So two hours later and I have completed adding on the PJCCS upgrade to the Quickie. Once again, Bottlehead doesn't cease to amaze.
First thing before even playing any music, I had to address my concerns on the noise floor and gain staging. Before without PJCCS, the Crack would be dead silent up to 12 o'clock, and even at max (4 o'clock) the background noise wasn't as bad as say the Emotiva. With the PJCCS, the silent noise level has been pulled back to 9 o'clock on Crack, and after 12 o'clock it gets quite noticeable. This makes sense that the max silent position got cut in half (6 o'clock is zero volume) since the PJCCS doubled the output impedance of the Quickie. As expected as well, the volume level of the Quickie remains the same with the Crack pulled down to 9 o'clock from 12 o'clock.
As for sound, the most apparent thing was the bass. There is just simply more bass! The bass has better impact and more body. As for anything else, I haven't really picked up anything as apparent, and having to compare by memory with stock Quickie, it's not as easy to pick out minor differences.
The other difference I believe I'm hearing now is more transparency and clarity. The Quickie can congest the sound a bit at times when a lot of stuff is going on, but less so now with PJCCS.
So the verdict: Quickie with PJCCS synergizes well with Crack. Imo for around the same price, this is a better upgrade to Crack than Speedball. Speedball improves technicalities more, but the Quickie affects the sound signature more, and works very well with my HD800, and makes it more euphonic and enjoyable. But why not have both? Quickie with PJCCS + Crack with Speedball + HD800 = <3