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#1
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Hi Everyone,
I was just wondering what people's opinions were on the famous (or infamous?) McIntosh autoformers, i.e., whether you think they are useful, how they change the sound you hear, et cetera. I've heard some people say they like the sound of the MC7200, for example, which is a direct-coupled amp without autoformers. I have a Mac 2300, Mac 2200 (both have autoformers), and a Mac 2002 (no autoformers), but have not yet done side-by-side comparisons. It probably would be most interesting (and fair) to compare the 2200 and 2002, since they have the same rated power, but differ mainly in the presence/absence of autoformers (2200 has 'em, 2002 doesn't...cue music..."Almond Joy's got nuts, Mounds don't!") Thanks, and looking forward to your comments, Adam |
#2
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On 4 Jun 2006 19:00:31 -0700, "Adam" wrote:
Hi Everyone, I was just wondering what people's opinions were on the famous (or infamous?) McIntosh autoformers, i.e., whether you think they are useful, how they change the sound you hear, et cetera. I've heard some people say they like the sound of the MC7200, for example, which is a direct-coupled amp without autoformers. I have a Mac 2300, Mac 2200 (both have autoformers), and a Mac 2002 (no autoformers), but have not yet done side-by-side comparisons. It probably would be most interesting (and fair) to compare the 2200 and 2002, since they have the same rated power, but differ mainly in the presence/absence of autoformers (2200 has 'em, 2002 doesn't...cue music..."Almond Joy's got nuts, Mounds don't!") Thanks, and looking forward to your comments, Adam For those of us who are less "in the know", can you explian just what an "autoformer" is? |
#3
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![]() For those of us who are less "in the know", can you explian just what an "autoformer" is? As per Roger Russell's website, http://www.roger-russell.com/mcintosh1.htm autoformers are output transformers which allow the amp to drive different loads (2, 4, or 8 ohms, for example) and exploit the full power rating, without increasing their amount of heat generation. According to Mr. Russell, they also provide some measure of protection to the loudspeakers in the case of an amplifier malfunction. Please check out his website for the full description. Thanks, Adam |
#4
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wrote:
For those of us who are less "in the know", can you explian just what an "autoformer" is? An autoformer or autotransformer is a transformer built with a single winding with multiple taps... you can use it to alter voltage or impedance like a standard transformer but without getting any isolation. Lots of companies used to make transformers for speaker load matching, so you could run 70V systems from transistor amps with 8 ohm outputs, or you could get more power from an amp that could drive 4 ohm loads by better matching into an 8 ohm speaker system. For the most part these aren't used any more, now that we have amplifiers that can put huge amounts of power into low impedance loads. Some folks have liked what the transformer matching does to the low end on studio monitors. Some folks haven't. Personally I think it depends entirely on the speakers and how they are voiced... a lot of older speakers were voiced for transformer matching since they were designed for tube amps, and they sound better that way than with a low-Z source. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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