Tube or Transistor Amp? (vintage set up r)
staxwax
1,474 Posts
Recently came up on some vintage speakers - in the 30-60 watt / 8 ohm range -
they are very similar to these
Now I need a new amp and am wondering since im all vinyl/analogue if its worth considering getting an old vintage valve or tube amplifier.
They are said to have a warmer sound than transistor amps, similar to the difference between cd and vinyl, although tube amps are said to have a slight inherent hum.
Anyone here have any experience with tube vs. transistor amps? Any recommendations?
they are very similar to these
Now I need a new amp and am wondering since im all vinyl/analogue if its worth considering getting an old vintage valve or tube amplifier.
They are said to have a warmer sound than transistor amps, similar to the difference between cd and vinyl, although tube amps are said to have a slight inherent hum.
Anyone here have any experience with tube vs. transistor amps? Any recommendations?
Comments
I'm mostly interested in hearing about differences in sound quality between transistor and valve/tube amps though -
ie is it worth getting a vintage tube amp because of its supposed warmer sound or is better to just cop a new transistor amp? Anyone riding for the tube amp sound? I now have this notion that vinyl + tube amplification might be the next level of warm analogue sound.
Why do you prefer tubes to transistors?
I have a Dynaco tube preamp, which can be had for cheap because they were very popular, running into a Bryston 4B solid state amp, which is dead quiet and sounds great.
any vinyl heads care to chime in on general difference in sound quality between transistor and valve amps?
All i can find online on the subject is very technical or relates to guitar amps-
for recording - solid state
I think as you're just getting your feet wet w/ stereo gear that I'd stick to solid state. Get something that sounds good to you. I've found that 70's transistor gear sounds good and doesn't require the maintenance of tube gear. Lp's were still the format of choice so pre's/ integrated (pre+power) amps have good phono sections. Glowing tubes are certainly more appealing visually and higher end gear (McIntosh, Manley) looks like the shit.
There's also modern 'hybrid' amps that have tube pre's running through a solid-state power section that are popular. I had a Jolida for a bit that sounded nice and wasn't too spendy. I've been into older Luxman gear as of late and really enjoy it.
There's a limitless amount of nerding out over audio gear so explore a bit and report back.
the thing about a solid state amp is that it's a static beast... which is fine if you love the way it sounds. With a tube Amp you can change up the tubes... different manufacturers, year of prod. , etc... There is a huge difference in sound from various tubes, be it Amperex, RCA or whatever. Some have more bottom end, but aren't quick, while others are very transparent. So you can customize your sound.
nah theyre from 89. 22 years old - thats gotta qualify as vintage right?
Thanks for the advice guys.