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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/19/2022 in all areas

  1. Thank you, Jim. I think it was (certainly should have been) painfully obvious to anyone with enough neurons to form a synapse, that there was something fundamentally wrong with those tests. Anyone who does testing of any sort on a professional basis knows that if your test results are entirely out of whack with observed reality, you need to re-examine how you are testing, and not blindly hold to results that don't make sense. For one thing, nobody is going to produce a tube amp with 4xKT120's that only puts out 15-17 watts. I'm not even sure you could design one, unless, perhaps, you leave most of the tubes unwired... This, sadly, is another example of where common sense has largely been lost thanks to so-called internet "experts." FWIW, I'm now the proud owner of a shiny pair of Crimson 275's, and plan to enjoy their ample, clean, wonderful sounding tube power for many years.
    4 points
  2. Much ado over nothing. Below is a view into the IEC socket of a Sunfire Symphonic Reference amp. Note the missing ground pin. Fuse has since been repaired, right @PMAT
    2 points
  3. This EG topic was very heated when we were building the kits. Some people insisted that the EG be connected, even after Bob told them not to. Earth Ground is NOT always safe. Furthermore, almost all audio equipment is NOT Earth Grounded.
    2 points
  4. Reply from Bob after testing for shock hazards as described on some forums. "We know that the 275 is perfectly safe the way it is currently wired. If you want it grounded another way, send it in and we can rewire it so the earth ground connects directly to the chassis, We will pay shipping both ways. We stand behind the product and its quality."
    2 points
  5. Hello, We made Bob aware of the controversy, from what will prove to be faulty measurement technics for the 275 on some forums by an individual. WRF (Wayne) having built and tested one of the amps in the original post has been great trying to educate. Bob gave me this letter as a response to post. I'll post it here and then ask Bob to answer any questions The Carver Site members may have first. We can/will repost the answers to your questions to the other sites. Not to sound bitter (because Bobs not) but I don't wish to draw clicks to their site. Better to draw attention here. Bob is busy designing a cool new amp called the 2180. 2x180 watts with 2-KT120 per channel. In most tube amps, the grid voltage is 1/2 the plate voltage. Bob has been working with a different voltage ratio between plate and grid with hand wound transformers. The prototype hand wound transformer made 200 watts driving one channel . The prototype factory production transformer should be ready for Bob and his assistant to test in 2 weeks.. I'll gather the questions on Mondays and give them to Bob for a reply.. Here's the note from Bob and his reply to a couple popular questions I had ask. Crimson/Raven 275 The current 275 is the best amplifier that I’ve ever designed. It is extremely powerful and it has a smooth and sweet musical voice. I have been building and designing amplifiers for approximately 50 years in my lifetime and in those 50 years I’ve been attacked and I’ve been vilified for my designs. My designs have also won many accolades and many awards and I’m very happy about that. Designing amplifiers has been my life’s passion and I cannot imagine doing anything that’s more fun or intellectually challenging or more rewarding. This amplifier has enormous power, an enormously wide frequency response and the best sound that I’ve ever been able to produce in my almost 30 years of amplifier design and building. I can remember walking on the pathways at the University of Washington with Tim De Paravicini and we had beautiful, beautiful talks about amplifiers, loudspeakers but mostly about amplifiers. Amplifiers were our passion. My amplifier knowledge today, when I compare it to my early knowledge, I find that my early knowledge was as scarce and meager kind. But no longer. This new amplifier design is my very best work. I have given it a voice that is large and a voice that has detailed imaging within the larger voice and it’s what I’ve always strived for. For now this is Bob Carver signing off. Thank you I invite any and all questions. So if anybody has a question or several questions, please just ask and I will answer. QUESTION: Bob, how can a 75 watt tube amp use such small output transformers and be lightweight ? ANSWER: I've always designed amplifiers that had lots of power and lighter weight than others designs. The transformer size can be made smaller by using fine wire and specified materials. There is no magic, because it adds inefficiencies in other ways like power, but the design has more than enough power. QUESTION: Bob, A guy is claiming a 275 makes 17 watts with strange distortion numbers any thoughts? ANSWER: Thats ridiculous, a 75 watt amp.. Isn't it obvious? It is being test wrong or its damaged.. My amps can be difficult to test, difficult to get the grounding correct. I've been dealing with people testing my designs wrong and getting grounding errors effecting measurements, most of my life. QUESTION: Bob is it fair to say that you design amplifiers for reproducing music into dynamic loudspeaker loads, more so than focusing on reproducing sine waves into load resistors? ANSWER: There is some truth to that. My amps can perform way above there power rating for a time, a time being several seconds. MORE QUESTIONS, ASK HERE.. The Carver Site is the place for answers. Have fun. Enjoy! Sincerely, Jim Clark.
    1 point
  6. I'm not trying to be a dick here but I want to throw out two things about the Audio Science Review web site review of the Crimson 275: 1. Amir is a sound, knowledgeable guy who has tested untold numbers of amps, etc. He has the knowledge and equipment to test amps properly and is a Bob Carver fan in general. 2. The overall tone of the site and the review of the 275 is that it does not meet the specs that are printed in the documentation. That is the main beef they are talking about. If there is an issue with his testing method it should be addressed. If not then it really looks bad for the Crimson 275 when judged by the published specs. I personally like how both of mine sound but the focus of the review is that the claimed output power is 75 watts into 4 or 8 ohms - and that appears to be a great stretch when reviewing the results of his testing efforts. The amp he tested blew the power fuse well before achieving anywhere close to the claimed power levels. The other area that is causing criticism are the tiny output transformers - they saw the 15 watt labels and immediately jumped to their own conclusions. To be fair to them all of the tube amps they have tested over the years that do produce 75 watts per channel are much heavier because of the large power and output transformers. For example, the McIntosh MC275 delivers 75 WPC, into 4, 8 or 16 ohms, 20-20KHZ, 0.5% THD max, 105db S/N ratio. It weighs 67 lbs. In comparison the Crimson 275 weighs 19 lbs. You can read Amir's testing and evaluation here: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/carver-crimson-275-review-tube-amp.29971/ Unfortunately the unit he received had a loose screw floating about inside the chassis. That could have presented itself as an issue if he had not found it during his inspection of the amp. I would be interested in seeing what the actual power and distortion measurements are when tested "properly" while using the full 20-20KHZ audio bandwidth, presented like the McIntosh specs I mentioned earlier.
    1 point
  7. I am. I'm tired of it. I have never seen so much babble about a single freaking amplifier ever. The controversy just keeps spinning right back to where we started! Over and over again. @wrf knows as much about it as I do. He may still have the patience for it...but I suspect his won't last much longer either. I still own two. I even used one of them to drive the 900W 4 ohm Tekton MOABS and it performed just fine. Sometimes I wonder just what the hell people are expecting from their amplifiers. It isn't a PA system - it's a little 55W per channel tube amp! I'm not trying to be an ass but my patience has a limit. I talk to people all over the world about audio everyday. In most cases, people enjoy relatively standard set ups - a set of good speakers and a Carver amp or two with a couple of sources and a preamp. But some people want their stuff to sound like a rock concert (which average about 150,000 watts of power). Or, they expect a 40 year old Carver to keep up with a modern class A amp that costs $30,000 (true story). So I don't understand people and never will. But I do understand when I've had enough. And I've had enough of the Carver275 'controversy'. Also - EGing everything is just a CYA nowadays thanks to the rabid (and very unfair) liability with products.
    1 point
  8. On page 2 of the Owner's Manual it says not to defeat the purpose of the grounding plug and to connect the amplifier only to an outlet with a protective grounding socket. This is not hooked up on either the CarverFest or production 275s, the third prong has nothing attached to it. Are you planning on providing a safety upgrade to actually put this grounding plug into operation?
    1 point
  9. He knows, Greg. Bob is focusing on designing new products and little else right now. He seldom looks at emails or phone calls. If he answered emails and phone calls, that would take all his time away from doing what he loves. Personally, I spend little time on forums. A cup of coffee in the morning and thats about it. Bob sent me his reply in a voice mail and asked me to transcribe it and post it. So that is why I'm here relaying his message. Whatever I can do to help him from being distracted, so he can stay in his creative mindset, enjoying his days, I will do at his request. Humbly, its an honor, but not one that I enjoy. Thanks for letting me post the reply here. Your site is largest of the Carver themed site so maybe the controversy can bring in more members and clicks. Most times, these "bad" moments have good hiding in them.
    1 point
  10. But Steve is selling his now? I'm walking away from this topic. This is blowing up my own neurons...
    0 points
  11. Heard from an international friend of mine... "Those Aussies aren't known to produce the top-rated tennis players in the world, but they sure know how to return a Serb."
    0 points
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