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Welcome Home ALO Studio Six

August 2, 2013 ohm
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Little ol' me put up a new impressions thread at Head-Fi. The subject is ALO's Studio Six home headphone amplifier. It is priced at 4.900$ USD, making it one of the most expensive headphone amps out there. 

For the uninitiated, Head-Fi is an English-language resource for headphone fans from around the globe. It is also the largest of any such endeavours in any language. Its creator, Jude Mansilla, is clever and level-headed- the ultimate sort of geek. He also has impeccable taste in portable studio lighting. It is a dream come true to be featured again on Head-Fi's home page. (If you're keen, the other featured article was Ω's FitEar Factory Tour.)

Thank you. 

Anyway, back to the Studio Six. Several days after posting my impressions, Headfi decided to feature the thread on its homepage. The new feature system is clever: it focuses the entire HF population on articles the admins feel are important. When I go to HF, I tend to hit up two places: my messages, and the features section.

Why? 

Because when the "what's better" headphone war ends, that's where the party will be. And I'll be thumping along with the rest of them. 

As for the Studio Six, it will warm up Ω's office for a good month or two.  (I sort of wish it had been released in the Fall when temperatures begin to drop. July hot plus valve hot do not say summer fun as well as an endless supply of Corona and chicken wings.)

Let's get back to the Six. 

Unique to it are four headphone outs, run in parallel. Each one runs a lot of power. Power alone is naff. Sensitive headphones run well because the volume pot is almost perfect. Left/right tracking are spot on even at low volumes. Six runs nill-level signal noise, though valve hum does get into sensitive earphones.

For its intended use, however, WOW. Three letters. Horrible grammar. But 'nuff said. 

I've not finished reviewing this amplifier. I take care in supplying ohmage to gear I feel is worthwhile. If something is crap, I'll not even write porridge to it. Fully accurate? No. I'm nearly as human as the next geek- nearly. (My penchant for liquorice and Sambuca lowers my status as an organism- at least according to my dear, beloved wife.)

Next week, expect a full review from this mostly-human. It will hit these shelves sometime next week. It will basically say that I'm impressed. Not only is Studio Six beautiful to look at, it is nearly as perfectly designed as a large headphone amp can be.

And, it's made its way to Head-Fi's featured page - a home befitting such leviathan an opus. 

 

In headphones, amps Tags ALO Audio
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Team Coco meet Team Beyer in dubbing of popular Chinese soap opera

June 28, 2013 ohm

I've only recently discovered Team Coco, but as a long-toothed member of Team Beyerdynamic, I'm glad that the two have met in this hilarious dubbing of a rather hilarious Chinese drama. 

So, while this video isn't exactly news, it's new to me and therefore, news to you.  Go Team Cobey... Beyco! Dynaco!

In headphones Tags Beyerdynamic
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ohmage to the Woo Audio WA7 fireflies

May 4, 2013 ohm
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The lubberly hernia I sprung lifting the massive cardboard box off my doorstep was 70% covered by Japanese national health insurance. No worries; I’m not in debt. Yet. I half-expected the parts to a WWI land mine for my pains. Can’t say I was disappointed after prying open the cardboard to find the WA7, the first of Woo Audio’s new breed of neutered steampunk. Sat next to a WA6, it reminds one of a 1980‘s ‘Volvo’: boxy, but good. Jack calls it ‘fireflies’ and it’s pretty awesome.

Specifications
​
Single-ended, class-A, transformers output
​Linear external high-performance power supply (remote-controlled power switching)
​Two 6C45 driver/power tubes
​C-Media 6631 USB chip
​TI PCM5102A 32-bit DAC chip
​Headphones impedance : 8-600 Ohms
​Input impedance: 100 Kilo-Ohms
​Sampling rate: up to 32-Bit, 192kHz
​Inputs: 1 Asynchronous USB2.0, 1 RCA
​Outputs: 1 1/4" and 1 1/8" headphone outputs, 1 RCA (same connector as the input)
​Max output: approx 1 watt @ 32 ohms
​Frequency response: 11Hz to 27kHz, +/-0.5dB
​Distortion: <0.03%
​S/N: 95dB
​Power consumption: 25W max
​Mains supply: 100-120V, 220-240V, 50/60Hz, user selectable
​Finish: Anodized aluminum
​DC cord length: 4.25 ft or 1.3 m
​​Dimension: AMP: 4.8" L x 4.8" W x 5.1" H with glass
​​PSU: 7" L x 3.5" W x 2.2" H
​​Weight: AMP - 5.3 lbs / 2.4kg, Glass - 3.3 lbs / 1.5kg
​​PSU - 2.8 lbs / 1.4kg

Woo Audio WA7 - 999$ USD

ohmage: DAC functionality
​
Fireflies sports analogue RCA inputs as well as this decade's Ubiq, USB. The latter is plug-and-play simple for OSX and iPads. iPhone and iPod touch users will have to jailbreak their devices to enjoy the WA7. Windows users will have resort to using Woo Audio’s drivers. 

The RCA jacks at the back serve dual purposes. When utilising USB input, they double as analogue outs. Otherwise, they are analogue in. Clumsy, yes, but functional.

ohmage: haptics
​
I’m staking whatever I’ve got left (about 507¥) after a trip to the beer store (and that hernia operation) that Jack Wu knows about Knob-Feel. The WA7’s got a great knob. Camera folk: it’s like using a properly greased Zeiss 35/2 Biogon ZM: rigid and well-damped. Unlike the Japan-made Zeiss, however, there is no play in its revolution. Control freaks will love its long throw. Earphone freaks will appreciate its noiseless operation. Twiddling it with two fingers is best. 

Let’s get back to what put me under the knife: weight. With its glass guard in place and valves installed, fireflies tips the scales at almost 4 kilograms. Side by side with CENtrance' DACmini, the WA7 is a fat man in tight shoes. It is smaller but much heavier than Antelope Audio's Zodiac DAC/headphone amp. Unlike either the Zodiak or the DACmini, it won’t flirt around your desk as you complacently attempt to stuff its jack with your headphone bits. Weight, my friends, is as much desktop audio’s bedfellow as it is hernia’s.

Fireflies’ arse bristles with doohickies: power switch, hi/low Z selector, input selector, input panel, and a puckering power inlet. The hose connects to a proper power supply that is practically as big as the WA7. And yes, it is stitch-popping heavy. Ditto the hose, which for the same reason boasts a sturdy screw-in ass-ring that ensures the amp stays coupled to its power source. 

ohmage: kitsch
​
The first litmus test for any piece of desktop audio gear is ‘what the wife thinks’. No amp has ever passed my wife’s litmus. The good news for Woo is that she didn’t exactly turn her nose up at fireflies. She likes polite. She married a Swedish-born Canadian for god’s sake. I eat pizza with a knife and fork, burp into my elbow, double flush. When she saw the WA7‘s clean, 80‘s Volvo-esque lines, she saw polite. She might have seen me for all I know.

Woo Audio don’t beam you with fireflies branding. They’ve kept the WA7 logo small. No gold bling anywhere. Even the top glass hides the glowing valves and the beautifully etched ‘Woo Audio’. This is probably Woo Audio’s most understated design to date. I think it will have many fans, though there are a few out there, who like me, love steampunk. Everyone has their weaknesses. 

By the way, WA7 looks and sounds great with the love-it hate-it Fostex TH600.

porridge: build quality and polish
​
Talent for inducing hernia is one thing; hardware follow-through is something else. The WA7 isn’t by any means, shoddily made. No. Its quirks, however, are several, and poignant. The first is the glass top. It slides around at the smallest earthquake (and not every earthquake around here is small). Even when the ground isn’t quaking, simply typing at the same desk the WA7 is perched on is enough to cause the chassis to rattle. 

The culprits are many. The worst is the wiggle room open between the the valves and the glass slab. The fit between metal and glass is poor. Coupled with the sheer weight of the melted sand roof, the resultant wiggle room is enough to break the valves. Woo Audio are now shipping rubber feet with every WA7. Good on them. But I’d rather support the valves with metal rings.

The second issue is less egregious, but belies the WA7‘s 999$ price tag (plus shipping and earthquake insurance). It’s the unanchored, wiggly woggly RCA connection which is reminiscent of a MUCH cheaper amp. Carefy do, carefy do. 

The final complaint is even more riddled with holes. It’s WA7’s half-arsed USB plug ‘n play software. The good news is that it works as advertised. But, the USB receiving chip has many functions, including SPDIF input and a multitude of outputs. What shows up in your preferences panel for the WA7 is: Speaker and SPDIF Output. ‘But my computer already has speakers, and SPDIF output’ you say. If you are used to browsing your computer’s audio output devices, simple deduction will get you to the WA7. If not, trial and error is the road you’ll have to take. In its current form, USB plug and play reminds one of the care a knock off vendor puts into their products.

ohmage: sound
​
Fireflies boasts lower noise levels than Centrance’ DACmini while adding the goodly harmonic bits valves are known for. The long-throw volume pot ensures all but the most sensitive headphones tracking headroom even at low volumes. 

ohmage: Noise at a 100% turn of the WA7‘s volume pot is less than the ALO Rx at low volume levels. 

Woo Audio is rather an icon among valve headphone aficionados. They make superlative interfaces and chassises. If you want tubey sound, they’ve got an amp for you. Ditto non tubey sound. Ditto all-out power. Fireflies trends towards the latter two, blending clear, far-reaching highs and excellent upper midrange timbre, with a meagre, but healthy dose of harmonic distortion and decent stereo separation. 

If there ever was a desktop equivalent to the godly Portatube+, the WA7 would be it. It’s the wonderful, grain-free timbre- no, it’s those violin-loving upper mids that do me in. Upper midrange ring is well controlled, but vestiges remain, adding sweetness to your concertos and jazz ensembles. Comparisons don’t stop there. Both Jaben’s amp and Woo’s exhibit slight signal-warming harmonic decay artefacts. Fireflies’s midrange comes away more a little more active while Jaben’s treble comes away with a bit more sparkle. Overall, the two share rather compatible voicing.

ohmage: WA7’s penchant for mid-high voiced strings makes it one of the best desktop amps for classical and jazz. 

Pairing the WA7 with your favourite warm headphone is glorious. On the portable end, Audio Technica’s ESW11LTD is a heavenly match. In a worst-case scenario, the WA7 is able to push over 65dB stereo separation into the likes of Audio Technica’s ESW11LTD while keeping THD and IMD quite low. The results don’t change much when pushing the ES7. Easier to drive headphones such as Sennheiser’s HD600 exhibit less load on the WA7. Even at harsh volumes, headphones like Fostex TH600 remain mostly sizzle free. Of course, easy to drive cans such as the DT880 600Ω are chicken soup and can be driven stably at any turn of the volume pot. One thing you may notice, however, is channel imbalance, especially with sensitive headphones. 

porridge: WA7’s volume pot exhibits up to 2dB of channel imbalance at all volume positions.

When comparing output across several different headphones at varying sensitivities and impedances, I rounded out a semi-quick conclusion: WA7 is most at home above 80Ω. Semi-low sensitivity is also favourable. The likes of Heir Audio’s amazing Tzar 350 and 90 earphones still stymie the WA7‘s output. While their impedances fall into the WA7‘s comfort zones, they simply don’t get enough low-voltage current to remain 100% stable. Still, they run much better than stage monitors like Earsonics’ SM2 does. 

Ringing in at 25Ω, the Fostex TH600 weighs in at the very bottom of the WA7’s semi-comfort zone. The errors it forces are minor: slight low frequency fall off and rise in IMD. Despite these issues, the couple make a great pair.

porridge: WA7 has a semi-high Ω output. It is best paired with headphones with impedances of 80Ω or more. Low-Ω headphones will force various signal errors.

Like many good hybrid valve/solid state designs, the WA7’s best frequencies are its upper mids and lower trebles. Both boast flavour of their own and ring beautifully. Violin timbre and detail is toast-worthy. You owe it to yourself to check out Bach’s Sonata for Violin #3 with a pair of woodies and this Woo.

While you won’t get record attack/decay speed from the WA7, channel separation and stereo artefacts are low. Combined with the right headphone, headstage can be surprisingly good. 

The WA7 is Woo’s most interesting departure from its steampunk roots. Its quadrangle design invites wifal approval. Its plug and play simplicity invites the newbie. Its power invites long time headphone users. Awkward USB driver branding, pliable RCA jacks, and the slippy glass roof describe a Woo Audio that may have rushed production. Which is a shame. WA7 is a great product. It sounds great. It looks good. And it works. But it doesn’t really feel like a 999$ product from an American company - particularly after springing a hernia. 

ohmage: 6

porridge: 3

​

In review, headphones, amps Tags Woo Audio, headphone amplifier

ohmage to the Fostex TH600

April 23, 2013 ohm
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From the country of endless kitsch comes a headphone that’s almost laughably stodgy. Its aniki, the TH900, dresses to the hilt in Harajuku-bright urushi blotches and swigs, glinting in even the dimmest listening room. Outwardly, the two could not be more incompatible. Despite bringing up the caboose in the foundling TH series of headphones, the Fostex TH600 plays things cool as 1980’s TV dramas. Think Night Rider without the Hasselhoff: KITT for a new, living-room bound age.

Specifications
​Type: closed-back dynamic
​Driver: 50mm neodym magnet / biodynamic diaphragm
​Frequency response: 5-45.000Hz
​Impedance: 25Ω
​Sensitivity: 94dB/mW
​Maximum Input: 1.800mW
​Weight: 370g (cable not measured)
​Cable length: 3 metres (y split)
​Plug: straight 6,3mm gold plated stereo plug
​Price: 850-1300$

ohmage: comfort
​The TH600‘s cups are made of light-weight die-cast magnesium alloy. Almost any sized ear should comfortably be able to tuck itself inside - with very little hanky-panky. That said, the pads are low profile and the the mounting flanges sit flush with the inner protective mesh. If your ears are even slightly mousey, you’ll feel the inside of the cups, but nothing too adult. The pads are made of an interesting concoction of egg protein, padding, and a lot of marketing imagination. To the finger, they feel surprisingly like leather. To the ear, they're mostly bearable. Egg protein, like every dead animal skin wannabe, feels strange once your ears start to sweat. And sweat they will. Despite coming in lightweight magnesium, the TH600 is heavy. Plus, egg pleatherette has the habit of jettisoning your offerings of sweat and oil back at you. It’s a humid road thereon in.

However, let’s be honest, headphones have never been completely comfortable. Pain and pleasure are old bedmates. Fostex’ newest headphone may be half scrambled, but it lays a lighter yoke than many cans. 

porridge: fit
​Here’s where my PC-ness hits the fan. Designed in Japan by a group of suave engineers with Japanese heads, the TH600 traces a thin line for narrow-noggined folks. Even with its headband compressed to its smallest size, the TH600 still sits heavy on my ears. It’s not meat-head-only Audio-Technica sloppy, nor is it as woefully oversized as Ultrasone headbands are; but in the end, the entire headphone sags past my ears' comfort zones. Suffice it to say, if you’ve got a mouse head, you may want to add a bit of sponge to the headband to keep the headphone from dripping to your shoulders. 

Normal to wide-headed people will get along nicely with the TH600. We mousers envy you.

ohmage: kitsch
​If the TH600 has any of this stuff, it’s buried beneath layers and layers of second-child psychosis. It’s freaking KITT for God’s sake without the Cylon eye thing, an ‘up yours’ to the gaudy TH900. 

The cables are wrapped in nylon filaments and joined in a sturdy Fostex-branded y-split. There on down, the cable gets thick and reaches over 2,5 metres to a large, no-nonsense 6,3mm plug. Plug and phone-side stress relief is taken care of by thick rubber friction tubes. Overall, the cable is excellent. The TH600 is a big-arse black headphone and its cable a garrotte, but it rocks. No frills to attract the watchful eye of your spouse and thus, no sweaty ‘chats’ about price, yadda yadda. 

The TH900 is pretty much the same thing but with urushi scaling, dabbing, and a shiny veneer over the top. Next to each other, the TH600’s colour scheme is Scandinavian in simplicity. The TH900 is Hawaiian-shirt-clad-Manitoban-evangelical-preacher in ostentation. (And as nice as that shirt may be, you have to be in to Hawaiian shirts to get it.)

Fostex, you’ve done your listeners (and believers) a service by offering something for Zeno as well as Zane. Thank you.

porridge: build quality
​If you’re even slightly handy, you’ll enjoy the no-nonsense approach to construction Fostex  have fostered into the TH600. If something breaks and you’ve got the parts, you can replace it. That’s good news, too, as the TH600 needs kiddy-glove treatment more than its direct competitors. Its weakest points are the mounting fulcrums on either side of the headband. Both the band and the yoke will develop wobble in Ikea time. This lax tolerance will cause the yokes to scrape the headband. That’s when the paint chips fall. Aside from that (and the egg padding), there’s little to complain about. But then again, for the price, we should be able to expect better.

ohmage: Sound
​Build niggles be damned, the TH600 walks away proud because, primarily, its sound has no real flaws.

Crispness
​Underlining every frequency is crisp timbre. The TH600 isn’t an analytical headphone, but it renders every frequency distinctly. At its heart are clear, unstrained vocals that take durst not encroach on their surrounds. Crisp is the name of the game. It makes sense. Japanese is a precise language full of sharp chirps and clacks with nary a vowel slide to offend the rhythm. You will encounter neither fleshy lisps, nor splashy ‘s’es anywhere in this headphone's repertoire of unoffending effects.

Conversely, the TH600’s  penchant for full-spectrum crispness leaves lush female vocals to flounder among percussion, pianos and guitars. Beyer’s T1/5 series places vocals front and centre. If you don’t like them, be damned. The TH600‘s `What you get is a mastering mix rather than a whisky-and-crackling fire feel good listen. 

Space
​While undeniably a closed-sounding headphone, the TH600 delivers sublimely wide instrument placement. Fostex’ approach to percussion is perfect: central placement with supporting instruments undulating in concentric circles around it. Vocals hover near the back of the ear, drifting near the black hole when needed. The magnesium cups are used to full effect, engaging the sense of space where there really is none. Where other closed headphones produce flat, regular spatial cues, the TH600 flourishes tangible rises and troughs that are great for music, and perfect for movies.

Speed
​The TH600 derives is crisp, spacious sound from speed. Notes decay in no time, front edges of every instrument are tight and grindy. Not too tight, however. In no way does the TH600 approach AKG's K70x series levels of knife-edged austerity. This speed does wonders with cymbals, no matter what slays them. Sibilance: no; splotch: no again.

Bass vs. Mids
Were I pressed to choose a winner, I’d choose bass as sound pressure heavyweight. Both are clear, strong, and detailed. Bass throbs through with more pressure, though, but neither ever gets summery. The gotcha to this presentation of course, is that vocals never step too close to the mic. Trance fans may rejoice, but small ensemble jazz fans and live aficionados are bound to bemoan: 'oh the humility!' Get over it, I say. It’s just not your typical audiophile headphone; the TH600 feels more at home in a monitoring environment - (though again, not too at home).

Bass vs. Highs
​Like its bass and midrange, the TH600’s highs are nimble and detailed. Sibilance-inducing tracks make off with nothing more than a weak shimmer. To be honest, this trance-head could do with slightly more aggressive highs. Bass and treble balance each other well. Too well, perhaps. With the slightly withdrawn vocal range working as a rudder, there’s almost too little accent, too little splash, too little ‘gotta have it’ in the TH600. But then again, that is probably the mark of a good headphone as opposed to an accented headphone. 

​Discerning listeners will detect a petite V sound curve that suits classical recordings and studio work well. Emotion is there when needed - but nothing's sappy, ever. 

The TH600 is the mostly harmless, nerdy younger sister who writes people’s essays for fun. If she’d take off her glasses for a moment, you’d get to see her eyes (which are big); if she’d let down her hair for a moment...

(BTW, if you want to take her glasses off, wait a few hundred hours. I'm not talking burn in - I'm talking cracking the eggs. The protein pads are soft from the get go, but as they soften up, the bass really starts to come out... and it's glorious.)

Whatever. I’m a fan of the TH600's sound. It compliments my all-time favourite DT880 well. It never steps on any toes. It never plays favourites. For some, it will be boring. For treble or bass haters, it will be mildly V shaped. It’s... it’s... it’s that hard to find jack-of-all-trades headphone -the equivalent of a 1982 Pontiac Trans Am, but without the requisite chest hair, cologne, and hanky panky of the same decade. And I’m down with that.

ohmage: 2
​porridge: 2

Equipment used:
​Woo Audio WA7 Fireflies
​Graham Slee Solo Ultra Linear

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In review, headphones Tags Fostex
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