Description

I am restarting a system on Audiogon just to let class D owners know there is gold to be mined in their systems. This is my H2O Laboratory. For over six years I strived to bring out all I could from the 16 bit CD. Finally, I think I learned everything there is to learn on how to match class D and H2O specifically to the most difficult speaker load extant.

I started this venture with unbridled enthusiasm. Having already heard great class A and AB amps on the Scintilla I knew how the speaker controlled the amp rather than the other way around. My first dally with Class D cleaned some of the thick solid state smudge. That was encouraging. I didn't care much whether it was musical or not in the beginning. I just wanted to hear what was on every CD. I didn't know then, how long a road of discovery it was going to be.

My beginning with the H2O six years ago was a rough start. I had to put up with preamps not made for the class D amp. My funds weren't overflowing putting two kids through out of state university. An Aleph P did a decent job. H2O make things OK by creating a class A preamp that not only worked with the H2O amp, but assisted the waking of the 1 ohm speaker too.

My sources were wanting back then too. I started with a Jolida 100 loaded with NOS Sylvania Black Plate tubes. Later I replaced that with an Audio Note One.1 DAC and a PSA Lambda. This combo allowed more of a the view through the CD window. I thought it was quite enough, until someone characterized the sound as being dark.

I sent the Lambda and AN back to H2O. They came back with cutting edge diodes that opened up all those highs I was missing, plus a lot of dynamics I didn't know I was missing. That sufficed for three years. The sound was extremely dynamic with full force surges that followed the biggest climaxing classical scores.

Cables were always a problem for me. I learned early on class D amps need shielded cables. The clip on iron rings did no good. Shunyata did good. Made up Belden wires did as well. All my gear is hooked up with Shunyata or Belden. I don't know why it works, but I do know it works well.

The speaker cable conundrum flummoxed me. I knew from experience insulation talks. Depending on the cable's thickness the insulator's sound will be a hiss to a shush. The only commercial naked SC I knew of was Speltz Anti Cable. After a year, I found out that they were lacking in the highs and lows, but had a killer mid. By listening to other's experiences I tried thin ribbon. That worked better than anything I had imagined. It just let every note through in it's fullest expression. The front to back depth popped into focus. Obviously all the CD's information can travel unscathed by the

Now, to bring it to present. My trusty Lambda transport died, and I became disabled.

I went on a search for a replacement for my Lambda. I was looking at older greats. They seemed to all upsample the signal before passing it on to the DAC. Some pre-filterred the music. I did not want any of that. Only one just passed the honest digital information.

There was one transport in my price range that did just that. That was the 47 Labs Flatfish and it's power supply, the Dumpty. This little jewel is better than I ever dreamed a transport could be. All of a sudden, I found the bass was not absorbed by my pliant 100 year old floor. There was something else, something that gave me dance fever. I looked up the Flatfish on the 47 Labs site. There I found what the transport's creator called the new ingredient in my system. He calls it, "Harmony." Whatever it is, it definitely takes the music to a whole new level of enjoyment. Suddenly, you just know that is what music should sound like. It isn't just low mid and hi notes it is the melodic interconnection of those notes that is missing in so many systems.

The Flatfish is coupled directly to the floor through the cabinet. My floor is suspended over a basement. I can feel all the speaker vibrations from the far side of the room where I am typing. Walking on the floor makes it bounce. How was I to keep the Flatfish from collapsing on it's unattached legs?

That is where I made the next big step. Like with the speaker cables, I had to invent something that would isolate the CD spinner. I looked at what was on the market, and saw there was nothing there that could do the trick to my satisfaction. So, I made one. It is perfect. It actually absorbs all the tremors and thumping the speakers make.

There will be no other changes. The lab is closed.
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Components Toggle details

    • Forty Seven 47 Labs Flatfish
    A tiny slab of aluminum with a stainless screen skirt. The CD spins on top. Three loose legs gingerly balance the player. This is the best transport I have ever witnessed. It is a barebones transport with as few parts as possible. The laser and clock are fixed on a rail. The power supply, Humpty, is separate. It is a robust aluminum cylinder.

    The sound is better than anything I have ever heard. It is this Flatfishes uncanny to unleash a subtlety they call harmony, I just say it is the missing ingredient necessary to get the performer's real intention.
    • Audio Note UK DAC-2
    AN DAC 2.1 with diode upgrade - very important. This DAC sounds far better than stock AN DACs. The ultra fast recovering diodes let all the music through. CDs have it all.
    • Sanyo PLV Z-3000
    All the detail one could want, excellent contrast and near seamless fast action.
    • H2O Fire 2
    This is a muscular and pristine preamp. The dynamics, and dynamic surges are not approached by any other preamp. That I am sure of. Also, every improvement I make upstream of it is clearly passed on by the fire.
    • H2O M250SE
    An amp that will require advice how to bring out it's hidden perfection. This is what my site is going to be about.
    • Apogee Acoustics Scintilla
    This is the STOCK Apogee Scintilla - the original. My system will not work on foreign ribboned Scintillas. The Scintilla is a totally misunderstood speaker. Being 1 ohm and 76 DB, it takes a hurculean amp and preamp to master. That is what I have.
    • Speltz Anti-Cable
    I still have these on board because they have never failed to deliver what upgrades up stream I made. I also am using their brand new true digital cable.
    • Mother Lode Audio Gold Strike
    These are my own. I could not find any SC that could do it all. All commercial cables lacked something, and most of them emitted self noise. My cables are ultra thin copper ribbon for the positive, and aluminum ribbon for the negative. These deliver all what is fed them from upstream.

    Why use aluminum at all? Because this system proves it makes no difference what is used for the negative cable. The positive must be the best, though. That too is proved here.
    • Mother Lode Audio Cloud Nine
    The Flatfish transport is fixed to what it stands on. The floor in my listening room is a hung over the basement wooden floor. It bounces, and transmits every tremor to everything in the room, save the Flatfish. It plays perfectly without of hint of smear or skip. I accomplish this with a granite tile topped perfect cushion. This cushion absorbs all outside tremors and thumps. Need I say more? I won't.
    • Speltz 75 ohm digital cable
    This cable is nothing like their ICs or SCs. They are both stiff, and bendable. The Speltz digital cable is as slinky as a garden snake. It's performance is simply outstanding.

Comments 34

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Muralman, Thanks for the offer for trying your cables. At the present time I am pretty happy with the cables that I am using. Henry is still burning my amp in and I will be most anxious to hear it once that I get it back.

Hopefully this latest review from 6-Moons will help get the word out and inspire others to audition Henry's products.

rlf

Someone else linked the new 6 moons review to me. After reading it I was inspired to send my H20 Signature S250 off to Henry for the newest upgrades including the pure copper foil wiring in the power supply, Schottky rectifiers, an improved AC filter, and top-of-line Mundorf silver/gold bypass capacitors which will replace my V-caps. Henry now has it for the upgrades, but needles to say, I am anxious to get it back to see how it sounds.

It appears that Henry's great gear does not receive all the attention that it deserves which probably is due to lack of marketing hype, I suspect.

rlf