I've been playing around with my SII-45 with the goal of getting it closer to the performance of my Kaiju.
A combination of new iron, tweaks to the parafeed cap values, 10 uF film cap bypasses of the last PSU 100 uF electrolytics, and 130 uF film cathode resistor bypass have gotten me pretty close. But there are two remaining and quite noticeable shortcomings as compared to my Kaiju: rolled-off highs and a narrow soundstage. I don't care that much about the soundstage, but the rolled-off highs bug me. And the roll-off issue isn't new - my "stock" SII-45 had the same issue. The Kaiju has so much more treble and sparkle.
Could this be a function of Miller Capacitance of the 12AT7? I've read that MC can cause high frequency roll-off in triodes and that it is a function of two main things: the output impedance of the previous stage and the gain of the triode. I measured the frequency response of the two amps a few weeks ago. I don't recall the values, but I remember that high freq. roll-off started considerably earlier (at a lower frequency) with the SII than with the Kaiju.
Output impedance of preceding stage: I'm using the SII-45 in way that was not intended: as a power amp after the Beepre. So instead of having the usual super low output impedance of, for example, a DAC feeding the SII-45, I have the Beepre with its (I think) 500 ohms output impedance.
Gain of the triode driver: The 12AT7 has nearly double the gain of the 5760 - 60 versus 35.
Could one or a combination of the above two factors explain the roll-off I am seeing/hearing? If so, are there any tricks for dealing with this? Or is the only practical solution to switch to 5670s in the SII-45? The Beepre is staying in front of the SII-45.
many thanks in advance, Derek