| Silent
Running
Audio VR
Series
Isolation
Platforms |
|
|
Mike
Silverton |
|
22
March 2002 |
Specifications
Component
specific SRA
isolation
platforms conform
to the width,
depth and weight,
and where
necessary, the
irregular contours
of the hardware
they support.
Address:
Silent Running
Audio
325 Hubbs Avenue
Happauge, NY 11788
Telephone/fax 631
342 0556
Web: www.silentrunningaudio.com
Agreed:
whether an audio
component's job is
to add, subtract,
or simply
transmit, we hear
the role it plays.
As a test (or
reminder), swap
that set of
interconnects you
were at pains to
select with the
cheesiest
equivalent you can
find. I cringe
still when I think
of the time I did.
But why dwell on
torture? Within an
hour of having set
my Mark Levinson
No.39 CD player on
a Silent Running
Audio VR Series
platform, I
wondered whether
anything I'd done
to enhance my
basic system was
more meaningful
than this. I
realize how
routine such
expressions of joy
must seem. Believe
me, this is not
your customary
audiophile-journalist's
triple salchow,
double toe loop.
SRA
isolators conform
to the horizontal
dimensions of the
hardware they
support; thus
their trim,
tailor-made look.
The hardware's
weight also
figures, albeit
internally. I find
it remarkable that
the handsome,
two-tiered piece
under my CD
player, with its
dappled gray (and
highly
specialized)
finish, retails
for $500. I'd have
thought the price
within reason were
this one of a
production run.
Given the
importance
designer Kevin
Tellekamp assigns
to size and the
vastness of
hardware our hobby
inspires, it would
be unreasonably
difficult even for
a much larger
company to stock
multiples. My
two-tier
characterization
refers to a bottom
protruding
"raft"
within its outer
housing. This
"isoBASE"
design conceals an
assortment of
"modules,"
similarly chosen
according to their
burden. Tellekamp
mentions that he
assembles his
isoBASE lines
within a nitrogen
blanket - a tent
of sorts -
"ensuring
that the enemy of
proper isolation,
air, is forced out
prior to final
assembly."
The
VR's packaging is
droll: a
snug-fitting wood
crate in military
olive, on one side
in white, TOP
SECRET; on the
other, CLASSIFIED.
There's more to
this than Soldier
of Fortune
whimsy. In
Tellekamp's words:
I
worked for
different
divisions of the
military, their
contractors and
sub-contractors
- Grumman
Aerospace and
Eaton Corp., to
name two. My
expertise is in
coatings
systems,
especially
Chemisorb and
Chemosmosis. My
experience
covers
everything from
anechoic-type
coatings and
sound
cancellation
finishes,
through
high-temp &
thermal-reactive
materials, along
with most every
type of
coating/finish
and system in
between. As the
military gets
strange over
project-specific
mentions, I find
that not going
into detail
makes for a much
more peaceful
day. I give away
no secrets when
I mention that a
lot of
audiophiles are
hooked into the
military. You'd
be amazed at how
many phone calls
I've received
from these
folks!
This
aversion to
martial
specificity goes
only so far. SRA's
top lines, the
Ohio Class XL and
Ohio Class, have
naught to do with
the Buckeye
State's pecking
order. In the
argot of the
submarine set, the
issue is silent
running, which
gets uppercased
here to Silent
Running, with
ample audible
justification.
With certain items
of combat
hardware,
undetectability is
the biggest of
deals, the
collateral bennies
of which this
conflict-allergic
aesthete reaps
with thanks.
That
first hour's
delights are best
encapsulated as
heightened detail;
to spell it out,
upgrades in
transparency,
resolution,
dynamic gradation,
transient snap,
all of which
persist through
follow-up
sessions. Not that
they were wholly
absent prior to
the SRA platform's
installation, nor
does one's
journalese provide
a true picture of
the pleasure one
feels when
something sounds
so right. We
audiophiles are
strangers to
half-measures. One
is blown away or
not. I'm still
looking for body
parts. I would add
only this
(probably
unnecessary)
cautionary note:
during one
listening session,
I bypassed my line
conditioners
(three
free-standing
Quantum Symphony
pods and one
Richard Gray's
Power Company
duplex), and the
outcome suffered
to a small but
audible and
therefore
significant
degree. No single
tweak does it all.
I await the
arrival of two VR
platforms for my
Mark Levinson amps
with pleasure.
Publisher's
Response
I
want to add my two
cents to what Mr.
Silverton proposes
of Kevin
Tellekamp's SRA
products because
they do indeed,
sonically that is,
do exactly as Mike
stated. I've known
Tellecamp for at
least 5 years, as
Jerry Gladstein,
one of his many
clients, just so
happens to be a
very close friend
and uses SRA
products
extensively. Since
Jerry seems to own
the best of the
best in, well…
come to think of
it, everything,
I've always
thought of the SRA
stuff as a most
expensive
proposition. You
see, Gerry uses
the SRA products
under his $70,000
Burmester digital
front end as well
as his $29,000
Lamm amplifiers
and exotic
analogue rig.
Anyone with a good
pair of eyes and a
calculator would
qualify this as an
expensive outlay.
Thus, I'm guilty
by association.
My
system's isolation
is replete with Sistrum
products for which
I'm still quite
happy and amazed.
Consequently, when
Tellecamp offered
to build a pair of
platforms under my
Bel Canto EVo
amplifiers I
hesitated. The
only reason I
opted to
experiment with
them was the time
he stated it would
take, due to the
fact he builds
each one
individually to
spec. None of that
"one size
fits all"
philosophy here.
The
only thing that
caught my
attention were the
crates they
arrived in. The
Deep military
green with Top
Secret emboldened
on the top got my
audio juices
flowing, I will
admit. But that's
where the
excitement
initially ended,
in the sense that
there's no fancy
secret formula,
multi-tierd,
dipped in gold,
silver or bronze
screaming-for-attention
isolation device
weighing more than
the product it
supports. To the
ostentatious
audiophile on the
quest for that
special something
hoping to get a
couple of oohs and
ahhs from your
audio stooges,
look elsewhere.
Besides the SRA
emblem befitting a
very snug and
slick fit and
finish under my
EVo's, I've not
gotten a single
inquiry on its
appearance, but
plenty on its
performance.
In
short, I've added
more body back to
the performance.
Our newest
contributor, Greg
Petan, formally of
Ultimate Audio,
describes my
system's ultra
transparency as
the proverbial
"throwing the
baby out with the
bath water"
type. Not a
compliment but
true. Sometimes I
think we can
become a victim of
our own biases. Ya
think? With his
constructive
criticisms taken
destructively, it
was an absolute
delight to hear
the warmth
reappear back in
my system after a
short absence. The
Sistrum System is
wonderful. I'm in
no way thinking of
removing them from
my front-end where
my
Electrocompaniet
CD player and Tact
preamp slash room
corrector rests.
But I will state
when using them in
conjunction with
the SRA products
under my
amplification,
things did get
noticeably better
in the areas of
body, warmth,
richness;
especially in the
reproduction of
the human voice.
My system, without
question, sounds
more musical with
the SRA products
providing their
services. A
service I'm quite
grateful of. So
much in fact, like
Mike, I've
nominated the SRA
as my new
reference under my
beloved EVo
amplifiers.

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