A lot of B.S. there! Amplifiers sound very different. I will concede that more modern units have better sound than those of the past and will not likely sound very different. Vintage amps however, those from the golden age of the 1970's, most had quasi complementary outputs producing what I call "transistor sound". The higher priced units had complementary symmetry output stages, they sounded a bit better. Units utilising MosFet output sounded much better still. In the late seventies work was put into reducing Transient Intermodulation Distortion (TIM/TID) producing better sounding amplifiers.
Once almost forgotten tube amps had been around since the beginning. It has been said that it is impossible to build a bad sounding tube amp and I would mostly agree with that statement. Throughout the seventies my attention focused mostly on quad. Still I always thought that those old tube console stereos and radios sounded great! With the first release of "Glass Audio" I was sent into a tube building frenzy. Tubes produce subjectively better sound in part because they add a bit of harmonic distortion. I don't believe that that is the only reason however, a tube is a more linear device than a transistor is. For most signal processing you can't beat today's high end op-amps, even the venerable TL071 series sound fine. I would not bother to use tubes there. For phono preamps and for Mid/High power amplification I swear by them! Tubes are far more reliable than people give them credit for. I have had far more solid state amplifiers self destruct than any tube amplifier.
Interesting statement "buy well-recorded CD's"! Where do you find them these days?
Once almost forgotten tube amps had been around since the beginning. It has been said that it is impossible to build a bad sounding tube amp and I would mostly agree with that statement. Throughout the seventies my attention focused mostly on quad. Still I always thought that those old tube console stereos and radios sounded great! With the first release of "Glass Audio" I was sent into a tube building frenzy. Tubes produce subjectively better sound in part because they add a bit of harmonic distortion. I don't believe that that is the only reason however, a tube is a more linear device than a transistor is. For most signal processing you can't beat today's high end op-amps, even the venerable TL071 series sound fine. I would not bother to use tubes there. For phono preamps and for Mid/High power amplification I swear by them! Tubes are far more reliable than people give them credit for. I have had far more solid state amplifiers self destruct than any tube amplifier.
Interesting statement "buy well-recorded CD's"! Where do you find them these days?