Tube amp for power hungry planar magnetics

Hello everybody,
Hope you are doing well!
I have a pair of audezee lcd3 headphones and I’m looking to build a tube amp for them. It can be both with an output transformer as well as Otl. I’m looking for some thing high quality with a great sound. The headphones have an impendance of around 100 Ohm and as all planar magnetics are relatively power hungry. Any suggestions or direct experiences? I’ve searched the net but so far didn’t find anything that has convinced me 100%.

Thank you very much!
 
I am not sure what you mean.

The output capacitors in my amplifier are not electrolytics. Getting more capacitance without using electrolytics may not be so practical, but it is doable. Besides that: Nowadays there are very good electrolytics so I doubt if this would present a real problem. I did not use them myself because I did not have to (but I confess that a little bit of "Mojo" was involved also).
 
The common understanding would be class A solid states would be a better pairing with planars compared to tube amps. Tube amps are able to deliver voltage required by planars easily but due to the lower sensitivity (power hungry), planars will pull more current. This is where tube amps lag behind class A solid states.

Yes output transformers are a way to go for voltage to current conversion.

Or build a PassDIY Whammy headphone amp :)
 
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The worst offender for power hungry headphones is HiFiman HE-6. 32ohm, 82dB/mW sensitivity so they require up to 3W. It’s about the only headphone that requires such extreme power. A headphone amp with an OPA541 output stage should handle it well. I am working with Jhofland and we developed a headphone amp with a SET tube buffer stage which then drives the solid state OPA451 to make about 5W into 32ohms. We have two versions, one is 2W and the other 5W. They look very similar as prototypes.

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I’ve always thaught that big electrolytics in the signal Line would have a negative impatto in the sound quality. 100 ohm is such an impendance that would require a big electrolytic and at the same time a relatevely high current amo inr si that maybe an otl is not the best way. Can you confirm that?
With transformers the Problem is to find the right one with the right impendance matchings. Not many produceva have specific ones for headphones.
I know a solid state class a amp is probably the most rational choice but i wanted to explore the tube option
 
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A 2200uF or two 1000uF in parallel electrolytic cap will take care of most headphones. You can get higher quality “audio grade” ones. Brands like Nichicon UKZ “Fine Gold”
or “Muses”, Panasonic SEPF polymer is one of my favorites for low ESR, Panasonic FR although not an audio cap sounds great, and Elna Silmic II are also superb sounding. Add a 2.2uF MKP film cap as bypass if you want some extra resolution.

Here is how you calculate value and bass extension.

Let’s assume worst case is 32ohm headphone impedance. Let’s say you want 10Hz before any bass fall off. Let’s take it two octaves lower or 2.5Hz for the filter -3dB point.

The corner frequency for 1st order high pass RC filter is = 1/(2pi x R x C). Solve for C and we get C =1/(2pi x 2.5Hz x 32ohms) = ~2000uF.

So a 2200uF cap will give bass response flat down to 10Hz with 32ohm headphones.
 
Thanks!
I'm slightly changing the question.
What would be your opinion about a set (or pp) amplifier with output transformers using for example 300b or 2a3 or el84?

I use a Tubelab SE with 45 tubes and some custom made Toriody output transformers - it works really well with my Audeze LCD2's, although I did have to use a Neurochrome HV regulator to get rid of the last traces of hum. With 300b's it would probably even drive a pair of HiFiman HE6's
 
The Audeze LCD line isn't too power hungry. The Bottlehead S.E.X. is a nice option if you want a kit. I liked the pairing. The WHAMMY is also a good option with very adequate output power.

As XKR wrote the HE-6 and HE-6se require a beefier output. Other offenders include the Susvara, HEDDPhones, and the Abyss 1266.


I am working with Jhofland and we developed a headphone amp with a SET tube buffer stage which then drives the solid state OPA451 to make about 5W into 32ohms. We have two versions, one is 2W and the other 5W. They look very similar as prototypes.
I'd be interested in learning more about this.

I use a Tubelab SE with 45 tubes and some custom made Toriody output transformers - it works really well with my Audeze LCD2's, although I did have to use a Neurochrome HV regulator to get rid of the last traces of hum. With 300b's it would probably even drive a pair of HiFiman HE6's
I'd reckon it would as well.

What would be your opinion about a set (or pp) amplifier with output transformers using for example 300b or 2a3 or el84?
All of these options have been used for headphone amps. I believe Eddie Current did the 2a3, there are a handful of 300b headphone amps out there (Cayin, Elekit, Eddie Current, etc.), and AudioNoteKits offers an EL84 headphone amp (Manley too I believe). The tubes all sound different, so that would be the primary driving factor for choice IMHO. I'd personally like to see an EL34 headphone amp design as I'm fond of that tube's midrange.
 
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