Disclaimer before you read the rest of my post:
Inevitably some people are going to read this to aid their decision on whether or not to continue with the C4S load themselves based upon what I say, so I first want to preface that my (and others) experiences are largely subjective, dependent not just on the S.E.X. amp itself but the entire audio setup. If you think about the multitude of variables involved in the process from: AC power quality, power supplies, source material, DAC, AMP, shape of your ears, psychological influences, wires that are used, capacitors in the circuits, speaker drivers, crossovers, etc, etc. I believe every little bit can influence in some regard so Y.M.M.V... Please A/B for yourself to know what you like best and what works best for your system. —sammyk
I've been doing some heavy daily listening since my last post. Previous complaints with C4S:
- Increased Harshness
- Perceptible Noise floor
- Lack of Musicality/Liveliness
1. Increased Harshness: Straight out of the gate, there was an overall harshness to the sound that was unpleasant to me. I theorized perhaps it may be that the C4S was making the system more transparent and I could hear the relatively fresh film caps better (I am firm believer in film cap break in, especially in boutique output and crossover caps). This did resolve to some extent, maybe in the range of ~20-30% better after 15 days of listening. Perhaps this would have gotten better after more time, but something else did make a surprising and significant difference here. I had two 4 pole Mundorf MLytic HV+ 470uF 550VDC power supply capacitors leftover from another tube amp I was taking apart, and I used them to replace the two 100uF 450V power supply caps in the S.E.X. while rewiring to make the 4 pole caps location in the circuit in between the diode bridge and chokes as recommended by Jensen Caps
http://jensencapacitors.com/CustomerData/Files/Folders/4-pdf/13_4-pole-capacitor-application-note.pdf.
This change made the C4S induced harshness go away pretty much entirely. It also increased overall SQ, lowered noise floor, and notably increased response in the low frequency giving a more holographic sound stage.
The theory is that C4S removes the power supply capacitors from the signal, but as I've seen and others in the past have reported, there still seems to be some interactions here that affect SQ.(See Paul's comments on the two stages of the S.E.X.)2. Perceptible Noise floor: With this one I wasn't sure if the C4S was making a difference here. I can confirm it does, however, it is only noticeable if you are using lower impedance headphones. Without C4S I can barely hear something on the 25ohm headphones, but with 600ohm, dead silent. With the C4S, noise floor is even less perceptible on 25ohm headphones, maybe if you are trying really hard. Likewise with the C4S, 600ohm headphones are dead silent. And with the power supply upgrade that I previously mentioned, the difference became even smaller.
(See Doc's comments on how noise floor reduction is accomplished and why the filter cap upgrade works)3. Lack of Musicality/Liveliness: This one is really what made me decide to question whether or not I should stick with the C4S. I love tube amps (esp. single ended triodes) because of their unique musicality. Even with upgrades as mentioned, and additional time for break-in, the musicality never came back. To make a simplistic analogy the C4S made an impact that made the amp sound somewhat more "solid-state" in that the sound was tighter, colder, accurate, the bass hits harder, but it is not particularly "interesting, or warmly inviting." Not relaxed. Serious. A bit sterile.
According to Morgan Jones in his Valve Amplifiers book, Cascodes behave more similarly to Pentodes than Triodes, without any of the negative features of Pentodes. I assume that because the Cascode should be so low in distortion this means the high odd order distortion of the the Pentode's characteristics shouldn't matter. I also assume that means if there was any pleasant even order distortion from a triode configuration, this would not exist with a Cascode. Ultimately, I do not know if the theory applies in this situation. (See both PB/Doc's comments). This week I tried some USSR film caps for the output and interstage, but it didn't get me back to the non-C4S sound that I knew was there without the C4S.
Conclusion: I think the C4S has a lot of benefits in: decreasing noise floor, increasing frequency response, deepening parts of the sound stage, etc. However, it also changes the stock S.E.X. sound that I really liked, enough for me to say I'm going to run no-C4S for the time being. Perhaps in the future when some major component changes come in (say new DAC or speakers). Or I'll probably just build another S.E.X. and have that be perma-C4S. In any case, compared to other amps I've listened to, the S.E.X. in both configurations blows most of them out of the water.