October 28, 200817 yr I admit that Wes Phillips' reviews of these two flagship models have got me looking at them, but everything I read seems intriguing and alluring. These are shockingly high cost items, so I am both hesitant to go too far down the rabbit hole of this fixation and yet still very curious. I also admit that the K-XR User Manual's suggestion that a balanced tape out could be used for a headphone amplifier made my heart go pitter-pat. Recognition in the highest of the high end! Anybody else heard the these and/or have any opinions on them or their design? A local dealer reps them, so I hope to get a listen later this week.
October 28, 200817 yr Author That would be cool. The pre has 2 balanced pre-outs and 2 balanced tape outs to go along with the 4 s/e and 4 balanced inputs, so it can do a whole lot. Any number of the ins and the tape outs can also be turned completely off and the ground lifted so it is like they ain't there.
October 28, 200817 yr It's probably just a buffered tape loop. Hell, I can do this off my KGSS and have done so.
October 28, 200817 yr My guess would be that Marc is right on the money but asking Ayre would be the best route. Since we are dealing with a real high-end company they will discuss their designs and can stand by them...
October 28, 200817 yr Author Marc and Birgir- What is it that you are talking about, or in other words what would I ask Ayre to explain? My comment about their suggestion of using the tape loop for a headphone amp was purely for grins and giggles because I don't recall seeing that in other hi-end preamplifier documentation. I was not suggesting it was anything special. As for turning off the inputs and the tape outs, my understanding is just what Wes Phillips and the Ayre manual say: turning them off "completely disconnects the auxiliary components from the K-XR (including the ground connection)." Wes goes into more detail on how it is done -- I think -- but mainly it just seemed like a good idea with so many ins and outs to be able to disconnect them and lift the ground to prevent ground loops or other interference from having all those empty jacks. That's all. Thanks, Al
October 28, 200817 yr At that price point I would look at the high end Parasound, Pass Labs and Krell too. The X .5 Pass amps are killer.
October 28, 200817 yr I have already had a couple of email with the guy. Wow, get it in time for Tampa.
October 29, 200817 yr It's no problem, he has a money tree out back at the Mayberry Compound. If you attended the meet, did you get to keep what you picked?
October 29, 200817 yr If you attended the meet, did you get to keep what you picked? Yup, everyone got to shake the tree once and keep what dropped.
October 29, 200817 yr Author How do you think Mike has afforded all those Beta22s and Suckitalo cables this year?
October 29, 200817 yr How do you think Mike has afforded all those Beta22s and Suckitalo cables this year? I can't wait to get out there again, maybe I can get my wife that kitchen she wants.
October 29, 200817 yr How do you think Mike has afforded all those Beta22s and Suckitalo cables this year?Wait, was he supposed to pay me for that stuff?
October 29, 200817 yr I was not suggesting it was anything special I suppose for some a heart-pitter-patter is special anyways, the question would be whether or not the main preamplifier circuity is responsible for handling the headphone load, or if it's an ancillary function. The latter would be my guess. Reason being that the tape loop may be powering something like a tube amp that in normal situations would cause an impedance mismatch.
October 29, 200817 yr Author The pitter-patter was due solely to Ayre mentioning headphone amplifiers in their manual. Here is the totality of the manual info on the tape outputs, and at least the third paragraph suggests there is a difference in how the signal gets from input to output as compared to the main outputs: The Ayre KX-R provides two tape outputs per channel, allowing connection of the selected source component to a recording device, headphone amplifier, or secondary sound system. These tape outputs utilize balanced XLR connectors. Should it be necessary to connect a tape output to a single-ended component, high-quality adapters are available from your Ayre dealer. Turn the tape outputs off unless they are currently being used. This will completely disconnect the auxiliary components from the KX-R (including the ground connection), eliminating the possibility of undesired ground loops. Unlike the main outputs, the tape outputs will not convert the signal from a single-ended source to a true balanced signal. Instead, the “hot” signal will be present on pin 2 of the XLR and pin1 and 3 will be grounded. This allows a connected balanced component to internally perform the single-ended to balanced conversion without the need for adapters. The tape outputs are controlled by a button on the remote control handset. Pressing the button activates the tape outputs, and pressing it a second time will turn them off. Turn the tape outputs off unless they are currently being used. This will completely disconnect the auxiliary components from the KX-R (including the ground connection), eliminating the possibility of undesired ground loops.
October 29, 200817 yr That thing costs more than a hooker, even on A'Gon. For that money, I expect more satisfaction than a hooker.
October 29, 200817 yr That thing costs more than a hooker, even on A'Gon. For that money, I expect more satisfaction than a hooker.
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