Great License Plate for Audiophiles....

SilverLexus

Super Enthusiast
This is Kevin Deal's Ferrari, a noted seller of vacuum tube audio equipment:



toobguyferari.jpg
 
Guess I'm out of the loop here, can you elaborate for us not familiar with that level of technical jargon :)?
 
Guess I'm out of the loop here, can you elaborate for us not familiar with that level of technical jargon



Retro amplification in the form of vacuum tubes which came before the transistor, er sand amps. :D
 
Yeah, except for those of us who don't buy into the "tube rules" philosophy ;) There are certainly camps of audiophiles in both camps. Not unlike those who prefer vinyl over CD or a carnauba over a sealant and vice versa.
 
For a guitarist/bassist...there's nothing sweeter than the warmth that a valve amp (tubes are also called "valves") give over solid state circuitry.



My last amp was a 100 watt Marshall bass head unit with two Traynor cabinets equipped with four 15" Altec Lansing speakers...



can you say....



Loud?
 
It can be (and indeed is) argued that "warmth" is the same as "muddied" or less than clear and concise. You say tomato I say tomato, potato...potato (hey! that doesn't "translate" :chuckle: )
 
A guitar amp is a very special animal. They’re meant to create a sound of their own not reproduce a sound that they’re fed. Electric guitars can’t make sound by themselves. The amp (a guitar amp is usually a combination of amplifier electronics with a speaker) is part of the “instrument�. And electric guitar without an amp is like a carburetor without an engine.



To create their own sound guitar amps are deliberately designed to operate the tubes in a highly nonlinear range of their transfer function. This creates an extremely complex relationship between the input and output.



An audio amp’s job is to make an exact reproduction (only larger) of whatever it’s fed. It shouldn’t change the signal in any way, shape or form other than to make it powerful enough to drive a loudspeaker. Audio amps’ electronic devices are utilized in their most highly linear operation ranges.



If transistors and tubes exhibited perfectly linear operation the output of either type of amp would be identical. The reality is that neither is perfect, some of either can be absolutely awful and some of either can be pretty darn good.



Transistors and tubes are also fundamentally different in their transfer characteristics. (And, to add even more confusion, bipolar transistors are fundamentally different form FET transistors.) So it’s a scientific fact that the outputs of various amplifiers are different from one another, what’s hotly debated is how/if those differences are audible.



The solid-state camp argues that the tube guys just like additional distortion, the bottleheads counter that silicon’s specific distortion products are nasty and unnatural. Both sides can produce excellent examples of their art. Neither has a clear winner in every circumstance.



I like to think of it much like FWD, RWD, AWD cars. There are talented designers that make great examples of each genre. Each can have advantages under certain circumstances. All can be a ton of fun to drive.





PC.
 
Gonzo0903 said:
For a guitarist/bassist...there's nothing sweeter than the warmth that a valve amp (tubes are also called "valves") give over solid state circuitry.



My last amp was a 100 watt Marshall bass head unit with two Traynor cabinets equipped with four 15" Altec Lansing speakers...



can you say....



Loud?



That's a little bit of power there. :D I've got a 50 watt Marshall JCM800 on top of 4 12's that's PLENTY loud enough for me. :D
 
One of the more random threads I've ever seen. There's a reason vacuum tubes went the way of the dinosaur.
 
Tasty said:
One of the more random threads I've ever seen. There's a reason vacuum tubes went the way of the dinosaur.



I suspect this kind of attitude wouldn't explain the carnauba vs. sealant debate...most people here use and enjoy both.
 
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