I also consider myself much more of a learner at this point than anything else. Some of the discussion here pushes me to read and try shit out. I truly enjoy it.
The main problem I have with him is that--unlike other writers like Cordell--he acts as a demagogue, declaring anything that deviates from his designs as "undesirable" or even not "allowable." See his latest rant on Class A amplifiers. Any topologies or approaches that deviate from his, whether CFA, folded cascode, single voltage gain stage, no overall feedback, tube gain, tubes, transformers, Class A, hell, even just using JFETs in the input stage--are instantly dismissed, and in sharply judgmental terms. In my opinion, this kind of demagoguery not only causes divisiveness (by the acolytes convinced that there is One True Path) and actively inhibits any real advancement, since, hey, if the 5532 is the ultimate expression of what is needed for audio (per Self), why ever try for more?
According to The Absolute Sound:"By any standard the Cambridge Audio Azur 840E and 840W rank as excellent components and at roughly $4200, a supernatural deal."All those supernatural savings proly coming from the awesomely awesome <$1 NE5532.
"With horrible inevitability, the very popularity and excellent technical performance of the 5532 has led to it being criticized by subjectivists who have contrived to convince themselves that they can tell op-amps apart by listening to music played through them. This always makes me laugh, because there is probably no music on the planet that has not passed through a hundred or more 5532s on its way to the consumer." - Douglas Self.
Quote from: ultrabike on September 25, 2014, 12:22:04 AMAccording to The Absolute Sound:"By any standard the Cambridge Audio Azur 840E and 840W rank as excellent components and at roughly $4200, a supernatural deal."All those supernatural savings proly coming from the awesomely awesome <$1 NE5532.HAH! Just like Cambridge's $5K transport killing 840 CD player. When TAS decides to pump up a brand, they go all in.
Let me highlight the inflammatory and judgmental aspects of this quote, then I will shut up about it:"With horrible inevitability, the very popularity and excellent technical performance of the 5532 has led to it being criticized by subjectivists who have contrived to convince themselves that they can tell op-amps apart by listening to music played through them. This always makes me laugh, because there is probably no music on the planet that has not passed through a hundred or more 5532s on its way to the consumer." For example, does the above do anything that this impartial rewrite does not--besides incite anger?Although the 5532 delivers excellent measured performance, and has been used widely in mastering consoles, some listeners believe that it is not a truly transparent device, and is bettered by other op-amps."