I have always had a love/hate thing with SET amps - love the tubes, 3-D sound, and warm mids, hate the poor damping factor and what I perceive to be a reactive, uneven frequency response with some loads. The Crack amp, with its OTL, cathode-following topography really intrigued me - perhaps the closest to my ideal of "perfect sound." Obviously, OTL's for speakers are tricky, so I've been thinking about modding the S.E.X. to use different tubes and/or feedback to lower the output impedance and give a more even response.
With CB's guidance, I did some minor rewiring of the S.E.X. amp to give the power triodes local cathode feedback (CFB). I basically undid the MQ irons from being wired as autoformers, ran the red primary wire to ground, desoldered the ground bus from each cathode, ran a jumper from the cathodes to the back terminal strips where the twisted pair for headphones meets up, and reversed the secondary wires (orange to ground, black to positive/headphone wiring). No bias resistor was used. The change is nothing short of amazing. The amp is cleaner sounding, more detailed, and much more balanced - all frequencies now sound in check with each other, whereas I had problems with tipped-up mids and treble previously. I'm hearing a bigger, deeper soundstage and little details previously buried in what I presume was harmonic distortion. Best of all, bass is better than anything I've heard to date - thunderous and musical, and a bit tighter than before. I estimate I lost about 3dB gain in the process, but no biggie.
I know NFB gets a bad rap, but this application of local cathode feedback should be an exception. It makes the S.E.X. sound more refined, and if you have a preamp, the loss of gain is easily made up for (I simply turned up the Quickie a bit to compensate). I suppose I can always "wet" the sound by turning up the Quickie and adding 2nd harmonic distortion to the signal, but the key here is the sound can be colored without affecting the damping factor, etc. like it would be if the power amp was responsible for the coloring. My Beyers (and even Grados) also sound much better, which leads me to believe it is less about the 120 ohm headphone jack resistors than people think.
Next up may be experiments with 6EM7 tubes and different OPT's for more power!