SILTECH SAGA SYSTEM
Jonathan Valin, Januar 2014
BAHNBRECHENDE ERRUNGENSCHAFT
Obwohl andere Leute (einschließlich einiger in diesem Magazin) der Meinung zu sein scheinen, dass wir in der High-End-Audio-Branche in letzter Zeit nur noch auf der Stelle treten, indem wir die gleichen alten Geräte nur mit besseren Bauteilen nachbauen und sie als "Durchbruch" bezeichnen, bin ich ein Optimist. Ich bin der festen Überzeugung, dass High Fidelity und die Qualität und der Erfindungsreichtum der Technik, die dahinter steht, noch nie so hoch waren wie heute. Schleier, die wir in all den Jahren für selbstverständlich gehalten haben (weil sie so niedrig und allgegenwärtig waren, dass wir sie nicht wahrgenommen haben - bis sie nicht mehr da waren), werden hörbar gelüftet, Verzerrungen und Verfärbungen reduziert. Als unmittelbare Folge davon wird eine Fülle neuer, bisher ungehörter Details über Musik und Musikschaffende (und den Aufnahmeprozess selbst) deutlich oder klarer. Natürlich scheinen einige Leute (darunter auch wieder einige in diesem Magazin) zu glauben, dass solche neuen Details eine Art falscher Gott sind - das Produkt von entweder aufgeblasenen oberen Mitten und Höhen oder einem heißen alten Neumann-Mikrofon (Gott bewahre uns übrigens vor diesen, und die einfach schrecklichen Aufnahmen von RCA, Mercury und Decca, die damit gemacht wurden), oder die Propaganda eines Dummkopfs wie mir, der es einfach nicht besser weiß, als sich daran zu erfreuen, Dinge zu hören, die er noch nie zuvor auf Aufnahmen gehört hat, die er schon zig Mal gehört hat. Es scheint nicht viel zu nützen, darauf hinzuweisen (wie ich es wiederholt getan habe), dass ich mich nicht an neuen Details um ihrer selbst willen erfreue, sondern weil sie in ihrer Gesamtheit eine überzeugendere Illusion des Echten ergeben. Oder dass solche Details wesentlich weniger trivial sein können als das Knarren von Stühlen in der Geigenabteilung oder das Umblättern von Partiturseiten in Klaviernotenregalen oder U-Bahn-Fahrten unter Aufnahmestätten (obwohl es einen audiophilen Teil von mir gibt, der sich zweifellos auch daran erfreut, diese Dinge zu hören) - dass das Hören von z.B., ein Bartók-Pizzicato wie ein Bartók-Pizzicato klingen zu hören, macht nicht nur einen wesentlichen Unterschied in Bezug auf den Realismus, mit dem die Klangfarbe, die Dauer und die Intensität der Note erklingt, sondern auch einen ebenso wesentlichen Unterschied in Bezug auf unser Verständnis der Musik, die sie unterstreicht, und unsere Wertschätzung für die Fähigkeiten des Interpreten, der diese Musik spielt. All dies ist, ob Sie es glauben oder nicht, eine Vorbemerkung zu dem Bericht, den Sie gleich über ein Produkt - eigentlich ein System aus drei Produkten - lesen werden, das Schleier lüftet, Verzerrungen verringert, neue Details enthüllt und, ja, die Illusion von Realismus verstärkt. Dieses Produkt mit dem Namen Siltech SAGA System wurde von Edwin van der Kley Rynveld entwickelt, einem begnadeten holländischen Ingenieur, der vielen von uns durch seine Pionierarbeit bei Kabeln und Verbindungsleitungen bekannt ist (einschließlich meiner derzeitigen Referenzkabel, dem Crystal Cable Absolute Dreams). Es hat sich herausgestellt, dass Edwin, den ich vor nicht allzu langer Zeit in Arnheim in den Niederlanden (ja, das Arnheim - die Brücke steht noch, nebenbei bemerkt) im Anschluss an meine Crystal Cable-Review besucht habe, weit mehr ist als ein Metallurge von Weltrang, obwohl er auch das ist. Er ist ein sehr erfahrener Elektroingenieur mit einer Vorliebe für den Bau neuartiger Lautsprecher (die Crystal Cable Arabesques mit Glaskörper sind seine neuesten Produkte) und ebenso neuartiger Elektronik. Vor einigen Jahren hat Edwin den SETA entwickelt, einen 80-W-Single-Ended-Triode-Monoblock-Verstärker mit selbstgebauten Röhren. Der SETA und der dazugehörige Vorverstärker haben sich auf dem weltweiten Elektronikmarkt nicht sonderlich durchgesetzt (es wurden nur 30 Paar dieser Verstärker hergestellt), aber sie waren dennoch hoch angesehen und wurden sehr gut bewertet. Allerdings nicht so hoch angesehen und gut bewertet wie seine aktuelle SAGA-System-Elektronik, über die bereits in mehreren Magazinen und Webzines geschwärmt wurde und über die ich demnächst wieder schwärmen werde. Was ist ein SAGA-System? Es handelt sich um eine sehr teure ($112.500), dreiteilige Röhren-/Transistor-Hybrid-Elektronik-Suite, bestehend aus einem Vorverstärker und einem 380-Wpc-Stereoverstärker (an 8 Ohm) von höchst ungewöhnlichem Design. Auch wenn es nichts Neues unter der HiFi-Sonne gibt, wie einige Leute (einschließlich einiger in diesem Magazin) behaupten, ist das SAGA-System unbestreitbar anders genug, um eine ausführliche Erklärung zu verdienen, sowohl was es ist, als auch warum es so ist, wie es ist.
Lassen Sie uns zuerst das Warum betrachten.
SAGA ist die gelungene Initialisierung für das, was Rynveld Structural Amplifier Gain Architecture nennt. Und Structural Amplifier Gain Architecture ist das, was sein Line-Stage-Vorverstärker (der C1) und sein Zwei-Boxen-Verstärker (der V1 und der P1 - der Grund für die zwei Boxen wird gleich erklärt werden) beispielhaft darstellen. Die SAGA-Komponenten wurden entwickelt, um das, was Rynveld als "die alte Gewohnheit" der Verstärkerarchitektur von Vorverstärkern und Verstärkern der Vergangenheit bezeichnet, elektrisch und mechanisch zu überarbeiten und klanglich zu verbessern. Laut Mijnheer Rynveld sind all diese Vorverstärker und Verstärker in einer Art Zeitschleife gefangen und verwenden eine Verstärkungsarchitektur, die Sinn machte, als analog noch König war, die aber im digitalen Zeitalter nicht mehr so viel Sinn macht. In den LP-Zeiten bestand die Aufgabe eines Vorverstärkers darin, das relativ schwache Signal der Phonostufe (typischerweise 1 V oder weniger) auf Line-Pegel zu verstärken, damit es zur weiteren Verstärkung an den Verstärker weitergegeben werden konnte. Heutzutage ist die Ausgangsspannung eines CD-Players oder eines DAC hoch genug (typischerweise 2 V), um denselben Verstärker zu übersteuern oder zu überlasten, wenn das vom Vorverstärker gesendete Signal nicht übersteuert wird (d. h. wenn die vom Vorverstärker angewendete Verstärkung nicht niedriger als Unity Gain ist). Und in der Tat ist die Abschwächung des Eingangssignals genau das, was Vorverstärker heutzutage mit digitalen Quellen tun, über Operationsverstärker, diskrete Schaltungen oder passive Abschwächer. Das Problem ist, dass die Verringerung der Spannung des Eingangssignals, damit es die Eingangsstufe des Verstärkers nicht überlastet, auch den Dynamikbereich dieses Signals verringert - typischerweise um 10 dB bezogen auf einen Leitungspegel von 1,5 V - und dass mit der Verringerung des Dynamikbereichs die Hörbarkeit des Rauschens zunimmt, da der Signal-Rauschabstand ebenfalls verringert wurde. Wenn der Dynamikbereich einmal verloren gegangen ist, kann er nicht mehr wiederhergestellt werden - ganz gleich, wie viel Verstärkung nach der Dämpfung angewendet wird. Diese unvermeidliche Verringerung des Dynamikumfangs und die daraus resultierende Zunahme des Rauschens zu eliminieren, ist die eigentliche Daseinsberechtigung des SAGA-Systems, dessen Verstärkungsarchitektur in jeder Hinsicht auf die Realitäten des digitalen Zeitalters abgestimmt ist. Der C1-Vorverstärker wendet keine Dämpfung auf das Eingangssignal an, und der zweistufige V1/P1-Verstärker ist so konzipiert, dass er die erhöhte Spannung einer digitalen (oder analogen, was das betrifft) Quelle ohne Überlastung oder Clipping verarbeiten kann, wodurch die verlorenen 10 dB an Dynamikumfang erhalten bleiben, während sich gleichzeitig die wahrgenommene Lautheit ungefähr verdoppelt und das wahrgenommene Rauschen halbiert. Wie Siltech betont, ist es dieses Rauschen, das die tiefen (und hohen) Details von Klangfarben, Texturen und Transienten verdeckt, die fast allgemein als Schlüssel zum klanglichen Realismus angesehen werden - außer von einigen Leuten (einschließlich einiger in diesem Magazin). Es gibt jedoch ein Problem mit Rynvelds Strategie. Wenn der Dynamikbereich vergrößert und die Lautstärke praktisch verdoppelt wird, erhöht sich auch die Hörbarkeit von "externem Rauschen" (in Form von RFI, EMI und Netzrauschen). Da Wechselstrom-Netzteile die Hauptquelle für solche externen Geräusche sind, kam Rynveld zu dem Schluss, dass die Abschaffung dieser Netzteile und die Verwendung von (wiederaufladbaren) Blei-Säure-Gel-Batterie-Netzteilen das Problem lösen würde.
... Edwin hat eine viel elegantere, effektivere und originellere Lösung gefunden, die ich noch nie zuvor gesehen habe
Jonathan Valin
Leider führte diese Entscheidung zu einem weiteren Problem. Obwohl eine Batteriespeisung in einem Vorverstärker mit niedrigem Stromverbrauch durchaus machbar ist (Edge, Nagra, Veloce, Sutherland und viele andere verwenden sie seit Jahren), ist sie in einem Endverstärker ein viel schwierigeres Unterfangen, denn Endverstärker haben in der Regel drei Verstärkungsstufen - eine Eingangsstufe, eine Treiberstufe und eine Ausgangsstufe -, die jeweils unterschiedliche Anforderungen an die Stromversorgung haben. Da die von ihnen verbrauchte Strommenge relativ gering ist, können die Eingangs- und die Treiberstufe eines Leistungsverstärkers (mit ein paar zusätzlichen Anschlüssen) ausreichend mit Batterien versorgt werden. Die Ausgangsstufe hingegen verbraucht große Strommengen, die eine Batterie schnell aufbrauchen würden; daher muss sie mit Wechselstrom versorgt werden. Da die Eingangs-, Treiber- und Ausgangsstufen eines Leistungsverstärkers in der Regel in einem Gehäuse untergebracht sind, stellt sich die Frage, wie man deren Stromversorgungsbedarf bewältigen und gleichzeitig die Einbringung von Fremdgeräuschen auf ein Minimum beschränken kann. Ich weiß es zwar nicht genau, aber ich vermute, dass Rynveld mit dem Gedanken gespielt hat, zwei externe Netzteile (ein Batterie- und ein Wechselstromnetzteil) für seinen Verstärker zu verwenden, obwohl ich mir vorstellen kann, dass es schwierig wäre, einen Teil der Schaltung mit einem Wechselstromnetzteil zu versorgen, ohne den Rest der Schaltung mit Rauschen zu belasten. Letztendlich hat Edwin eine viel elegantere, effektivere und originellere Lösung gefunden - eine Lösung, die ich noch nie zuvor gesehen habe (obwohl sie meines Wissens nach in der Vergangenheit schon ein- oder zweimal ausprobiert wurde).
Instead of dividing the power supplies in two, he divided his amp in two, physically separating the input/driver stage (the voltage amplifier or V1 unit) from the output stage (the current amplifier or P1 unit) by housing each in its own separate, massive, heavily damped, beautifully made chassis. This not only allowed the voltage amplifier to be independently powered by batteries; it also insulated and galvanically isolated the low-level signals processed by the V1 (and those of the also separately-housed, battery-powered linestage preamplifier, the C1) from any AC power-supply noise in the current amplifier. If this were the end of Rynveld’s SAGA System innovations, it would suffice us. But ’t’isn’t. All things being equal Rynveld prefers the sound of triode tubes to transistors—and, as noted, has had experience designing triode amplifiers and preamps of the highest quality. However there are issues associated with using tubes in a battery-powered preamp and amp (or half of an amp) that wouldn’t crop up with AC power supplies. For example, typical twin-triode preamplifier tubes such as 12AX7s or 6922s require considerable voltage to operate as designed, and the voltage demands of high-output power tubes such as 6550s or KT120s simply put them out of the question. To get what he wanted sonically Rynveld had to make a series of interesting choices—and a compromise. First, he picked an unusual tube for his C1 preamp, the dual-triode ECC86, designed in 1958 (by Philips and Telefunken) for use in low-voltage environments such as car radios. Not only was this tube ideal for a batterypowered preamplifier—necessarily low in microphony, long-lived, and very rugged, in addition to having the right voltage requirements—Rynveld also (and most importantly) considers it a sonic gem. Four of them are installed in the C1 preamp in a “minimalist,” zero-feedback Class A circuit. Second, he used a high-frequency DC-to-DC converter to up the voltage of his battery power supply in the V1 voltage amp, which, among other things, allowed him to deploy two completely separate, switch-selectable amplifier-input/driver-stage circuits—both tube-powered. One of these circuits uses an E80CC triode, running in Class A, for lowergain (28dB) applications (i.e., higher-sensitivity loudspeakers); the other uses a 18042 pentode for higher-gain (34dB) applications (i.e., lower-sensitivity loudspeakers). The working assumption is that most listeners will prefer the sound of the Class A triode tube (provided their speakers have a sensitivity of about 87dB or higher); I certainly do with the Raidho C 4.1s (though the pentode has its merits, too, for which see the sidebar on using the SAGA System). Both the triode and the pentode are, again, installed in zero-feedback “minimalist” circuits. Third, for his ACpowered P1 current amplifier Rynveld decided to use discrete transistors because driving current is precisely where transistors are at their best. This doesn’t mean that the P1 is a conventional solid-state gain stage, however. As I hope you can see by now, very little about the SAGA System is conventional. Though the P1 gets its power directly from a wall outlet in your listening room, it does not use a typical AC power supply. Since the whole object of the SAGA is to preserve dynamic range and avoid the introduction of noise, internal or external, Edwin chose to use a 160kHz switching power supply with smaller transformers rather than a standard supply with larger E-core or toroidal transformers, thereby sidestepping the problem of noise leaking from the transformer’s primary to its secondary windings and thence into the SAGA System ground plane. Previous experience with today’s highly sophisticated switching power supplies (see my review of the superb Soulution 500 Series electronics in Issue 236) suggests that this was a smart choice with a profound sonic upside (particularly when it comes to bottom-end grip, definition, and speed—areas where even the best tube amps can use a bit of help). In the past, the knock against switching power supplies was that they radiated “switching noise” into the audio circuit— the very thing that Rynveld was trying to guard against. But to judge by the Soulution 501 monoblock amps (and the Siltech SAGA, for that matter), today’s far-moresophisticated, higher-frequency switchmode PSUs no longer have this problem. At least, I can’t hear any trace of it—in either the Soulution gear or the Siltech. [Or in the Rowland 725 amplifiers.—RH] However, partly out of an abundance of caution and partly out of sheer technical hubris, Rynveld took a further step to keep external noise out of his current-stage power amp— what he calls the Apollo LightDrive. This patent-pending bit of engineering brilliance further isolates the power supply from the gain-stage transistors by converting DC into light. An extremely powerful LED (developed for automobile headlights) turns the switch-mode supply’s output into an intense beam of light (so powerful that the LightDrive has to be encased in a light-proof box lest its radiance blind you). This intense beam of light is directed at high-efficiency photocells (developed for use in satellites), which convert it into the current that biases the P1’s bipolar transistors. Like every other part of the SAGA System, those transistors are installed in a zero-feedback circuit that runs in full Class A, even at the 1200W levels the amp is capable of into 2-ohm loads. (The standard strategy for Class A is to prevent the power transistors from ever switching off via bias current that is higher than the peak levels the amplifier is capable of generating. This results is an efficiency of about 10–20 percent, i.e, 80–90 percent of the amp’s output is dissipated as heat. The P1 uses its light-coupled current source to bias the output transistors independent of power demands via the following equation: The P1’s dissipation equals output power plus roughly 50W. Siltech claims that this more conservative biasing strategy prevents the power transistors from switching off, keeps the amp in Class A under all loads, even those under 1 ohm, and allows the amp to run considerably cooler—about 100ºF on the outside of the P1’s chassis—than conventional Class A amps.) In all fairness, using light to bias transistors (and to galvanically isolate the power supply) is not an entirely new idea. The American firm Edge, for one, used a variation of this strategy in its top-line amplifiers back in the late 90s (and I believe that Jürgen Reis of MBL uses opto-couplers in his 9011 monoblocks, which I reviewed several years ago). Nonetheless, when you take all of the innovations in the SAGA System as a whole, even skeptics (including some on this magazine) would have to grant that this is not “the same old thing” spiffed up with new parts. (For that matter, neither are the other innovations we’ve seen over the last few years in speaker and driver design and source components. But that’s another story.) Of course, the proof of the pudding is in the tasting. No matter how ingeniously contrived Edwin’s Structural Amplifier Gain Architecture is—and no matter how sound the reasoning behind it—the SAGA System would simply be another brilliant flash-inthe- pan if it didn’t deliver the sonic goods. As you can guess, since I would hardly have wasted all this space on something that didn’t sound great; it does deliver the sonic goods, sounding just a smidgeon more realistic (in the midrange) than its closest solidstate competitors from Soulution and Constellation and more than a smidgeon quicker and better defined (particularly at the frequency extremes) than its closest tube competitors from ARC or c-j. Indeed, the sound of this Class A hybrid system falls almost exactly in-between that of the highest-fidelity solid-state and the highest-fidelity tubes I’ve heard. Ofttimes in the past this has not been the case with tube/transistor satyrs, which instead of melding the sonic best of both gain strategies seem to highlight their defects and compromise their virtues. Not so here. You can hear what I’m talking about by putting on virtually any good recording of voice, such as Keb’ Mo’ singing “Am I Wrong” and accompanying himself on guitar (with hand-clap and kick-drum accents) from his eponymous first album. If you listen to this cut with a great all-tube setup (say the ARC Reference 10 linestage and Reference 250 power amps), you will be struck immediately by the lifelike timbre of KM’s voice, which simply sounds “right” in a way that nothing else—tube, solid-state, or in this case hybrid— quite equals. Of course, ARC tubes are famously wonderful at getting steady-state tone just-so, particularly in the heart of the midrange, and also at capturing much of the natural dimensionality and bloom of the real thing. If you were to compare this all-tube presentation to the sound of a great all-transistor setup (my reference Soulution 500 Series electronics, for example), you would hear the timbre of KM’s voice darken a bit. The Soulution’s tonal palette is a little more “bottom-up”—e.g., weighted slightly more toward the bass than that of the more dead-center-neutral ARC gear. KM’s voice would also be a little more flattened in aspect than it is through the ARC gear (though it wouldn’t come close to losing all of its dimensionality and bloom, qualities that the Soulution gear is better at reproducing than any other solid-state electronics I’m familiar with). At the same time, the tiny transient details that go such a long way toward recreating the way a real singer is singing—the way he is shepherding his breath, the way he is employing his mouth, nose, throat, and chest to modulate timbre and dynamic, and the way these changes in his delivery contribute to the dramatic effect—would be somewhat more clearly reproduced, making Keb’ Mo’ sound just as “there” but for slightly different reasons. If, in turn, you were to listen to this same cut via the Siltech SAGA System, you would hear vocal and guitar timbre that are much closer to the utter naturalness and neutrality of the ARC electronics (though not quite as fool-ya “right” as the ARC), but you would also hear textures, transient details, decays that are much closer to the utter naturalness and higher resolution of the Soulution electronics (although, perhaps, not quite as “quick” and explosive as the Solution is on the picking of that resonator guitar).
Selbst in der seltenen Welt des Ultra-High-End-Audiobereichs ist die Verarbeitungsqualität dieser handgefertigten Siltech SAGA System-Komponenten hervorragend.
Jonathan Valin
To put this plainly, you would hear slightly more of the things that make Keb’ Mo’ sound “real” via both of these different gain strategies, along with a very slight reduction in the signal virtues at which each excels. Though the differences between these three presentations are subtle, they are quite clearly audible and their effect on perceived “realism” is marked, with the Siltech SAGA System holding a bit of an edge overall. Of course the Keb’ Mo’ cut is a piece of music that lives almost entirely in the midrange— and lives there without making great demands on a preamp/amp’s dynamic prowess. If we turn to something more challenging—such as George Crumb’s duo for violin and piano, Four Nocturnes, on Mainstream—the picture changes a bit. In this piece, highly percussive moments filled with staccato raps on the violin’s upper bout and the piano’s case, as well as explosive Bartók pizzicatos on both violin and open piano strings, alternate with more lyrical passages (wraith-like harmonics on violin and “prepared” piano, glissandos on both instruments that spill colors like prisms). Here, in a piece that is largely composed around mysterious and lovely nocturnal noises, the Soulution 500 Series electronics’ advantage in transient speed pays dividends in perceived realism. The 500s are simply quicker off the mark and more unstintingly explosive than the Audio Research gear. And yet…Four Nocturnes is also built around the evanescent bursts of tone colors that attend these transients and the way they die off into the nighttime silences that play such a large role in the structure of these miniatures. In timbre the ARC electronics holds the same advantages that it had with the Keb’ Mo’ piece. Even though the ARC components are not as quick or as complete on starting and stopping transients as the Soulution gear, they still hold a slight edge in naturalness of tone color, bloom, and dimensionality. Once again, the sound of the Siltech SAGA System falls almost exactly in-between these two paradigmatic examples of solid-state and tube electronics, with nearly the same speed on transients, the same resolution of very-low-level textural details, and the same wonderful preservation of decays that make the Soulution gear sound so exciting and realistically “present,” and nearly the same naturalness of tone color and three-dimensional body and bloom of the ARC gear. Plus the nighttime silences between notes and phrases really are deeper, more silent than through any other gear I have heard in my system. Though the Crumb recording is an LP, the greater dynamic range that the Siltech is capable of—and that Rynveld sought so cleverly to preserve—is clearly there, as are the lower noise and higher resolution that are its side benefits. Indeed, I’ve never before heard electronics which use tubes in their gain stages exhibit this kind of transient speed and ultra-lowlevel transient detail; nor have I heard any solid-state amplifier with quite this level of neutrality and naturalness of timbre (though the Soulution and Constellation come very close). How about large-scale music? Well, the story is more or less the same. On the new Acoustic Sounds’ reissue of Lieutenant Kije [LSC-1950], the Siltech matches the Soulution in extension and resolution on those big, floor-shaking bass drum strikes in “Kije’s Birth,” while at the same time very nearly matching the ARC’s peak-free loveliness on those sometimes piercing piccolos and flutes at the playfully martial start of the same movement. The SAGA has almost the same dark rich density of tone color and sheer weight as the Soulution on the marvelously sluggard passages for bassoons, tenor saxophone, and low-pitched brass in “[Kije’s] Romance,” and much (if not all) of the sheer silken gorgeousness of the ARC on massed strings. In short it has the same unique blend of tube and transistor virtues it has on other music. And this plays out in its staging and imaging, as well, with a mix of tube-like expansiveness and transistor focus that makes full orchestras sound both big and densely populated. Can the Siltech SAGA System rock? Well, it doesn’t have quite the phenomenal bass at very loud levels that the Soulution 500 Series monoblocks do, but then, as I noted in my review of the Soulutions in Issue 236, neither does anything else. That said, the SAGA System comes mighty close and outdoes the slightly (albeit beguilingly) softer-sounding Soulution in the treble on the timbre and dynamics of rhythm-marking instruments like cymbals and drumsticks (or, for that matter, the colorful accents of the tambourine and orchestral bells on Chad Kassem’s great new reissue of Debussy’s Iberia [LSC-2222]). No, the Siltech cannot fully match the Soulution’s bottom end on powerhouse rock—such as the Puget Sound twotrack, 15ips reel-to-reel tapes of Sgt. Pepper and L.A. Woman, where the drum kit and Fender bass don’t have all of the thunderous, you-are-there impact and definition of the all-solid-state Soulution. Not that the SAGA is at all muddy or anemic sounding. From the midbass through the power range the Siltech gear has color, clarity, resolution, and dynamics galore (just listen to the lifelike sock and thrilling tonal weight of the rhythm section on Janis’ “Try” from I Got Dem Ol’ Kozmic Blues Again Mama!); and the SAGA amp goes low (as low as the Soulution gear). It just doesn’t do these things with quite the same iron grip and punch-in-the-chest slam that the Soulution combo, with its damping factor of greater than 10,000 and much higher current capabilities, does. (Of course, the Siltech come far, far closer to the Soulution in these regards than the ARC electronics, but then tubes, even great ones, aren’t killers in the bottom octaves when it comes to grip.) On the other hand, if you want to hear what the SAGA does extraordinarily well, listen to the incomparable Karajan performance (with the Berlin Phil) of Bartók’s Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta [Columbia SAX]. The Siltech’s lower noise, higher resolution, exceptionally natural and beautiful tone color, and astonishing dynamic range and discernment really pay benefits here in sheer clarity of line. For instance, I don’t think I’ve ever before heard as clearly the way that Bartók expands the tight chromatic intervals of his main theme in the first movement into wider, more tonal intervals when he repeats the same theme in the dance-like final movement. This is resolution that serves a purpose. (My thanks to our incredibly knowledgeable Music Editor, Mr. Lehman, for helping me to phrase this correctly.) To sum up, the Siltech SAGA System is not only engineered like nothing else; it sounds like nothing else—or at least nothing else I’ve heard. With its unique blend of tube-like bloom, three-dimensionality, and naturalness of timbre, and solid-state-like transient speed, resolution, bass-range extension and clarity, and extremely low noise, it truly does bridge the gap between these two gain strategies in ways that will delight both tube-o-philes and solid-state mavens, combining the most salient virtues of each device with a satisfying completeness that has never before been achieved in a single package. For this alone, it is a landmark piece of audio engineering. That it also raises the bar in the realistic reproduction of music of all kinds, particularly in the midband, makes it a no-brainer highest recommendation— and my new and, uh, one-and-only tube/transistor-hybrid reference. As soon as you lift the SAGA units out of their cartons— those of you who are lucky enough to be able to afford them—you will see that your money was well spent. Even in the rarefied world of ultra-high-end audio, the build-quality of these hand-made Siltech SAGA System components is outstanding. The SAGA’s three incredibly solid and well-damped chassis (you can actually do a knuckle-rap test on them, as if they were the side-panels of a Magico loudspeaker) were designed using a CO MSOL Multiphysics finite-element-analysis program; its RC A I/Os are all top-line WBT Nextgens; its XLR I/Os are gold-plated Neutriks. Though you will need an extra set of balanced interconnects to go from the V1 voltage amplifier to the P1 current amplifier—and be sure to select a very, very good set (such as Crystal Cable Absolute Dreams, Synergistic Research’s fabulous new Galileo LE, or Siltech’s own top-line Royal Signature silver-monocrystal wire, which is what is used inside the SAGAs)—you will quickly find that setting up the SAGA system and operating it are a snap, thanks in part to the logical simplicity of its controls, inputs, and outputs. The C1 preamplifier, for example, only has three adjustments on its front panel: a large, lighted (the light can be dimmed via the remote control), smoothly operating, centrally located dial for setting volume level— with a blue LED set like a pointer at its circumference to show you where you are on in the dial’s arc of travel—a row of six pushbuttons below the volume dial to select your source from one of six inputs, and two buttons which light up when you press them, one to turn the unit on and off, and the other to put it into “forced charging” mode (for more about which, see below). On the C1’s rear panel you’ll find six inputs (five RC A and one XLR) plus two pairs of outputs (one RC A and one XLR). As Siltech’s manual points out, the first inputs you should try are Numbers 5 and 6, as they have shorter paths to the circuit board and sound better. A system power-on switch is also located in the right rear corner of the back panel. The V1 voltage amplifier has only two pushbuttons on its front panel, which also light up when pressed and serve the same functions as the two pushbuttons on the C1—turning the amplifier on and off and engaging its “forced charging” function. On its rear panel, the V1 has two pairs of XLR outputs, plus two stereo inputs (one RC A and one XLR). The two pairs of stereo outputs are there in case you decide to biamp your loudspeakers by buying a second P1 unit. As with the C1, a system power-on switch is located in the right rear corner of the back panel. On the bottom of the V1 chassis, near the front panel, is another switch that allows you to choose between the two completely independent triode and pentode circuits built into the unit (only one at a time is active). Your choice of circuit will, to some extent, be dictated by the sensitivity of your loudspeakers. But all other things being equal, the sound of the SAGA System is sweeter, richer, and more finely textured when the V1 is played in triode mode, although you may prefer the greater dynamism and leaner tonal palette of the pentode mode on certain kinds of music. The P1 current amplifier has two pushbuttons on its front panel—one to turn the unit on and off, and one to mute the amp’s output. Each lights up when depressed. On its rear panel are one set of balanced stereo inputs, loudspeaker binding posts (the very best, gold-plated, high-current WBT s, of course), and an IEC inlet for an AC power cord—the only IEC inlet on any of the chassis, as the P1 is the only unit that plugs directly into the wall. Both the battery-powered C1 and battery-powered V1 come with “charging units” with long cords that plug and lock (via a rotating collar) into the DC-In jacks on the rear panels of each component. The chargers have multi-color LEDs built into them, which glow green when the batteries in the V1 and P1 are fully charged, and the chargers are no longer functioning. As these chargers require low voltage to operate, they can be plugged into a power strip rather than occupying a wall socket that could be used for something that’s directly powered by AC (such as the P1). A word about battery operation. The batteries in the C1 and V1 need about eight hours to fully charge (twelve hours when the units are initially plugged in). Once charged, the batteries will have sufficient current to power the units for twelve to fifteen hours of play. When the batteries near exhaustion (or the C1 and V1 are turned off for the evening), the chargers will automatically re-charge the batteries. (The SAGA System can be played while the batteries are charging—at very first turn-on, for instance—by pressing the “forced charging” buttons on the C1 and V1. The sound is excellent, BT W, if not quite as sophisticated as it becomes when the units are being fully powered by their batteries.) The life of the batteries in the C1 and V1 is said to be 5–10 years (with replacement recommended every five years for best sound). The life of the tubes in each of these units is said to be 10,000 hours, with best sound for the first 5000–8000 hours. Let me say another word about batteries and hi-fi components. Past experience with gear powered by battery supplies led me to expect mixed results from the SAGA System. In the past, such battery-powered systems have been quiet, yes, and high in resolution, but they have also been dynamically hamstrung, sounding overly polite on transients and big dynamic swings, and also rather whitish in timbre. The SAGA System is the first battery-powered preamp and amp I’ve heard that has none of these issues. On the contrary (and as noted in the review), the SAGA is almost as fast and powerful as the fastest and most powerful solid-state amp I’ve heard, and very nearly (if not completely on some instruments like strings) as voluptuously beautiful in timbre as the most beautiful and realistic tube amp I’ve heard. Clearly, huge strides have been made in the design of battery-powered high-end components. The SAGA comes with a cool-looking, touchscreen Logitech Harmony remote control and handsome cradle-like charger. This remote repeats the functions found on the C1 preamp—allowing you to change volume and choose sources from a distance. It also allows you to mute the system, to put the C1 into “forced charging” mode, and to dim the C1s frontpanel lights. What it does not do—what the SAGA System itself does not do—is, well, anything else. There are no tone controls, no loudness controls, no stereo/mono or polarityreversal buttons on the remote, because none of these functions are built into the preamp. While there are some listeners (including some on this magazine) who would positively tear their hair out because of these omissions, I applaud them. Putting aside the fact that I have little hair of my own to tear, most of these functions (the stereo/mono switch would be my sole exception) are not only unnecessary; they also add active circuitry—and with that circuitry, conduits of external noise and distortion—to devices that, in this instance, were expressly and elaborately designed to eliminate all sources of noise and distortion. There was a reason why these silly, imprecise, noisy controls fell out of favor at the beginning of the high-end era. In every way conceivable (including this one), the SAGA System is a return to the purist ideal that got the high-end ball rolling in the first place. In the SAGA System, all that needs to be there for highest-fidelity reproduction is there; anything else isn’t. Do note that each of the SAGA System components should be wired up to sources and to each other before you power anything up. This is simply good practice, but violating this dictum may also void the warranty.