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Audio by Van Alstine Super Pas 4i
Preamp Kit
Audio
Auricle, August 1993
Manufacturer: Audio by Van Alstine, 2665 Brittany Lane, Woodbury,
MN 55125; 651/330-9871 http://www.avahifi.com/ info@avahifi.com
Van Alstine's Super Pas 4 preamplifier is not unusual in being a hybrid
design (four 12AX7A vacuum tubes supported by a panoply of solid-state
devices) and certainly not in taking a minimalist approach (volume and
balance controls, selector switch, two tape loops, and a headphone jack
are all you get). It is special in being a kit, at a time when even the
redoubtable Heath Company has fled the field, declaring that its former
customers are now too busy programming their computers to bother with
soldering irons. Building this kit ($569) affords a $140 saving over the
wired version, and it also enables you to more easily admire the quality
of the parts included (e.g., all American made Dale 1% resistors, in my
sample, and top-quality controls, most of them environmentally sealed).
Frank Van Alstine, known for modifying products manufactured by the original
Dynaco (which closed its doors in the late 1970s), has also long been
a manufacturer of original designs. Though its model name is similar to
that of a familiar Dynaco product, the Super Pas 4i falls into the latter
category. All parts, including the chassis, are new. Each channel uses
a 12AX7A for phono and line voltage gain, but the outputs are FET op-amps.
The operating instructions claim the sonic virtues of both tubes and transistors
but without making clear where their presumed synergy is supposed to lie.
The Audio by Van Alstine catalog, however, says that the tubes perform
the voltage gain, the solid-state stages serve as current amplifiers and
high-speed buffers, and the combination reduces distortion, improves high-
and low-frequency linearity, and keeps noise low. The result, a company
newsletter claims, is that "there is no solid state sound . . . no
mush and rolled off vacuum tube sound . . . only delightful transparency.''
The kit I built was a Pas 4, a model that was supplanted, midway in my
review process, by the Pas 4i. So while I can comment on the sound of
both versions, my comments on assembly apply more strictly to the older
one. In build complexity, that kit fell somewhere between a fully prepackaged
Heathkit or Dynakit and an Audio Amateur project. All necessary parts
were supplied, as was all necessary assembly information, though the instruction
manual I worked from did not attempt to be a rigorous, step-by-step guide.
Also, I found it helpful to depart from its suggested sequence of operations
several times to avoid some tight corners that appeared to be developing.
I stated these concerns to Frank Van Alstine, who says he has since incorporated
some of my suggestions into the manual for the Pas 4i, now in production.
So the 4i manual (which I haven't seen) should be an improvement in this
regard. In any case, Van Alstine says, he revises his manuals frequently,
based on errors he finds in home-built units sent to him for checkup.
(The price of his kits includes a free checkup after construction; Van
Alstine recommends home-built units be sent to him for checking before
they're first turned on, so he can catch any construction errors before
they lead to damage.)
The basic layout of both the Pas 4 and 4i is conventional. The chassis
floor is occupied by a large double-sided epoxy circuit card with plated-through
holes and by a substantial toroidal power transformer. The builder stuffs
the card, mounts controls and connectors to front and rear panels, and
wires the subassemblies together point-to-point. An accomplished assembler
could probably deal with the job in two evenings. (Still trying to adjust
to age related failure of near vision, I had to proceed much more slowly.)
It might even be considered a project for a first-timer, although not
one so green as to be unable to distinguish between a resistor and a capacitor
at first sight.
The assembled preamp, a snug package about the size of a desk dictionary,
offers no amenities beyond the headphone amplifier, which is a meticulous
design sharing nothing but the power transformer and rectifiers with the
rest of the unit. The three polarized a.c. convenience outlets are unswitched.
While these outlets are rated at 15 amperes, the manual states that they're
not intended for use with high-powered amplifiers, though I consider such
amps otherwise appropriate for use with the Pas 4i. The unit therefore
depends solely on its sonic characteristics to win your approbation.
In the earlier Pas 4, those characteristics were not encouraging, and
they failed to persuade me that I was listening to sound that qualified
as high end. Then Van Alstine changed the design. This change, making
the preamp the Super Pas 4i, involves merely parts upgrades: Beefier plate
capacitors in the line-level stage and new op-amp ICs all around (AD845s
to AD843s). Modifying the older version costs $50 for these parts and,
if desired, factory installation. I made the alterations on my review
sample without mishap, but I am short on appreciative capacity when forced
to bumble around in a deep chassis, half blind, with a lethally hot instrument
in my hand. So those who need the conversion might prefer having it done
by the manufacturer, although I feel that the fun of building a kit includes
the fun of modifying it.
I was pleased and impressed by what I heard from the updated unit. It
has taken a long stride into the center of the high-end arena. All the
signs familiar to audio enthusiasts are present: The solid identity given
to the instruments at the back of the orchestra without diminishing those
at the front, the exciting contrasts of instrumental blending and divergence
that mark a good performance and good playback equipment, and the valuable
clues to the acoustical nature of the performing environment.
In addition, for better or worse, the Super Pas 4i does manage to sound
like what many enthusiasts expect from an amplifying device that uses
vacuum tubes. The highs gleam and tinkle sweetly instead of splashing
aggressively, and you no longer drive casual visitors out of the room
with a system religiously operated at flat settings. Beware of the risks
in this, however. One of my first tests of the preamp was the beginning
movement of Mahler: Symphony No. 8 (Telarc CD-80267), a colossally
congested piece of work that, dismayingly, began to sound somewhat congested
toward the end. But it turned out to be neither the recording nor the
playback. It was me. Liking what I heard, I had played it too loud and
too long. The whistling in my ears persisted for more than an hour afterward.
Van Alstine has no use for conventional specifications as descriptors
of audio quality, so he publishes none. However, a few perfunctory measurements,
made after listening and only on the 4i version, suggest he has little
to be ashamed of. The performance profile of the Super Pas 4i is generally
what you'd expect from a fine vacuum tube preamplifier. My main caveats
are the phono input's overload point of 60 mV, quite low by today's standards,
and that there is no infrasonic filtering which might block record-warp
assaults. With the low output cartridges I used for listening evaluations,
there were no discernible difficulties-but caution is advised, particularly
with marginally stable tonearm/cartridge combinations.
I'd guess that the Super Pas 4i is not the best preamplifier I've ever
heard-but then, I no longer have that "best" preamp for comparison.
I couldn't afford it and had to send it back. However, I can afford the
Pas 4i, so it will stick around, probably plugged in much of the time.
Ralph Hodges
Products: Super
Pas 4i Preamplifier
Please refer the the price list
for current prices and options.
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