfect for what I needed.
    • Stack Audio AUVA EQ equipment isolators
    Based on the many favorable comments I have read I decided to buy a set of 4 to give them a try, and with a 30 day return policy, there was no down side. Well, these really work in my application. I experimented using them under my streaming transport and my DAC, and I found that the results were highly positive under the streaming transport, but ambiguous under the DAC. What did they do? Increased focus and seemingly, provided greater low frequency dynamics that are readily palpable.
    • Room treatment GIK & Acoustimas
    Last year I added some room treatment; spent under $500 and it was money very well spent. I put some larger panels behind my listening position and some smaller panels at the front of the room.

Comments 52

Showing all comments by hamr.

View all comments

Great system! The Pass gear looks interesting. I wish we had a dealer nearby where I could get a loaner to hear it at home.

hamr