I had ordered a Quickie about two weeks ago. This was my first venture into DIY electronics.
For the past couple of years I was using an old Fisher tube amp but unfortunately that died. I know nothing of circuits and could not find a local shop to fix the amp. So, sadly, the amp went to a new home.
In the mean time I bought a Sumo "The Nine" amp used (Class A baby). I have always wanted this amp since the first time I heard it sing in the early nineties. I was using an NAD integrated amp as a preamp for the past couple of weeks. Everything sounded good but not as smooth as tubes.
Enter the quickie. I had never built anything electronic (Except tinkering with Lego Mindstorms, which are way cool, and wiring a house). If I screwed up the Quickie assembly I wouldn't be out much cash. Also, I figured it would be a good project to introduce my boys to circuits (ages 8, 6, and 5). I am a firm believer that education should never be limited in any form and kids should be exposed to as much as possible at a young age.
Assembly of the quickie was a blast. My only issue was the coffee I drank that morning. The coffee seemed to hinder me from having a steady hands. The amp was assembled in about two hours taking time to explain what I was doing to my boys. The PJCCS was assembled the following morning. The preamp sounds sounds amazing. Soft on the top, detailed in the middle, and decent on the bottom.
After switching out cables a few times I was able to get the sound just right. For folks having issues with sound try swapping out cables first. Believe it or not they really have a HUGE impact on sound. My past experience is that some cables will dramatically impact low end and add harshness on the higher end of the sound spectrum.
The only issue I am having is with what occasionally sounds like clipping? Not really sure if it is clipping I need to do a little more research and listening.
My system consists of the following...
Bottlehead Quickie (Awesome)
Sumo Amp "The Nine"
Enligtened Audio Design (CD Transport)
Audio Alchemy (DAC DDE v1)
Vampire Wire (interconnects silver plated copper)
Kimber Kable (Simple black and brown stuff)
Spica TC50's (These speakers have been a mainstay in my system since high school, 18 years ago, and I can not part with them)
Every component in the system was less than $400 dollars with the exception of the speakers which I bought new my senior year of high school. I am a Corporate Controller and cheap as can be...
Thanks the Paul Joppa, Doc , and the Queen who were all very helpful and amazingly friendly. Also, I am not sure who I spoke with on the phone when I called about top plate color availability couple of weeks ago (he even got in his truck and went to the warehouse to see what colors were available ). Now that is service. I can all but guarantee I will get hooked on crack. I will upload some pictures later today.
Thanks,
Don