May
2003
The AVVT 300BSL Output Valve
by Thorsten Loesch

In
December 2001 I published a test of overall nine different types of 300B
valves, or should I say 300B compatible valves in that they fit the same
socket as the 300B and have at least notionally identical electrical parameters.
Missing at that point in time where two makes of 300B that had proven near
impossible to obtain within the UK for testing.
One of them were the valves
designed and manufacturer by Alesa Vaic, sold under the AVVT brand and
the other where the valves designed and produced by the late Dr. Kron,
sold under the KR Brand. While the KR Valves have remained elusive for
me, due to the good offices of Bjorn Steenback I had a chance to test a
brand-new pair of AVVT 300B SL in the recent month.
This test of the AVVT 300BSL
should be seen as a continuation of the original 300B Test and I would
strongly recommend to read the other test first to get an idea of the context.
While my system has changed appreciably between the original test and now,
I have retained samples of most of the valves originally tested and hence
the actual comparisons are still valid, both relatively to the Valves previously
tested and to the test of the AVVT 300BSL. I have also retained the format
originally employed, to keep the continuity.
This
valve has been around for a while and in fact as I write this it is in
the process of being replaced by the "Reference" Series using a “Nickel
Block” Anode and other improvements. While I have previously described
the build quality of the TJ valves as outstanding, these AVVT Valves raise
bar a few notches higher. The entire Valve feels immensely solid; the workmanship
on the structures inside is quite outstanding.
When
it came to sound, this valve also delivers the goods amazingly well. Compared
to my personal "reference", the TJ Mesh Anode Globe 300B, the AVVT valves
sounds somewhat brighter, yet this is absolutely smooth with no grain or
edge. To compensate the thusly highlighted treble the AVVT valve also seems
to have more weight and impact in the lower registers. In those areas the
AVVT is clearly ahead of the TJ, only when it comes to the midrange fades
the Magic and the TJ 300B is ahead. The AVVT shows a highly resolved midrange,
accurate tonal colours but it just misses the tough of "magic" the TJ brings
to the proceedings. That said, either TJ or AVVT are clearly, to me personally,
the best currently available valves that plug into a 300B socket without
changing circuits. Whereas the TJ highlights the Midrange and adds a touch
of fairy dust to everything, the AVVT tends to be stronger at the very
extremes of the sonic range and it presents music in a way that is a little
more cerebral, a little more restrained than the TJ.
However all this is swings and
roundabouts, I could happily live with either the TJ or the AVVT. The current
production WE 300B makes a strong showing in a close third place, in my
list at least.
Comparisons to the lesser 300B’s
from Valve Art, Sovtek, Svetlana and JJ Electronics clearly put all of
these notably behind the top three, arguably at a lower cost too, you get
what you pay for. The AVVT 300B SL joins my personal list of outstanding
300B Valves and is certainly worth the extra outlay, just as the WE and
TJ are.
Which
Is The Best?
That will depend upon your preference
and system context. The AVVT would be my first choice if I felt my system
would need help at the frequency extremes, the TJ if I wanted to add a
touch of magic and the WE, well, it’s WE, what more is there to say.
-
Overall 90
-
Tonality 90
-
Bass 95
-
Midrange 85
-
High-frequencies 90
-
Resolution 95
-
Soundscape /Imaging 90
-
Fit and Finish 100
System
Used For Audition:
Source
Analogue:
Acoustic
Solid "Solid One" turntable, with a number of Arms and Cartridges
including Origin modified RB-250 & Goldring Elite, SME 3009 & Denon
DL-103, Rega RB-300 & Goldring Elite/Denon DL-103, Ortofon RS-212 special
with SPU-GTE Pickup
Source
Digital:
Philips
LLH-1000 (Marantz DA-12) DAC, with TDA1541 and synchronous upsampling (or
you can say oversampling if you like) to 176.4kHz. The DAC has been fully
restores with all electrolytic capacitors replaced and is fitted with Burr
Brown OPA627 Op-Amp’s. A modified Pioneer DV-505 DVD player drives the
DAC as transport.
Preamplifier
Phono:
DIY
phonostage, EQ600 LCR RIAA equalization from Stevens & Billington,
TX-103 MC Step-up transformer from Stevens & Billington, Siemens E810F
special quality valves; Powersupply with only high performance Ansar
film capacitors, GZ34 rectifiers, 9 chokes….
Preamplifier
Line:
Passive
Linestage based around the TX-102 Magnetic Volume Control Transformer from
Stevens & Billington functionally similar Kits are available from DIY
HiFisupply and Bent Audio, a finished unit from MF Audio UK.
Power
Amplifier:
DIY
HiFiSupply Billie Amplifier Kit, heavily modified using WE 437A driver
to grid choke loaded 300B, WE 274A rectifier, several added power supply
chokes, power supply with only high performance Ansar Film Capacitors and
signal path with a Silver/Mica coupling capacitor, no electrolytic capacitors
except heaters
Loudspeakers:
Tannoy
Corner York copies build in 1-inch solid wood by a sadly departed friend,
using C37 lacquered Tannoy Monitor Red 15 Inch coaxial drivers, 95dB/W/m,
15 ohm impedance, 25Hz to 20kHz in room, closest current equivalent is
the UK/Europe/Japan only Tannoy Canterbury, not the somewhat
inferior North America only Tannoy Churchill
Room
correction: Behringer Ultracurve
8024 Digital equaliser
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