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Got to say amen goFab,
Stereophile would have had one notable review if I had been writing one on the most expensive amp. If it were an inexpensive product, I would simply say it broken. If it had been this one for $350K and it was apparent they meant it to be this way, the review would have redefined the term scathing. I believe I recall some part of the review mentioned, "a listening experience like no other, a way of hearing the music different than any other". I should think so, considering the broken manner it was operating most of the time. To be very generous and say higher levels of second harmonic only aren't too bad, wasn't it like sqarewaving at 10 watts? JA did comment on it in the "AS WE Hear It" section. Commenting on a very expensive system that was so good, and would have left one with enough money for some very expensive cars too. I just wonder if JA still owned the magazine rather than working for a large publishing owner, would he have said differently? More assertively declared the amp broken as designed. I know he reads this newsgroup. But cannot think of how he could defend that product or the review of it. If he said he has an employer to satisfy I would accept that, but don't think he would admit it. Otherwise, I see no defense for it. When learning electronic circuits, I built a simple pre-amp circuit on a bread board with a decent power supply on it. It had one jfet, cap coupled at both ends. Was operated single ended. Cheap bulk jfets being what they are it only had about one volt of clean output before heavy second harmonic distortion set in. I even experimented with using it that way, and padding down the output to hear different amounts of second harmonic distortion. And it sounded surprisingly good even when you could see the distortion on an o-scope. But it wasn't high fidelity and it wasn't an improvement. And I could have paralleled a few of them and put out the power that darn $350k amp would with similar operating characteristics although I don't suppose it would have the voltage swing to keep putting out the higher voltage and wattage levels well past the point of heavy distortion. I have been unhappy with Stereophile, and that pretty much does it for me I think. Lunacy for sure. Dennis "goFab.com" wrote in message It's all true! The "cult of Harry" is as weird as ever. Unfortunately, Stereophile also grows progressively less readable with each passing issue, IMHO. Part of the problem is that Mr. Atkinson seems reluctant to exercise his editorial prerogatives; there is a definite sense of an absence of strong leadership and the absence of an adult, guiding hand. As a result, writers like Dudley, "Aural Robert" and certain others are devoting seemingly ever-greater portions of their columns to political rants, domestic soap operas and the like. Stereophile writers shouldn't write about irrelevancies such as politics for the same reason IBM shouldn't diversify into making truck tires -- readers and shareholders can diversify their magazine and newspaper purchases (or stock holdings) a lot more efficiently than an audio reviewer can learn enough to become a value-adding political pundit (or even an entertaining writer), or computer makers can learn how to make treads. But Mr. Atkinson lets it all continue. I increasingly value writers like Damkroger who stick to the knitting and do a really fine job, minus the doo-dads. In addition, the equipment reviews seem have become, at last, totally unmoored from reality. A recent review of an absurd $350,000 tube amplifier from Wavac results in the predictable "takes things to a whole new level of heart-stopping reality" praise from the reviewer. We then find out in Mr. Atkinson's technical sidebar that this amplifier, costing as much as 3 Porsche 911s and rated at an already-modest 150 W/ch, actually only reaches 2 W/ch before clipping. There are some other eye opening measuremens as well, reminding one of Mr. Atkinson's comment in another recent review (I believe about an amplifier Dudley was raving about) that amplifiers that test like this are usually described as "broken." Yet the Wavac review is unreservedly positive in recommending the expenditure of readers' $350K. My point is not that this amplifier has nothing to recommend it -- no doubt it is a real work of art if not of engineering. But if a review of the most expensive home audio component in the world (?) is all sweetness and light when the thing can only put out 1/75th of its rated power before clipping and has no other obvious severe measured flaws, one wonders if equipment reviews have any function at all -- besides providing backing pages for advertisements. Oh, well. At least Stereophile publishes Mr. Atkinson's sidebars so that the intrepid reader can see the foolishness of the accompanying review -- with the Absolute Sound we have nothing but the Golden Ears to trust (you know, the ones that declared any number of products -- e.g., the Hovland premamp, the Hurricanes -- to be the Second Coming of Christ, only to run away from those claims very rapidly because a few capacitors or some such were changed). I'm growing to appreciate the British style of audio journalism a bit more. On the whole, it seems decidedly more analytical and less emotional than its US counterpart. There's a good degree of skepticism, and a feeling of balance in the reviews. There's also less of a feeling of outright hostility toward the readership. It isn't hard to detect in both the Absolute Sound and Stereophile a real kind of "f*** you" attitude towards their readers, whether it be in responses to letters in both magazines in which notable reviewers routinely display childish pique, the tone of Mr. Pearson's periodic descents from Valhal -- er, Sea Cliff -- or in Stereophile's recent arrogant response to numerous reader complaints about too much Musical Fidelity -- "you don't like Musical Fidelity coverage? Here's tons more!" -- including paragraphs spilled reviewing Musical Fidelity's first watch. Yes, wris****ch. You read that right. Sorry to take this thread so far afield! Cheers. |
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