ELEKIT TU-8200R

Got it. Not available anymore, and not cheap when they were.

If you buy the 8400 without output transformers, as you suggest, then the remainder of your old 8200 will not be useable anymore afterwards. Can one buy just the 8400 parts that are different, to minimize the expense and waste? Do they even use the same chassis?

It might be more cost effective to buy a complete 8400 kit including standard output transformers, swap in Lundahls from your 8200 (if it was upgraded before), and then sell or gift the still functional 8200.
 
$1200 is not a budget amp. $100 (or $150 for the Zenductor 2s, plus chassis of course) is a budget amp.
And what shortcomings?? Why do you tell me now?! ;-) 😉

Seriously now, I believe you when you say the 8400 is better, but I think at this point if I felt the need for a better or bigger tube amp, I'd probably try something with a single ended triode, like the 8900.
 
We are not comparing the amps from Amazon or Ebay.

I sold more than 2500 units of TU-8200 in the last 14 years. The common problem of TU-8200 is the FET filier. It is a good filter but If you use a bad tube it is very easy to damage the FET filter. It also cannot use tube higher than KT90. TU-8400 is to address these issues. Also the available of KT170, TU-8400 is made possible to use this tube.
The stock TU-8400 is not $1200. For amp made in Japan, $800 is a budget amp. ie. Lundahl LL2777B is a $400 upgrade.
TU-8900 is not a budget amp . Just the amorphous core is more than $945.00.
But if you look at the cost of other Stereophile Class A components then TU-8900 is cheap.
 
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@vkung

Hi Victor,

I have an 8200R with a Lundahl transformer and your upgraded coupling caps.

I recently noticed that the left channel is making a very faint putt, putt, putt, puttaputt noise. It is rhythmic, but no so much that you could say it was at a certain number of cycles. It is super faint--I can only hear it if I put my ear within 8 inches or so from the speaker. The noise is independent of the volume level or input switch position. It does not happen in the right channel. I have a video that I can post where you can kinda hear it, but the volume has to be turned way up.

I only recently noticed because I got my turntable out and I sit very close to the speaker when switching records.

The speaker on that channel is an EV Aristocrat with an SP12B + T35 tweeter with the original X36 crossover. The noise if below the crossover frequency (3,500), so I can only hear it out of the SP12B.

Any ideas?

Thanks, Peter