September 2013
World Premiere!
Coincident Turbo 845 SE Integrated Amplifier
Transcending the recording... Ignoring the
equipment... Enjoy the music!
Review By Rick Becker
The Turbo
845 SE has the makings of a classic amplifier that can be the cornerstone of a
musically rewarding system when combined with equally accomplished front end
components and speakers. It is an end game product for those with limited space,
limited budget or an inclination to concentrate more on the music than the
machinery. For anyone truly seeking to enjoy their music and take the focus off
the equipment, this is the path. Integrated amps are not normally optimal for
reviewers because of their need to swap and compare products but this one has
some additional flexibility. As a reviewer, the Turbo will probably be one of
the components I most regret having returned to the manufacturer when my time is
up. Our children will probably hate me for letting it go, just as I regret my
parents not buying an AC Cobra back in the mid-60's when they sold for $6000 —
same price the Turbo is now. But let me get down to work.
Is it perfect? Not for every situation. The
relatively low 28 wpc power rating suggests that you will have to pair it with a
moderately efficient loudspeaker in spite of the fact that those are Class A "tube
watts". But with the massive power supply storing 510 joules it is capable of
putting out 100 wpc on musical peaks opening the window of opportunity to pair
this 100 pound beast with some unlikely candidates. With its low output
impedance and enormous power supply it is claimed to be able to handle speakers
with impedance as low as 3 Ohms, which opens the window even further. There are
also many high efficiency speakers that would virtually eliminate amplifier
clipping for all but a few micro-seconds of most music. It helps, too, if the
loudspeaker has a relatively benign impedance curve. Avantgarde, Zu Audio,
Tekton Design and of course Coincident's own speakers which are efficient and
designed to be driven by tube amps, come to mind most readily. A carefully
researched list would certainly be much longer — especially if you consider
loudspeakers with active woofers. Depending on the size of your listening room
and the type of music you prefer, this list could become quite long.
Form
Factor
Let's begin with the form factor because that's
what stands out the minute you take delivery. It's heavy metal. This is a
classic tube amplifier with roots that stretch back to the invention of recorded
music. Large tubes on the front porch, heavy transformers concealed under a
polished stainless steel box out back. It's the antithesis of Class D laid out
in a thin chassis with a footprint the size of an Apple iBox. It will sound a
lot different than Class D, too. The chassis itself measures 290mm wide (11.5")
by 530mm (20.87") but the 10mm thick anodized aluminum faceplate is 310mm wide
(12.25"). Overall depth is 580mm (22.87") and you will need another eight inches
or so to bend a serious power cord into its IEC socket as well as room for the
interconnects. Height is 250mm (9.87") to the top of the Psvane 845 tubes, but
the tube set puts out a fair amount of heat that demands sufficient air space
for cooling to prolong the life of the tubes. I configured an amp stand with a
couple of slabs of 2.5" thick architectural slate capped with a wood top from an
old chest of drawers. To lift this amp, you'd think the bottom two inches were
filled with concrete, but a lot of the weight is due to the high quality
Japanese steel used in the transformers. (The weight came as no surprise to me
as the separate power supplies of my Coincident Statement Line Stage and Phono
Stage are each the size and weight of power amps. Coincident believes in huge
power supplies.) Keeping the Turbo low to the ground is a plus because the 845
tubes throw out a white light that is multiplied by the polished stainless
steel. Listening in the dark is only a metaphor with the Turbo. I placed it
behind the right speaker close to the equipment rack with the back of the amp
facing the wall. Being offset like that allowed for two-meter interconnects and
put the tubes in my peripheral vision, but it is such a beautiful amp I could
easily understand if you wanted to prominently display it between the speakers.
The power switch is on the top front left corner
and requires considerable force that led to anxiety when I used my right index
finger to turn the amp on or off. The fear was that my finger would slide off
the smooth toggle switch and bump into the small 6EM7 tube, either breaking it
or burning my finger. I conquered my fear by using my left thumb on the toggle
switch with my fingers curled around the left side of the slightly protruding
faceplate. Problem solved. The power switch is the highest quality military
grade with maximum voltage capacity in order to handle the high voltages when
turning on the amp. Don't plan on it ever becoming easier to flip. I'm also told
there is no chance it will ever arc. The phrase "built like a tank" immediately
comes to mind.
Connectivity
& Control
Aside from the standard headphone jack on the
faceplate, all cable connections are made at the rear. Three line level inputs
are all single ended RCA connectors of high quality. The Euro-style speaker
binding posts that came on the review sample will normally be the standard
Coincident 6N copper binding posts used on all their amplifiers and speakers. My
experience with other Coincident review samples and my own Partial Eclipse II
speakers over the years is that they hold very well and are easy to secure
tightly. They are said to be sonically superior to the Euro posts and they look
to be a good bit more expensive. Both types allow for sandwiching a pair of
spade connectors if you must bi-wire, but the proximity of the power cord and
interconnects makes this a challenging task. Using one speaker cable with banana
ends and the other with spades would simplify matters. Or, use those fancy
banana plugs that let you piggyback a second banana plug into it. (I encountered
the need to bi-wire when using the Zu Union speakers with the Tekton Design
subwoofers in my previous review.) The other minor annoyance was the labeling of
the inputs. Black letters silkscreened onto polished stainless steel are hard to
read. A second set of labels, upside down, above the inputs would make it easier
to identify specific inputs when bending over the amp from above. Color coding
the labels to match the colored LEDs on the faceplate would be cool, too.
If an inventory of the tubes on top suggests the
preamp stage is passive, you'd be right. NOS RCA 6EM7 tubes are used as the
input tube and Psvane 300B tubes are the drivers for the Psvane 845 power tubes
rated at 28 watts per channel. These are the clear glass affordable Psvane tubes
from their HiFi series. Their high end black bottle tubes would be an upgrade
path if you feel the need, though I'm told there is little sonic advantage to
using a black bottle 300B in this amp since it is the driver tube. Psvane,
manufactured in southern China, is fast becoming a premiere tube manufacturer on
the global market. For the inside scoop on this relatively new company see their
story here.
Coincident buys their Psvane tubes in bulk and both matches the tubes and tests
them for low noise and distortion, using only the ones that meet their rigorous
standards. Would it be an oxymoron to say these tubes look like they are built
like a tank?
A
velvet-smooth volume control is front and center on the top plate but most
likely you will enjoy the small remote control machined from billet aluminum
that controls the volume, source selection and mute. While the top mounted
volume control is infinitely adjustable, the volume control from the remote
jumps in small steps. Nonetheless, there was much finer control with the remote
than what is available from the twin volume controls on my Coincident Statement
Line Stage, so I immediately became addicted to using it. I noticed no sonic
penalty in using the remote vs. chassis mounted volume control. So nice was the
remote that I asked Israel Blume if there were plans to introduce the remote on
the Statement Line Stage. He replied:
"Cannot be
done since it is completely different circuitry. The Statement Line Stage is all
transformer coupled including the volume controls. A remote requires a motor to
move the control. To move the Statement's would necessitate a large motor which
would not fit into the chassis. We are about to introduce the new Statement Line
Stage RC (remote control) which will incorporate the same remote control system
as the Turbo. There will be a bit of sonic penalty since the transformer coupled
volume control (the purest available) will be replaced with a variable resistor
pot like the Turbo. Still superior to any Line Stage in existence but not quite
as pure as the current Statement."
Recessed into the faceplate on the right are small LEDs that
indicate CD (red), Aux 1 (yellow) and Aux 2 (green) for the selected source. The
colors were easy to differentiate from the listening chair ten feet away. The
fourth LED at the top of the column is also red and comes on automatically when
you turn on the amplifier. It stays lit until the motor automatically resets the
volume control to off. Presumably this is a safety feature to keep the music
from blasting before the tubes have warmed up at the beginning of a listening
session. Once an appropriate level has been established via the knob on
the chassis or the remote, this doesn't happen — the volume remains as-is when
you change CDs or LPs. Since there is no LCD screen or notation on the volume
knob to indicate the playback level before hand, it is necessary to fade-in the
first piece of music from silence thus missing the opening bars of music. As a
work-around I taped a black line on the top of the volume knob so I could
pre-set the volume before listening to the first track of a listening session. A
drop of black nail polish would be a more permanent fix. Or for maximum effect
it could be taken to your local nail parlor. In addition to the mute button on
the remote, a push-button on the faceplate beside the red LED for mute also
activates the mute. Likewise, there is a small button on the faceplate to cycle
through the three inputs in the event your recliner has swallowed your remote.
Individual buttons on the remote allow for random access to the inputs.
Current
Production Models
My review sample was from the first production
run and models produced from August 2013 onward will have two additional
features. First, there will be a direct input to the amplifier section that
by-passes the source inputs and potentiometer for those who wish to use the
Turbo solely as a power amp. I was able to virtually duplicate this by running
my Statement Line Stage into the Turbo with the potentiometer on the Turbo set
wide open and using the transformer coupled volume control on the Line Stage to
control the volume. I used the same Kharma interconnects and the same input on
the Turbo in both trials, but since the volumes were adjusted by ear, any slight
difference I thought I heard is highly suspect. This configuration also allowed
me to set the Line Stage wide open and use the remote control of the Turbo to
adjust the volume, preserving that convenience and the mute function as well.
Both volume controls seemed to be of the highest quality with little if any
difference between them revealed in this casual comparison. Another possibility
was also offered by this arrangement. I substituted a 1meter Audio Sensibility
Statement balanced interconnect from the DAC to the Statement Line Stage in
place of the Kharma single ended interconnect. After several rounds of
comparison I was just barely convinced there was a slight improvement in dynamic
contrast using the balanced cable, but again, since the volume was adjusted by
ear, this conclusion is suspect. With longer cable runs there might prove to be
discernible justification for using balanced interconnects, but I didn't find
any penalty with a short run.
The second change in current production is the addition of a
standard 300 Ohm headphone jack on the right side of the faceplate. The power
stage is simply padded down from 28 to 20 watts — way more than enough for
typical headphones which draw about a watt, and still more than enough for
electrostatic headphones which draw 5 to 10 watts. Depending on your head to toe
distance, the Turbo will act as a superb foot warmer in the winter when
listening to headphones. While it may be a bit of overkill as a headphone
amplifier, it is a nice feature for those who on occasion want to listen loud
when others want to sleep.
Aesthetics
I first encountered the polished stainless
steel chassis that has become the hallmark of Coincident amps when the
Frankenstein Mk II Monoblocks made a brief visit in late 2008. I reviewed them
in concert with the Coincident Total Victory V speaker before they both headed
west to the CES show in January, 2009. In the spring of 2010 I reviewed the
Statement Line Stage and bought the review sample, subsequently awarding it a Blue
Note Best of 2010 Award. A year later I added the Statement Phono Stage
to my reference rig, so you can deduce I must like the look. I've become so
accustomed to it that it's hard for me to get excited about it at this point.
That's good news, because it tells me it is withstanding the test of time. It's
still sexy, but in a mature way — not like the hot new babe in my life that it
once was.
It really is dressed up when paired with the piano gloss black Kharma speakers
yet can be dressed down like a shiny western belt buckle on a comfortable pair of
jeans when paired with the satin walnut finish of the Zu Union speakers. It
counterbalances the chrome on the vintage motorcycle in the garage and it
complements the green jungle plants along the front wall of the listening room.
For listening in the dark it reflects enough light for me to safely cross the
room to flip an LP. As a large amplifier placed upon the floor it vies with the
speakers for the attention of our guests. And at the claimed 100 pounds, you
will vacuum the floor around it, but not likely under it. Although it occurred
to me that I could use a furniture dolly as an amp stand to facilitate those
occasions when it had to be moved. Note that unless you are very strong or very
skilled at moving heavy objects, have a suitable friend help you unpack and
position the Turbo. An injury will severely diminish the joy of acquiring this
wonderful amplifier.
Old
School/New School
As I read over my previous reviews of
Coincident speakers and amps I realized my writing style was a lot more
exuberant than what I'm putting down here. Been there — done that — and
Enjoy the Music.com has also featured
an in-depth article on Israel Blume and Coincident. It should be clear
by now that Coincident Speaker Technology is one of the premiere manufacturers
of high end audio gear in the world. That they haven't become as large a company
as some of the other brands speaks to their commitment to maintain control of
their high standard of quality rather than trying to be all things to all
audiophiles. The company is right-sized and the products are priced right. Their
multiple speaker designs are aimed at filling different room applications, not
necessarily multiple budgets. Nothing in their line changes just for the sake of
having a "new" model. Their amps are designed to be the best of their type
without superfluously enlarging their price tags. We're talking auto-biasing
circuits, zero global feedback, no circuit boards — everything is hard wired.
Actual wire is used when the leads of the parts cannot be directly soldered
together. Signal paths are kept as short as possible and critical attention is
paid to isolate the sensitive input circuitry from the high voltages of the
power supply which would induce hum and noise. The signal-to-noise ratio of the
Turbo is claimed to be 90 dB, which is very good for a tube amplifier, and
channel separation was excellent due to the true dual-mono configuration, save
for the chassis and the incoming power cord and switch.
Don't others use these same techniques, you ask? Well, some
do, but some do it better than others. Obviously, one of
the top priorities is to be emotionally involved in the music. Of course it
takes a good (if not great) recording, a well-coordinated rig and a thoughtfully
laid out room to achieve that experience. Others may have other priorities such
as those that lead many audiophiles into the world of solid state gear. When I'm
hiking up mountains I have different food priorities than when my wife and I go
out to dinner. Imagine Clif Bars versus seafood. And the mellow low-fi
background music I enjoy at work would be totally unacceptable in my listening
room at home. But when it comes to maximum enjoyment of music I turn to tube
gear for the intimate and detailed replication of "being there". In the world of
tube gear, Israel Blume is one of the master chefs.
A few years ago after attending the Toronto furniture show I
visited Coincident and had the opportunity to listen to some of my own familiar
music, both analog and digital, on their reference system. Everything except the
source components was of their own manufacture, including the wiring. For the
record, no power treatment was employed, much to my disbelief. It was one of a
handful of finest systems I've experienced and I fondly adopted it as my own "reference
in absentia". Unfortunately, I've been "in absentia" ever since. The sound was
not unlike my own, except at a much higher level. More recent upgrades to my
digital and analog front ends have brought me much closer, but there is no way
the single 9" woofer of my Kharma were going to match the four 12" woofers on
each channel of his double-Pure Reference Extreme speakers. The Accuton ceramic
midrange drivers are common to both speakers which significantly contribute to
the similarity. The point here is that my audio values and those of Coincident
are virtually identical so you need to be aware of how yours differ from theirs
and tone down my hot sauce with your favorite micro-brew.
The Word From Henry's Swing
Club
Stepping back a review or two, I was really digging the new Zu
Union speaker being driven by the Triode Lab EL34TT Mk II integrated amp. For a
speaker with 99dB/W/m sensitivity, the 6 wpc TT was a muscle amp with tight bass
and extended treble. The combination was exceedingly transparent and dynamic,
but word was that the Triode Lab 2A3 Classic stereo power amp with 3.5 wpc was
even better. I teamed their 2A3 with the Coincident Statement Line Stage and
discovered one of the most emotionally engaging presentations I've ever heard.
Musical enjoyment to the max, yes. Musical truth? — only with fingers crossed
behind my back. Take another swig of your favorite micro-brew.
I then teamed the Turbo with the Zu Union, first alone and
then with the Tekton Design subwoofers. This was a serious, reasonably priced
reference combination. Tight authoritative bass down to the lowest organ notes
on Master Tallis's Testament from "Pipes Rhode Island" —
powered by the internal BASH amplifier of the subs, but with the signal coming
through the speaker terminals of the Turbo. The somewhat questionable super
tweeter of the Zu was very nicely tamed and the midrange through the
crossover-less full range driver was ultra-transparent and very well focused.
Dynamics were you are there! I felt like I had just come off a mountain and
was confronted with the choice of twenty flavors of ice cream at Custard's Last
Stand in Blue Mountain Lake. Never before had I hosted so many delightful
products for review at the same time. And more to come, I might add.
Ultimately I had to get back to my reference configuration and
drive my Kharma with the Turbo — the moment of truth, so to speak. The Kharma
are 89dB/W/m efficient and have a complex crossover embedded in vibration quelling
material in the bottom of the speaker. Focus is further enhanced by Boston Audio
Design TunePlates under the spikes and 4x4 wood posts between the joisted floor
of the listening room and concrete floor of the basement. I consider the Kharma
moderately efficient and experience has shown they are a fairly easy load for
tube amplifiers. A really good 8
wpc 300B amplifier might be used in a small to medium size room, but my
reference for years has been the 18 wpc Tube Magic monoblocks with parallel 300B
tubes, now in Mk 3 guise. The Kharma are noted for their top to bottom coherence
and for the music's ability to get completely out of the box, making these
relatively large speakers virtually disappear. The replacement model has jumped
up to $39,000 and comes with new proprietary drivers of Kharma's own
design. I haven't heard it yet, so I can't comment on it other than to say I
expect it would be quite good.
"Stepping down" from monoblocks to an integrated amplifier
with a passive line stage I was expecting less but the Turbo actually stepped up
to the plate with confidence. Compared to the Tube Magic monoblocks the music
was less lean and the soundstage was less pinpoint in its imaging. It was more
like live music in real space. The musicians were realistically placed on the
stage but not isolated from each other as if they were on separate islands in
the Caribbean. The space was continuous and believable. The continuity from low
bass to treble was seamless and exceptionally flat. In particular, the mid and
low bass were well controlled, exhibiting sufficient silence to reveal the room
tone in live recordings. The additional payoff was very good focus and
transparency in the upper bass and lower midrange. The Kharma did not growl with
authority in the lowest octave like the Tekton subs with the 300 watt BASH
amplifiers, but they certainly handled bass well down to their 32 Hz limit, more
than enough for most music I normally listen to. As I mentioned above, there
seemed to be no sonic penalty to the passive line stage, contrary to
conventional wisdom. This is testimony to Israel's design skills. If you do
choose to add an active line stage for greater connectivity or because you need
to drive longer interconnects, there should be no penalty if you select a good
one.
Since I was using the Synergistic Research Tesla power cord
with the active shield I tried the different tuning bullets to see what effect
they might have on the signature of the Turbo. Listening late at night I thought
I could easily discern a difference between the silver and black Enigma bullets,
but the next day, well rested, the differences were much less obvious. All three
bullets sounded very fine. I also tried a JPS Labs SuperConductor+ power cord
which sounded a bit more dynamic, and a Coincident CST power cord that seemed a
bit more neutral, but with less tonal color. Overall, I preferred the
Synergistic Research cable for its more holographic imaging that ultimately
evoked a more emotional connection with the music for me. The choice of power
cord is one of fine tuning as they are all very good cables, commensurate with
the price and performance of the Turbo.
Recollecting that the Coincident reference rig in Toronto used
no power conditioning, I also ran the power cord directly into the 30 amp
dedicated line from JPS Labs, by-passing the Synergistic Research PowerCell 4.
There wasn't much difference which indicates there is significant isolation
built in to the Turbo and possibly this is why the Enigma tuning bullets were so
similar. What was most noticeable was refinement in the sound of cymbals and
cleaner air in the treble — not a huge difference, but enough to make me
re-connect the amp to the PowerCell 4.
I
kept going back to the rig listening for something I might be missing, but the
music just kept coming out clean and dynamic with all the pace rhythm and timing
needed to keep my left foot bouncing on my right knee. It is exceptionally
neutral leaning very slightly to the warm side, which is preferred by most. For
an integrated amplifier it is very transparent with very high resolution — but
never analytical. Only in comparison with the Tube Magic monoblocks does the
Turbo lack the last bit of harmonic resolution and air that comes with the very
finest separate components — ultimate refinements that come with a much higher
price tag and require a lot more floor space. Nonetheless, the Turbo 845 SE makes
it easy to transcend recorded music and reach that level where you ignore the
equipment altogether and commune with the music. In this rarified air the
differences become increasingly smaller. Greater joy will most likely come at a
much higher cost. As prices continue to escalate into the esoteric sphere of the
1%, Coincident is to be commended for offering first class components with
outstanding build quality at relatively affordable prices. The Turbo 845 SE is
another prime example. When paired with an appropriate speaker it is very highly
recommended. On top of that, it is a beautiful amp that one of our children will
be proud to own (someday) as I've decided to buy the review sample.
Specifications
Type: Stereo integrated vacuum tube amplifier
Tube Compliment: Two each 6EM7 input tube, 300B driver and 845 output
Inputs: Three analog stereo sets via gold-plated RCA
Power Output: 28 watts per channel
Frequency Response: 20 Hz to 20 kHz (+/-0dB)
Sensitivity: 1V for full output
Input Impedance: 100 kOhms
S/N Ratio: -90 dB
Design: Pure dual mono, all hard wired with 6N copper
Japanese Steel proprietary power and output transformers
Discrete Resistor volume control
Voltage selectable 115V/230V
AC ground lift
Remote Control
Weight; 100 lbs.
Price: $5999
Replacement tubes:
RCA 6EM7 (NOS) $30
Psvane 300B HiFi Series $150
Psvane 845 HiFi Series $135
Company Information
Coincident Speaker Technology
19 Strauss Road
Thornhill
Ontario, Canada L4J 8Z6
Voice: (905) 660-0800
Fax: (905) 660-1114
E-mail: iblume@coincidentspeaker.com
Website: www.CoincidentSpeaker.com