Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2020 21:13:05 GMT
I will keep a record of any/all feedback I receive in regard to Bigbottle or AVALON products/work here:
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2020 21:15:43 GMT
Feedback from "Lurch"
A few weeks back, in a wanted classified on AoS, I made a comment Re having a Tron Seven Ultimate and getting a BB3, (I bought to it in our classifieds at HiFiwigwam) that I would do an a/b and report back.
Well I've had the BB3 in my system for a couple of weeks now, and all I can say is WOW!!! The Tron Seven Ultimate has spent 13. 5 of the last 14 days impersonating a doorstop, let me explain.
A few weeks beforehand I had acquired an early (serial number 1205) Garrard 401 with SME 3009 s2 which I'd fitted with an A&R P77Mg and it was producing a wonderful rich though not as detailed sound as my Bardo/Conqueror/Axia combo via the TSU. A sound I much preferred that made me realise that I had moved too close to that line that exists between musicality and hifi. It was at this point I also realised I wasn't at all happy with my vinyl front end, what I needed was a sound profile halfway between the 401 & Bardo.
I then changed arms on the 401, sticking the Conqueror & Axia on it and bingo, I had the sound I wanted. Richness, body AND Detail. At this point I was seriously considering selling the Bardo in favour of the 401.
Move on a few days, Bardo still on the floor and & 401 rehoused in a heavy plinth I'd been given instead of the hollow lightweight 60s plinth it came with, when the BB3 arrived. I did an a/B against the TSU for a couple of hours then decided the Bardo needed another chance given the sound signature the BB was giving out.
I put the Conqueror back on the Bardo and fired it all back up, and damn, there it was, the sound I was looking for.
The BB redeemed the Bardo, changing the decks sound sognature to one with air, space, body, detail and richness. Bere in mind also that this is what the BB did with new valves and only a few hours on the clock. I did put the TSU back in but it only stayed in the system for 3 tracks before becoming an expensive doorstop.
Don't get me wrong the TSU is a fantastic phonostage, but the BB3 in my system and to my ears gives me the sound signature I've been chasing, though I didn't really know what I wanted until I heard it.
The BB3 is now fully bedded in and sounding absolutely fantastic, better than it did initially, and I didn't think that was possible.
So when I get round to it the will be a newly serviced (by GT) 2018 SPEC, TSU in the classifieds.
As for the 401 it's now been fitted with an RB250 and the P77Mg and is doing Stirling service in my 2nd system, so will also be selling the 3009 s2.
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2020 21:20:55 GMT
Feedback from Paul @ Reference Fidelity Components' DIY BB3:
Having wired and connected everything up, the acid test was in the listening. Bearing in mind I've now fitted a closely matched pair of Teles for the PCC88's and a Tungsol 803s for the V2 position, the valves now ought to be sorted as none of these proved microphonic at all.
A 20 minute warm up and settling time and then straight into playing some LPs. I wasn't expecting a night and day improvement over the previous iteration, perhaps just a little quieter but I was surprised to find that it WAS what I can honestly describe as a night and day uplift. The combination of the right (and matched) valves ensuring equal channel balance and hopefully adhering to correct RIAA balance, also happened to be much quieter with no discernible heater noise or any noise at all with volume turned up higher than I'd ever listen to. Any semblance of transformer hum was gone...entirely gone. In fact before anything could be heard through the speakers at all, the volume was over 3/4 of the way round the dial where max safe listening levels are less than half way, so with vinyl, this would prove to be utterly silent in background noise so a big tick in the box.
Onto listening: Biggest changes here were in detail and channel separation. Yes, new output coupling caps were in place as well as the valve changes and the FET boards installed. Without knowing if the changes were a collective upgrade or down to one specific change I don't know as I don't have access to the circuit diagram to see how it's all interconnected, but what I can say is wow...that soundstage now goes from one wall to the other, way beyond the speakers. Because I use time aligned and phase correct speakers, the depth of the recorded space comes through with astonishing presence and clarity on live recordings, not multi-tracked close mic'd stuff.
So was it all worth it? Well, yes but with reservations. Part of me still says, (the head speaking) that it should be entirely possible to have a compact phonostage at less cost than commercial offerings because the circuit can easily be compactly packaged, this takes up a lot of real estate and there's no getting over that. the heart, however says that it has been a resounding success based purely on the end result. Whether its the euphonics of valves I am liking more than the flatness of many solid state offerings, I don't know. All I know is that this offers what many do not, an emotional connection with the music and where live recordings are concerned, in a system capable of revealing it, a real sense of presence. That to most of us I'd bet sums up what we want from our systems, surely?
Top marks to Oli for project managing to the degree that he has and with the enthusiasm that he has, and in particular to listening to feedback and acting on it. The last point has turned a modest design that does what it says on the tin into one frankly a cut above the rest, where "the rest" is perhaps many that exist out there to £2.5K in valve land. There are lots that run it close or beat it but few can be had under £2K. I would advise under that mark looking at one of the Trilogy phonostages for SS offerings or where valves are concerned, this one and only one other that I can honestly recommend...
This is where things get interesting as that "one other" in entry level valve offerings is the TRON Convergence but here I lay may cards on the table for honesty. Oli and Alan are not aware of this, so it should come as a pleasant surprise just how close the BB3 is: Mine isn't a standard TRON Convergence, but a special order one from Graham called the "TRON Signature" which is a much rarer beast and the only one currently that I know of in existence and a very much upgraded and re-worked Convergence. The TRON has a different presentation to the BB3 but is still a fair comparison. This is not, nor should it become a "shoot off" of one V's the other because that would be largely non constructive, subjective and miss the points I'm trying to make here so lets not get too distracted by that side of things. I am only throwing it in because I use two TT's and one uses the TRON.
It has, if anything, in Signature trim, even more detail and a pretty amazing depth of sound stage, but isn't perhaps quite as wide as the BB3. My original TRON Convergence to my ears was a little light on one channel in bass which initially was why it was sent back, and it was found that one of the valves was out of spec which had adversely affected RIAA below 1KHz by around 2dB which is significant. This was corrected and measured with new, matched valves but the whole thing was taken apart and converted with just about all components changed to shoe-horn in the "Signature" version. It now has very accurate RIAA (tested) but I cannot give away what in the circuit was changed, but safe to say it is most definitely up there with the best in this price group and what I like about it is it's neatly packaged into a compact enclosure too.
The BB3 is still well worth the effort because you can achieve stunning levels of performance, to my mind way better than the EAR 834 or even the latest Icon Audio PS2 as well as the PS3 Mk2, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is quite an achievement so well done Oli and Alan. It's really quite an extraordinary stage. It is still possible to package it into a compact case IF a toroid is used but for the best sound quality, a traditional E&I to my mind is the better route as long as you can get it far enough distant or well enough shielded from the PCB. For quietness it matches the TRON, no mean feat!
For those already started along the DIY route, I would most humbly present a case for going the whole hog on this build to get the potential from it. The difference between not doing so and actually investing the time and money and effort in doing so is quite staggering in terms of sound quality uplift. I hope that this has been an honest and fair description of my own "BB3 journey" but please take it as it is intended, just an honest opinion. Once more my congratulations to Oli and Alan, and to all you reading this who want the best valve stage in this price category, you do owe it to yourself to speak with Oli, and in fact to Graham, as each offer something pretty unique but undoubtedly very special and neither really can be bettered in terms of valve power unless you are prepared to spend an awful lot more. There's a big jump to the next best valve stages and that means upping budgets to between £2.5K and £5K or more. Below those levels I have not tried anything that really competes with either of these two.
As a final comment, I will throw in that I am happy for anyone to visit me and listen to either of these stage for themselves especially where it might be a little too far to visit either Oli or Graham. I stand to gain nothing from this, nor should I, but I operate an ethos of supporting UK small businesses so am happy to do my part, as one of those businesses because I passionately believe that the best hifi has "gone underground" in the Uk and you simply will not find these little gems on the shelves of major company outlets.
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Bigman80
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 23, 2020 21:24:47 GMT
Speedracer:
John (Lurch) brought his BB3 over to mine earlier this week for a try in my system & I have to say I am very impressed with it.
I was previously using a Aurorasound Vida which I loved, but am currently using the MM stage in the Mastersound Pre & a Townshend battery powered head amp, perhaps an unusual combination but a very good one, if not quite Vida good.
The thing that struck me most was the BB3 didn't change the sound signature, but allowed individual components to shine, so it enhanced the sound I already had & enabled me to hear more of what was going on in the groove.
I think I will be making contact with Ollie soon!
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Post by iceman16 on Nov 29, 2020 17:32:00 GMT
Oli, My BB3 is not going anywhere but staying in my system until I win the lottery! I hope that sums it up lol..😀
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Post by Bigman80 on Nov 29, 2020 17:56:28 GMT
Oli, My BB3 is not going anywhere but staying in my system until I win the lottery! I hope that sums it up lol..😀 Thanks Jayson. 🤣
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Post by Bigman80 on Mar 4, 2021 14:20:30 GMT
From "Mikeyb"
I own two, a Mark 1 and a Mark 3.
The Mark 1 is excellent and I'd be more than happy with it, but Oli convinced me that the Mark 3 was an improvement in the Mark 1.
I'd owned a Mark 2 version for a few months whilst the Mark 3 was being developed. It was built into my Mark 1 case and I kept the Mark 1 PCB in the cupboard in case I ever had the desire to rebuild it myself, yeah dream on, I've never soldered before
So, the Mark 3 design was ready, I asked Oli about it and he did me a deal to take my Mark 2 AND also the Mark 1 PCB, put the Mark 1 back into its original case and upgrade the Mark 2 to a 3 in a two case build to get the power transformer away from the phono PCB.
Hence the reason I now have both sitting here, my intention was to listen to them both and sell the Mark 1, advert for it will be up soon
Now, I've had more stages here than some will have heard as I've always struggled to get the sound I want.
So, here's some of the list that fell by the wayside in no particular order:
NVA Phono 2
Trigon Vanguard II
Whest 2
Ryan Sound Labs
Graham Slee Reflex
Graham Slee Revelation
Primare R32
Long Dog Audio MC
Firebottle Vivant
Trilogy 907
I've even tried going the SUT and Headamp route, I've tried built in phono stages in my TQ Claymore integrated, Denon PMA-850.
And as you can see I've tried SS and valve.
However after all that I think I've found the one that's a keeper. The Bigbottle Audio MK3 just sounds right to me, good tight bass, excellent midrange and the highs are crystal clear with no harshness. I'm using a Russian 6N2P-EV and two Matsushita 7DJ8 valves in it just now, ok those valves and the stage itself are new so some burn in might come yet, if not it won't matter, I'm loving it.
My system consists of Technics SP10 Mark II with Fidelity Research FR64fx arm and Hana ML Cartridge, Herron Audio VTSP-2a Pre amp, Primaluna Dialogue Premium HP Power amp, Tannoy Berkeley speakers upgraded with RFC external crossovers, Raspberry Pi with Allo Boss DAC, EWA LS-25 speaker cable.
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Post by Bigman80 on Mar 4, 2021 14:26:40 GMT
From "Radient Red"
Ok, so here we are with the BB3 now in full operation with a few tweaks. Ive had an afternoon and this evening to really hear what this can do. Loaded with Telefunken’s in V1 and V3 and a 6N2P in V2, left it on for half an hour. Pathos amp warmed and ready..
Kicked off with Yello ‘Electrified’ which is a superb recording in its own right but to be able to hear it well, a phonostage must be free from noise and sound silent (you get my drift?) anyway, at any given volume, the BB3 stayed focused and at no time, introducing any noise or feedback which was incredible. Vocals composed and three dimensional with depth and imagery where it should be. On this hearing, the BB3 had texture that I haven’t heard in a long time from a phonostage under 2k. The overall sound I would describe as the warmer sound of neutral but plenty of attack and drive.
Moving to a more complex piece being from Led Zeppelin ‘Bring it on Home’ the BB3 gave a truly spectacular insight to the 1969 mastering by not exaggerating the slightly distorted sections of the track. It’s so easy for a piece of ‘HiFi’ to excel in one area but then to let itself down in another. I feel the BB3 is neither, it’s an item that can demonstrate its abilities across all spectrums.
Given its modest price, I’ve heard very few phonostages that can demonstrate what this can. I had use (or loan) over the last week (yes Oli, I kept this quite lol) an Ear Phonobox which is a superb phonostage and thought that it was very similar to a degree to the BB3 but felt that it was noisier over a period of time, best described as white noise meaning it was there but you couldn’t always hear it but it didn’t sound as clean in the sound and slight (ever so) hard.
Im currently listening to I Robot by Alan Parsons and it’s giving great delight.
AND:
WOW!! absolutely stunned how good this is with the new Benz cartridge I have. Having had a few stages in my lifetime, I can’t say I haven’t heard much better under 3k
So there you have it. BB3 has done well and with a little more tube rolling, I’m sure there is more to come.
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Post by Bigman80 on Mar 4, 2021 14:30:48 GMT
From "Lurch"
Yesterday I also joined the BB3 club, and it spent its 1st couple of hours battling it out with my Tron Seven Ultimate, and even with new valves the BB3 has, knocked the TSU into next week. The TSU is a bloody good PS and majors on neutrality and detail particularly in the, mid and upper regions, however to my ears the BB3 won out on mid range texture & richness, also bass had real slam and texture. Yes there was a slight loss of shimmer to cymbals etc but with the valves only having a few hours on the clock, who cares.
Overall, even at this early stage I prefer the sound of the BB3, and am pretty sure the TSU will end up in the classifieds, along with my Brinkmann Bardo. Yep it looks like I'm changing tt in favour of the early Garrard 401 I bought on a whim a few weeks back. With the BB3 & 401I now, have the body and richness but with detail and nuance I've been looking for.
"Nils Lofgren - Keith don't go" sounds stunning, I've never heard a guitar sound so nuanced before. The BB3 seems to let you know how notes devolop and what and instruments made from 😊😊
The BB3 not only trounced an £8.4k Tron Seven Ultimate, it transformed the sound of my Axia S from a very good hifi cart into a wonderfully rich nuanced musical cart. A cart I hasten to add I was looking to move on if I kept the Bardo, as I felt it was to blame for me getting to close to the line between music and hifi. I'm now keeping the Bardo & Axia.
A few weeks later:
Well I've had the BB3 in my system for a couple of weeks now, and all I can say is WOW!!! The Tron Seven Ultimate (TSU) has spent 13.5 of the last 14 days impersonating a doorstop, let me explain:
A few weeks beforehand I had acquired an early (serial number 1205) Garrard 401 with SME 3009 s2 which I'd fitted with an A&R P77Mg and it was producing a wonderful rich though not as detailed sound as my Bardo/Conqueror/Axia combo via the TSU. A sound I much preferred that made me realise that I had moved too close to that line that exists between musicality and hifi. It was at this point I also realised I wasn't at all happy with my vinyl front end, what I needed was a sound profile halfway between the 401 & Bardo. I then changed arms on the 401, sticking the Conqueror & Axia on it and bingo, I had the sound I wanted. Richness, body AND Detail. At this point I was seriously considering selling the Bardo in favour of the 401.
Move on a few days, Bardo still on the floor and & 401 rehoused in a heavy plinth I'd been given instead of the hollow lightweight 60s plinth it came with, when the BB3 arrived. I did an a/B against the TSU for a couple of hours then decided the Bardo needed another chance given the sound signature the BB was giving out.
I put the Conqueror back on the Bardo and fired it all back up, and damn, there it was, the sound I was looking for.
The BB redeemed the Bardo, changing the decks sound signature to one with air, space, body, detail and richness. Bare in mind also that this is what the BB did with new valves and only a few hours on the clock. I did put the TSU back in but it only stayed in the system for 3 tracks before becoming an expensive doorstop.
Don't get me wrong the TSU is a fantastic phonostage, but the BB3 in my system and to my ears gives me the sound signature I've been chasing, though I didn't really know what I wanted until I heard it. The BB3 is now fully beded in and sounding absolutely fantastic, better than it did initially, and I didn't think that was possible. So when I get round to it the will be a newly serviced (by GT) 2018 SPEC, TSU in the classifieds.
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Post by Bigman80 on Jun 3, 2021 14:07:41 GMT
A bit more arrived today:
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Post by Bigman80 on Dec 14, 2021 11:50:35 GMT
"Mick"
Hi Oliver,
The BB3 has landed & WOW it is BEAUTIFUL.😉
The casework is brilliant & I have to take my hat off to you for the outstanding quality, it's truly STUNNING.
You have made my year Oliver, because this BB3 has blown me away. You are truly a CRAFTSMAN of the highest order!!!! 😉
A gobsmacked owner of a BB3.
Cheers,
Mick
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Post by Bigman80 on Mar 1, 2022 16:41:35 GMT
Hi Oliver,
I have to say this is remarkable. I'm absolutely blown away. I played a Rush album earlier and I've never heard it like this. And my Blue Note jazz records sound ridiculously good. I don't have the words to describe this lol. I'm so happy with it. For me it's a keeper for life. Thank you so much for taking this and making it into a reality. I know how much work that entails.
It's funny, I went through the resistors on the PCB and compared them to the BOM to check there were no mistakes (I needn't have bothered). I had a magnifying glass and it made me laugh when I realised you had orientated the resistors in a mirror image for right and left channels. It's that level of OCD and obsession that I love. I would probably do the same, or at least I like to think so.
Totally blown away and again thank you so much. If you still want people to give feedback I'll gladly do so though I should probably introduce myself first!
Neil
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Post by Bigman80 on Aug 28, 2022 20:00:35 GMT
A bit of feedback from "Alex S" over on PFM
Sorry this is another long post. Please skip to the final paragraph for a resume´.
Having bought Mike P’s Leak ST20 and been thrilled with the result, I decided to continue the valve path and look at the phono stage. I had £1K max so I started looking in the Classified’s for a Tron Convergence. What a surprise, there weren’t any. There was also the fact that I needed MM & MC in a single box. Given my luck with Mikes, I saw a Big Bottle 3 for sale, this time from Mikey B, and following my usual strategy of not listening to anything but buying on a hunch, I bought it.
Two days later it arrived. Let’s start by saying that for a small outfit, the Big Bottle 3 (henceforward BB3) is immaculately finished in nice case work, proper etched logo. Then I plugged it in. There was clearly a problem in the left channel, fairly alarming periodic thumps and noise through the speaker. Mike, then Oliver who makes the BB, were informed. It had clearly been damaged in transit (Mike had already sent a video of it working perfectly prior to shipping). ‘Send it back no problem, we’ll fix it’ said Oliver, (the ‘we’ being Alan of Firebottle who designed the BB), so I did.
Oliver tested the BB3 and identified a microphonic valve, a small area on the PCB that needed re-soldering, fixed that and sent it back, all free of charge. All good I thought but after a few hours, although the thumps had gone the noise in the left channel remained. Another call to Oliver: ‘don’t worry we’ll sort it. I have decided to replace the entire PCB’. Please remember, this was a second hand unit bought from one of Oliver’s customers. You can argue that he might fix any issues at cost but all this was being done at no cost to me other than some upgraded capacitors I decided to go for. In effect, I was getting a new phono stage free of charge.
After a couple of weeks building and testing my new BB3 arrived and I again I plugged it in, and wonderful it sounded, apart from - dreaded ground loop. Another chat with Oliver (who at this point was supposed to be enjoying a holiday). Today I rebuilt the system, tried every socket and re-routed cables. Still an earth loop somewhere, not audible from the listening position but annoying. Doubly annoying since I knew already how good the BB3 could sound. Another call to Oliver, where I threatened to lift the earth wire from the plug socket, temporarily, to see if it solved the problem before I fried various children and pets. “In the case there is an earth connection for the PCB, try removing it. The PCB will now float but the case will still be earthed”. Okay, let’s try that - Bingo! Ground loop gone, near silence and the best vinyl playback I’ve ever had by a long, long way.
So, the BB3 is a superb phono stage that absolutely shows how good a Dynavector XX2 is, strapped to a modded Technics. I won’t burden you with reviewer babble - it’s just really, really good! But, similar to the Leak thread this post is mainly a thank you. A thank you to Oliver for patiently taking all the time needed to talk this through and resolve everything perfectly, no corners cut, supremely helpful and patient throughout (as was I of course). I basically have a brand new BB3 built at no cost to me. That is customer service and why I buy (usually small) UK brands whenever possible.
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Post by Bigman80 on Aug 29, 2022 9:09:39 GMT
Some feedback from "Pete"
I have been loving my BB3 for 3 months now, life has been busy so I have only got about 50 hours on it, but thought I would like to put down my thoughts on my journey with it to this point.
Firstly, my other phono stage is a Salience, also sold as a Jasmine. It is made by a manufacturer in China that specialises in valve amps, it is a 2 box solid state design. It is a thing of beauty, both to look at and to listen too, far better that I had realised, but more of that later. The real positives of the Salience is a massive sound stage and a real engagement with the music. It just makes listening great.
So, onto the BB3. As others have said before, out of the box it looks amazing and oozes real quality. It is beautifully put together with an amazing attention to detail. My first listen though was a bit disappointing. The sound was very engaging, but it was a bit ‘shouty’ in higher frequencies and lower frequencies were a bit muddled, what have I done, I thought!! I couldn’t understand it as everyone loves the BB3, something must not be right.
I had talked with Oliver about how I felt my current interconnect could do with improving, he had put one of his Phantom cables in the box, so to be fair to the BB3, and the cable I swapped back to the Salience with the new cable to see how it improved the old phono stage. Out of the box it was amazing. The Salience with the Phantom seemed to be the biggest upgrade I had done in a long time, the increase in soundstage, depth of sound, the beauty in the way notes started and decayed, the cables were amazing, I started playing LPs I hadn’t heard for a while and the enjoyment I was getting from the music was incredible. I thought the upgrade in sound I was hoping for had been delivered without even connecting up the BB3. I contacted Oliver and told hm the sound stage was so great that if I shift the balance to just one speaker you would swear the other one is still playing. I had to go right up to the speaker to check it wasn’t!
Then I connected the BB3, things were really sounding interesting. I was getting everything I was getting from the Salience, but more of it. Beautiful definition in the higher frequencies, lower frequencies were just getting better and better, mid frequencies were a little muddled though, and the sound stage was limited. After about 20hrs the BB3 it was really opening up and I was starting to get the increased soundstage, left and right. I mentioned before about the single speaker thing with the Salience. I got the same with the BB3, but weirdly, only from the left speaker. Balance just to the left appeared RH speaker still playing, to the right definitely just the right. A couple more hours in and it was happening to both sides, it was amazing hearing the changes,
I am now up to 50 hours and it is just wow. Mega soundstage, fantastic bass extension, and that mid range has completely opened up and instruments just flow. Even vocals which appeared muddled previously are completely clear and I can follow every word. Records which have poor sound quality suddenly have loads more to offer. Loveless by My Bloody Valentine, a brilliant album, but with the BB3 there is so much more there in the mix, the music just flows over you, and through you, the LP is a thing of genius, Hawkwind live at the BBC, you are there in the audience, Lemmy’s bass playing is a revelation, I could go on and on and know it is only going to get better. I am using stock valves while everything is settling down and opening up, but looking out for some different ones to try after another 50 hours or so.
The BB3 is bloody brilliant.
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Post by Bigman80 on Dec 21, 2022 16:45:34 GMT
Oliver - Feedback Just to say, just received some terminated SAEC triple C from the Olster and once again, nothing but impeccable service. More so, I've never met Oliver face to face but have had lots of hifi system communication and have always found him to be a genuine straight up guy, informative, helpful and always happy to share whatsoever he can to help you get the best from your set up. Has to be said, not everyone will share details and info of all the good stuf with you like this man does, he is a credit, plain and simple - I am grateful and can only wish him well robbiegong
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Post by Bigman80 on Dec 21, 2022 18:49:37 GMT
The BB3 has been in my system for around 3 weeks. It has had around 15-20hrs with a signal running through it. Oli advises that it'll take 50-100hrs to fully open up, but I thought I'd post my initial impressions now.
I've never written a review for hifi equipment, so please bear with me! I realise we all hear differently and all have different systems/rooms so this is just the perception of my humble (slightly old) ears!
First things first, the setup:
Rega RP10 deck with RB2000 arm and Ortofon Cadenza Black Cartridge Musical Fidelity X-P100 with JS Audio stage 2 upgrade and upgraded power supply Musical Fidelity A3.2CR power amp with JS Audio stage 2 upgrade Ekta MkII speakers - DIY build based on a Troels Gravesen design - Scanspeak drivers Scanspeak 10" Sub - DIY build based on a Troels Gravesen design Cables are various and will be upgraded when the stereo settles in its eventual music room.
The outgoing Phonostage is a Rega Aria - A roughly £1k solid state phono. I felt this was the weak link in my system, hence the search for a new stage. The Rega Aria is my only relative comparison to the new BB3.
First impressions are very good, the BB3 is simply better at everything! It's really hard to pinpoint any one thing, however, the biggest and most wonderful quality is the lovely open, natural and thoroughly musical soundstage. Yes, the Aria has a soundstage, but the BB3 presents it more naturally and fluidly - it's wider, deeper and more immersive. On a decent recording the speakers really do disappear. The tone of the BB3 is more natural and less 'hard edged', but still gives a much greater insight into the details and texture of the instruments and vocals. The BB3 definitely sounds way more 'real' and is just thoroughly enjoyable to listen to - I often forget the HiFi and just get lost in the music.
Bass is definitely tighter, more extended and more tuneful. Double basses sound more realistic and the kick drum has more attack and presents a more realistic impression. *{Kick drums are definitely not 'real' sounding yet, but they never will be with 7" drivers handling the 40-800Hz range! One day I may have 12-15" bass drivers so hope to get closer to the realism of the kick drum.}
Treble is one of the most fantastic improvements... I thought the Aria did reasonably well at treble and then along came the BB3! The BB3 is often startlingly good. Cymbals have an attack, realism, sparkle and detail that is just scarily realistic. Treble is so much more real and extended, but (somehow) never edgy or harsh! Even some of my poor recordings are flattered by the BB3. Some recordings used to sound wooden and flat on the Aria, but have now come alive. It's great to have a phonostage which flatters good and poor recordings alike.
Midrange is wonderful also; saxophone, piano, strings, vocals... well, just everything is so much better. More detailed, more open, more natural, more texture... Just wonderfully musical and a joy to listen to. I am still surprised and impressed by how competent and musical the BB3 is. I am often listening and just wowed by the realism and wonderfully immersive sound. Yes, I realise there will be much better phonostages (the BBu and Avalon to name two), however, for now I'm very happy and will thoroughly enjoy the BB3 until the next phonostage upgrade/build occurs.
THANKS SO MUCH TO OLI FOR BUILDING THE PCB AND HELPING (VIA MESSAGES) WITH THE BUILD OF THE BB3 - I SIMPLY WOULDN'T BE HERE WITHOUT YOU OLI! THANKS SO MUCH FOR READING THIS BUILD AND THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR KIND WORDS AND RESPONSES. SUB BUILD NEXT, SHORTLY FOLLOWED BY SPEAKERS.
- Jason
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Bigman80
Grandmaster
The HiFi Bear/Audioaddicts/Bigbottle Owner
Posts: 16,398
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Post by Bigman80 on Jun 5, 2023 18:15:35 GMT
Cable Monkey regarding his BB3:
I will say from the outset that there will be no going back for me. This phono stage has restored the love I had for vinyl playback in quite a surprising way. I say that because as someone who has owned some quite nice devices in the past including a Tron 7 phono stage (older base model, no bells and whistles), this is just so much more enjoyable. I am lucky enough to own a lovely cartridge in my VdH Black Beauty SPX and I am hearing it at its best for the first time. It never really got on with my Tron stage but it is singing away now! Most importantly I have that sense of engagement with my vinyl that has been missing for a while. Vocals are a joy, bass is solid and dependable (maybe a touch less resolution than the best I’ve owned) and treble is just doing as intended. There without announcing itself (an issue I had with the Tron-VdH combo). So, in conclusion. Another ‘forever’ component in my setup!
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