Decware
SE84C
Zen
Triode
Amplifier |
|
Constantine
Soo |
15
March 2002 |
Specifications
Power
Output: 5 Wpc,
stable into 2 ohm,
zero negative
feedback
Frequency
Response: 25Hz -
25kHz (+/- 3dB)
30Hz - 20kHz (+/-
1.5dB)
Hum and Noise:
less than 1.5 mV
Input Impedance:
100K
Output Impedance:
0.8 ohms
Dimensions:
6" ×
10" ×
6.5" (W
D × H)
Price: $499 fully
assembled factory
direct, $399 as a
kit
Warranty: 30 years
Address
Decware/High
Fidelity
Engineering
Company
1202 N.E. Adams
Street, Peoria IL,
61603
Phone:
309-671-2428
Website: www.decware.com
Email: fidelity@Decware.com
The
Amplifier Scene
Half-a-century
ago, supposedly in
reference to
driving his
hundred-some-dB-sensitivity
Cornwall, Paul
Klipsch said,
"What this
country needs is a
good five-watt
amplifier."
What Mr. Klipsch
probably didn't
anticipate were
the commanding
prices of some of
today's five-watt
amplifiers.
In
the vacuum tube
amplifier family,
the single-ended
triode tube
amplifier is the
much celebrated
and infamous
member. However,
the prohibitive
cost of some
triode tube
amplifiers,
especially those
of the 300B
variety, can
represent a high
maintenance cost
when the time
comes for tube
replacements.
During
the 60's, the dawn
of the transistor
was to
revolutionize
audio
amplification with
its lower cost of
manufacturing,
ease of
maintenance and
measured
excellence, making
powerful
amplifiers
increasingly
affordable to the
general public.
Taking advantage
of such new
technology,
speaker designers
considered the
transistor
phenomenon a
newborn freedom in
their endeavor,
according them
unprecedented
flexibility in
design parameters
previously
impractical
because of
scarcity of power.
Continuing and
reinforcing the
trend to this day,
makers of both
amplifiers and
speakers churn out
amplifiers of
brute force as
well as
inefficient
speakers.
Considerable
advancements over
the decades in
solid-state
amplifier design
notwithstanding,
many tube
aficionados still
prefer the
century-old tube
design because of
its more sonically
benign,
even-ordered
harmonic
distortions when
pushed to the
limit as opposed
to solid-state's
predominantly
odd-order harmonic
distortions, which
many claim to be
more sonically
detrimental.
Objectively
speaking, both
solid-state and
vacuum tube
amplifiers possess
distinctive sonic
signatures that
delight every
audiophile; but
neither design
combines the
advantages of
perfect linearity
with power and
stability to
boast. Therefore,
speaker efficiency
concerns aside, it
becomes largely a
matter of taste in
choosing between a
solid-state or
tube amplifier.
Decware
& The Zen Amp
According
to the
Merriam-Webster
Dictionary, Zen
is a noun for a
Japanese Buddhist
sect that teaches
self-discipline,
meditation, and
attainment of
enlightenment
through direct
intuitive insight.
Historically, the
Japanese Zen
was a derivative
from the Chinese
original with the
same basic
meaning.
My
editor Greg Weaver
pointed out to me
that Nelson Pass
first adopted the
Zen designation
for amplifiers
during his bygone
Threshold era.
With the
single-ended
topology being the
commonality of
Decware and
Threshold, in the
company of
esteemed
manufacturers like
Audio Note and
Cary, Decware
applied the
topology to the
simplistic tube
circuitry in the
design of his
Decware products.
Nelson Pass,
currently with his
technology-intensive
Pass Lab
equipment,
continues to
flourish in his
solid-state arena.
When
you visit Steve
Deckert's Decware
website, a program
begins to run and
a passionate
female voice
greets you. The
current products
include the $499
Zen triode SE84C,
the $695 Select
SE84C-S, the $1495
Zen Triode Dual
Mono Integrated
SE34-I, the
top-of-the-line
$1995 Zen
Signature triode
monoblocks, the
$795 Zen Triode
Phono Stage ZP-1
and the $895 Zen
Signature triode
preamplifier.
Being the joy and
pride of Steve,
his miniature
SE84C Zen Triode
Amplifier is
aesthetically a
bare-looking,
minimalist design
measuring 6 inches
wide, 10 inches
deep and 6.5
inches at its
tallest. Sitting
on four little
rubber feet, its
unimposing size
looked lonely on a
shelf and hardly
called attention
to itself.
The
SE84C features the
cheapest and
smallest output
tubes I've ever
known, the
Svetlana SV83. $7
each, two SV83
output tubes are
configured to
produce a claimed
5 Wpc into 8 ohms.
The owner's manual
recommends annual
output tube
replacement. The
rectifier tube and
input tubes are
said to be able to
last for many
years.
There
are altogether
eleven
hand-to-hand
wiring solder
points and no
circuit board.
Only one capacitor
and two resistors
are in the signal
path with no
hookup wire. One
surface-mounted
bias toggle switch
on the front and
one rear-mounted
power toggle
switch are
provided. Although
the switches are
not labeled, the
simplicity of the
SE84C's operation
makes the use of
them quite
intuitive and
self-explanatory.
I prefer switching
the bias toggle
towards the
amplifier's rear
because that
produces higher
output resulting
in better dynamic
contrasts. A bare
rotary volume pot
on the rear
completes the
functionality. The
power cord is
detachable, and
only RCA inputs
are facilitated.
Two very sturdy
sets of
surface-mounted
three-way speaker
binding posts are
provided.
Decware
boasts in the
owner's manual
that "it
is usually a
given that no
other part of
your hi-fi
system is
capable of
surpassing the
fidelity of the
SE84…You would
have to spend
around $10,000
on a cost no
object front end
to actually hear
the fidelity
this amp is
capable of…you
will never be
able to actually
hear the
amplifier, it
only passes
signal (no
coloration's) so
whatever you
feed it is what
you're going to
hear."
Assuming
"fidelity"
means honesty to
original signal,
then it is safe to
say that a
component with the
highest level of
fidelity is one
imparting no
individuality at
all - a component
you cannot hear.
So, I agree with
Steve on the
perfect amplifier
definition.
What
I disagree with,
however, is the
statement that
says it take a
$10,000,
cost-no-object
front end to hear
the Zen amp's
level of fidelity.
A perfect
amplifier would
amplify signals
from upstream
components with no
coloration or
distortion,
whether those
components are
sonically superior
or inferior. What
Steve might have
meant to say was
that to expose any
sonic
contamination
induced by his Zen
amp, it will take
the most
transparent
equipment in the
audiophile
marketplace
usually carrying a
price tag of
$10,000 and
upwards. We shall
see.
Set
Up and Audition
SE84C's
built-in volume
control was
initially used as
the only means of
level setting,
whether I was
playing SACD from
my Sony
SCD-777ES SACD
Player, or
Redbook CDs from
my CEC TL1
belt-drive
transport via
Illuminati Orchid
AES/EBU cable to
Wadia 27 Decoding
Computer. In the
case of the Wadia
27, its output was
internally reset
at the same level
of the Sony SACD
player at 2 V,
churning out
maximum resolution
and volume.
Without a preamp,
the Zen Amp's
volume pot was
consistently
rotated to
approximately 75%
of full volume to
reach my preferred
listening level.
Cables used are
the Granite
Audio #470
throughout, with
Cardas Quadlink 5C
speaker cable.
Speakers were my
104 dB Klipschorns.
Beginning
with no preamp, I
played SACDs first
to get an
impression of the
resolution
attainable via the
Zen amp. The first
disc I chose was
Mark Levinson's
"Red Rose
Music
Sampler"
Super Audio CD.
Recorded mostly
inside the small
studio of the
infamous Manhattan
"Red
Rose" store,
this SACD
highlights sounds
of single
instruments
primarily.
Despite
the SE84C's modest
output, it allowed
the Klipschorns to
depict the
instruments
without sounding
constricted or
uninvolving.
Honestly conveying
the bare ambience
of the studio, the
Zen amp conveyed a
surprising
proliferation of
tonalities at the
same time, drawing
my attention to
realism of
instruments like
guitar, saxophone
and piano, which
contained
revealing
overtones,
endowing the sound
with body and
character.
Initially,
the Zen amp
reproduced
convincing
dramatic contrasts
from the Sony
Classical SACD
"The Rite
of Spring"
[Sony SS 089062],
until sustained
levels of snare
drum rolling
progressively
caused clipping
distortions. In
addition, a slight
touch of dryness
surfaced during
louder passages,
while the
background tape
hiss of the
vintage master
tape was notably
audible during
softer passages.
Neither of which
was as prominent
when amplified by
the Audio
Note Quest
Monoblocks.
On the bright
side, the Zen amp
disclosed a sheer
amount of
information in
terms of spatial
definition and
instrument
tonalities.
The
clipping
distortions became
far more prominent
when the Zen Amp
was asked to
reproduce the
hellish drum
strokes from
Verdi's Requiem
[Sony SS 000707].
With the AN Quest,
this extreme
orchestral
bottom-end
rendition
epitomizes a
frighteningly
surreal afterlife
or judgment-day
experience. In the
case of the Zen
Amp, it portrayed
the ambience well
with realistic
spatial
definition; but
the soundstage
collapsed
momentarily during
demanding peaks.
On audiophile
grounds, this SACD
has startling
clear
dimensionality and
highly definitive
drum strokes over
the regular CD
version. It is a
wonder those
archaic studio
master tapes can
preserve such
powerful passages.
Pianist
Vladimir
Horowitz's reading
on SACD "Horowitz"
[Sony SS-6371] was
one of awe and
dimensionality via
the SE84C-driven
Klipschorn. A
sense of ease and
realness
complimented the
string hammering,
as fortissimos and
pianissimos
carried seemingly
infinite contrasts
of dynamics.
Despite the
periods somewhat
less opulent
recording quality
compared to
today's standards,
it easily exceeds
Redbook CD
versions of the
same repertoire in
its drama and
power.
Playing
regular CDs via
the CEC TL1 and
Wadia 27 combo,
the soundstaging
of Richard
Strauss' "An
Alpine Symphony"
[Deutsche
Grammophon "Karajan
Gold" DG 439
017-2] was at once
wide and stable,
with a
spellbinding
coherency
throughout,
reinforcing both
the label's and my
K-horn's
consistent traits.
However, in
addition to the
thunderous bass
drum in track 19,
"Thunderstorm,
Descent,"
which quickly
depleted the Zen
amp's dynamics and
soundstaging
abilities, a touch
of coarseness
persistently
exerted itself.
Despite that,
Maestro von
Karajan's Germanic
discipline and
pitch perfection
were communicated
admirably. It was
like staring into
the cleanest water
at a beach and
being able to see
the movements
beneath. Only
during sustained
intensity did it
again show a loss
of definition in
dynamic transients
and timbre
portrayal.
Performing
the vocal version
of Samuel Barber's
"Adagio For
Strings",
renamed as "Agnus
Dei", the
Corydon Singers
under the baton of
Matthew Best from Bernstein
Chichester Psalms,
[Hyperion CDA
66219] produced
some of the most
hauntingly
anointed and
euphonious vocal
effects - as
rendered by the
Zen amp. Despite
the lack of
midrange silkiness
from this early
digital recording
and the hint of
coarseness, there
was immense
musicality that
spoke volumes of
the composer's
ingenuity.
Fortunately,
absence of an
orchestra both
alleviated the
load considerably
and complemented
the light
character of the
Zen amp.
Wilhelm
Kempff playing
Beethoven's Moonlight
piano sonata
[Deutsche
Grammophon
"The
Originals"
"Klaviersonaten"
CD 447 404-2] was
incomparably
rendered, as the
Zen amp
immaculately
resolved the
German pianist's
hammering of the
strings with
incisiveness,
sonority, and an
abundance of
ambience. While
the sound didn't
approach the
resolution of SACD,
the music playing
was rendered with
precision and
control.
The
singing of Ella
Fitzgerald [Best
of Ella Fitzgerald
& Louis
Armstrong,
Verve 314 537
909-2] emerged as
velvety vocal
renditions with
excellent
reverberation.
Armstrong's
trumpet smearing
in
"Summertime"
was given amazing
definition by the
SE84C's ability in
low-level detail
retrieval. While
the trumpeting was
given adorable
depiction, the
magnetism in
Fitzgerald's voice
was lightly
tainted by a touch
of dryness.
Changing
to my stereo
Monarchy Audio
SM70 produced more
pronounced dynamic
contrasts from the
same passages,
rendering the
sound livelier and
more energetic.
This energy was
most captivating
even in music
featuring solo
instruments. The
higher 25wpc
output of the SM70
also enabled it to
convey full
orchestra passages
without
impediment, a task
with which the
SE84C struggled.
The SM70 also
induced increased
top to bottom-end
responses.
However, in spite
of its strengths,
the SM70 couldn't
approach the
instrument
tonality of the
SE84C.
Playing
the same passages,
adding my Krell
KRC-2 solid-state
preamplifier
increased the
SE84C's dynamics
at the expense of
even more
pronounced
coarseness.
Although the
soundstage width
did not diminish,
the onstage
activity portrayal
turned slightly
chaotic, making
the presentation
slightly tenser.
Audio Note's M3
tube preamplifier
largely eliminated
the Zen amp's
coarseness and
promoted even more
coherent tonal
shadings among
activities
onstage. However,
the Zen amp also
displayed dynamic
strains more often
with the M3
reigning. A pair
of the SE84C's,
run in monoblock
configuration, may
further improve
the dynamics and
should be
something to
consider, given
their affordable
pricing.
Summary
I
expect that Steve
Deckert will not
agree with my
description of the
sound of his Zen
amp; but the Zen
amp's fundamental
lack of tube
smoothness and
transistor-like
tonalities puts it
in a different
league than
typical tube
amplifiers.
Despite the
noticeable bottom
octave deficiency
in the playback of
selected music, my
K-horn's lifelike
dynamics were
largely unimpeded
as driven by a
single SE84C. Solo
instruments and
light jazz
represented easier
loads on the Zen
amp and were
wondrously
revealing. Bass
drums in complex
orchestral pieces,
however, were
deprived of
definition
summarily.
Depending
on your sonic
priorities,
extensive
auditioning of the
Zen amp may either
boost your passion
in the audio
hobby, or prompt
you to throw the
little dwarf out
of the window. The
Zen amp's real
commendable
quality, no doubt
derived from its
lack of complex
circuitry, was its
highly passive
nature, resulting
in an unusual
susceptibility to
changes in system
matching. This
easily makes the
Zen amp the
singular most
uncompromising
piece of equipment
in a system given
its
unpredictability.
While the Zen amp
may well be the
theoretical ideal
to many
audiophiles, this
fundamentally
passive character
demands
proficiency in
system matching
and ultimately may
not bode well with
audiophiles with
determined sonic
preferences.
It
is necessary to
have clear sonic
priorities to put
the strength and
weakness of the
Zen amp into fair
and proper
perspective.
Theoretically,
equipment
similarly devoid
of character
should compliment
the Zen amp; but
discretion must be
exercised in such
pairings. Be
mindful that, in
spite of the
claims of
transparency or
fidelity, products
from different
companies do sound
different. What
the Zen Amp needs
is compatibility,
a budget companion
component like
Steve's $895 Zen
Signature Triode
Preamplifier,
which is
presumably
designed with the
same approach and
priorities. If so,
then they may make
a potential
pairing mandate.
The SE84C is
unable to compete,
power-wise, with
other amplifiers
of either tube or
transistor
variety; but for
readers possessing
efficient speakers
who prefer to have
a minimalist and
sensibly-priced
reference, its
$499 MSRP
represents
essentially an
automatic
recommendation.
The
SE84C is
mechanically
reliable,
economically
priced, physically
unobtrusive, cheap
to maintain, and
above all, it
provides a bold
statement of what
a cleverly put
together and
affordable machine
using conventional
methods can do.
Objectively, the
Zen amp is a
conceptual
triumph. It is
pure in nature and
essentially
maintenance-free.
Subjectively, its
very limited
driving capability
and a distinctive
departure in
sonics from the
mainstream norm
for tube
amplification
debit it.
Longstanding 300B
tube users may not
appreciate the Zen
amp's unique
fundamental
traits, and
audiophiles
accustomed to
transistor
powerhouses may
never find the
SE84C worthy.
Retrospectively,
however, to some
ears, the SE84C's
ability at tonal
precision and
ambience depiction
can be gratifying.
Amidst
a world of
diversity in
designs and
implementations,
all high-end audio
companies past and
present claim the
title of maker of
the best sounding
equipment. The
truth is, despite
the claims of
fidelity and
transparency by
various companies,
with all their
experiences and
advanced
understanding of
the technologies
involved, no two
company's products
will sound the
same. Therefore, I
find Decware's
proclamation of
its products
superiority by
recommending the
SE84C for use with
cost-no-object
machines, both
bold and
subjective.
Many
readers are firm
believers in
technological
advancements and
in constantly
staying abreast of
the latest
offerings by
actively buying
new equipment and
trading in their
old pieces when
they are
discontinued. Many
amplifiers will
bring these
financially
well-endowed
audiophiles and
music lovers to
musical nirvana in
flamboyant style.
The SE84C, in its
simplicity and
appearance, may
not bode well with
that group.
At
$499, the SE84C
upsets the
established value
versus price ratio
in our hobby and
warps our
perspective. It
requires neither
significant
soul-searching nor
deep pockets to
acquire this amp,
but its output
limitation may
hinder matching to
most audiophiles'
systems.
Therefore, this
Zen amp will be
appreciated only
among audiophiles
with high
efficiency
loudspeaker
system. And, just
like one may have
bought an Acura
NSX but not an
equally fast Mazda
RX7 for less than
half, and the
folks who can
afford Mercedes
Benz and BMW will
unlikely buy a
Honda or Toyota.
Yet the birth of
the SE84C is a
brilliant and
necessary step in
the audio
evolution.
Products like the
Zen amp seldom get
recognized,
especially when
they are this
affordable.
By
adopting the
affordable SV83 as
the main output
tube for critical
audio
applications, the
emergence of the
Decware SE84C Zen
amp is a cause for
celebration. Even
without further
enhancement, this
is one affordable
high-end amplifier
worth owning. It
should be
experienced.

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