The HA-2 used a 6SN7 as the input tube. Personally, I much prefer the sound of the 6SN7 in this position to the 12AU7 that the Crack uses.
Pete Millett made fewer than 40 HA-2s before pulling the plug on Wheatfield Audio back in 2000 or so. He's admitted on other forums that he was “the world's worst business guy.” I believe he sold the rights to the HA-2 to HeadRoom Audio back when it was Tyll Hertsen's company, but AFAIK no more were made.
I bought one of those original HA-2s from Headroom. I was shopping for a headphone amp and was looking online at the Headroom amps (made in house) when I noticed they also had the HA-2 for sale. I don't think anyone else ever sold Wheatfield amps. Given Headroom's generous return policy, I ordered both a HeadRoom Max and an HA-2, thinking I'd return the one I liked less. I returned the Headroom Max, even though it had way more resolution and power than the HA-2. The HA-2 just had something magical going on, the kind of component that sucks you in without drawing attention to itself.
As I recall, the HA-2 sold for $799, $899 for one with upgraded tubes. I got one with upgraded tubes (Mullard CV378 rectifier, GE 6SN7, TungSol 5998--boy, those were the days). It was kind of ugly, but very well built. Almost all of the resistors were Rikens.
I gave away my HA-2 to a friend who now lives across the country, so I've never heard a stock HA-2 next to a Crack, but I have made 4 or 5 of my own versions of the HA-2 circuit over the years. The latest one uses solid state rectification but keeps the choke. As much as I love glowing tubes, I have to admit the solid state rectifier sounds better (I tried it both ways). And I use blue LEDs to bias the input tube (instead of the resistor plus bypassed cap array Pete used on the HA-2: he bypassed the electrolytic bypass caps with 1uF Solen caps).
It sounds really, really good. Not better than my S3X, but different. A friend brought his modified Crack over to compare it my own modified HA-2 circuit, and he thought it was a draw. I wasn't so sure.
I think the 6SN7 plays a big part in why I like the HA-2 circuit so much. Plus, the 6AS7/6080 tube is pushed harder: 2K cathode resistors instead of the 3K used in Crack. As Paul points out, that makes for one toasty chassis, so I have a hefty heatsink in mine. I also decided to use a toroidal PT and choke because I just could not get the Hammond iron I'd been using to be quiet.