| Thor Audio TA-1000 Line Stage and
TA-3000 Phono Stage |
|
Preview To Mark II |
| Michael Wright |
|
January 2005 |

Upon hearing from a friend of mine that I was
writing reviews for ST and using the Mark I
version of his TA-1000 and TA-3000 line and
phono stages, Thor Audio’s Paul Marks
contacted me and offered to update my units to
the current Mark II specifications. A full of
review of the Mark II units is in the works so
be on the look out for it in the coming
months. It should be very exciting. In the
meantime, I want to share with you the effects
of the Mark II update that was performed on my
units as a prelude to the coming Mark II
review. For those of you who are owners of the
Mark I units, the update is no longer
available. Sorry. But I think after you read
this, you’ll be as excited about the Mark II
as I am.
Thor Audio has been around since 1996 and from
the time they made their move on the audio
scene, their equipment has been considered as
some of the best available. I had heard about
their TA-1000 line stage before it was ever
reviewed. I heard that it was to be a vacuum
tube based unit with phenomenal sound and a
shape that was a total departure from usual
black box. It was shaped like a doughnut. When
I first heard the Thor at the local salon
(Holm Audio in Woodridge, IL), the hype was
immediately justified. Here was a vacuum tube
preamp that didn’t sound like tubes in the
traditional sense. It was powerful and highly
detailed sounding.

I then had an opportunity to hear Thor’s
TA-3000 phono preamp and became hooked. Still
owning an analog rig and enjoying the sound of
vinyl, the TA-3000 bought me closer than
anything I had previously heard, save the
Klyne System Seven phono preamp, to audio
Nirvana. The Thor phono preamp was the first
piece of Thor electronics I came to own and
still consider it my most prized piece for
what it does for my vinyl listening. What it
does is allow vibrant living music to bloom
with so much naturalness that it captivates my
senses. This phenomenon was consistent with
every line stage that I connected it to. The
TA-1000 took a little more effort to decide
upon. I listened to quite a few preamps before
I decided upon it. Other designer’s preamps
that made the final cut were the Hovland,
Audio Research LS25MKII, Joule-Electra LA-100
and the Lamm L1. The reason I went with the
Thor line stage was because it combined the
naturalness of tubes in the midrange with the
extended frequency extremes of the best
solid-state pieces and explosive dynamics like
I had not heard before. When Thor came out
with the “Mark II” upgrade, I was a little
skeptical at first. I felt that my line and
phono stages were sounding good enough as it
were, and that upgrading would probably not
give me much in return for what the cost of
the upgrades would be.
There is one thing I need to make clear before
going any further. What I am reporting on to
you is a Thor TA-1000 and TA-3000 that were
Mark I and have been upgraded to Mark II. The
performance of the pieces will be, according
to Paul Marks, owner and designer of Thor
Audio, about 90% of what a brand new Mark II
version of the same pieces. The new Thor Mark
II linestage and phono preamp have a more
substantial chassis, which adds to the
improved sound. According to information taken
directly from Thor’s site, “The circuit
changes are many and give frequency extension
into the deep bass for a deeper, tighter
sound. It can also deliver this bass into any
impedance, even into low impedance solid-state
power amps. Other improvements include greater
air, transparency, and focus of the image, and
even more effortless overall presentation.
More changes include better dynamics, inner
(micro and macro) detail, and an even more
palpable overall presentation.” One of the
features that is available with the Mark II
version are the availability of a remote. I
used to take pride in claiming myself to be an
audio purist who wouldn’t dream of using a
remote control with my preamp. I will admit
that remotes are becoming less of a
convenience and more of a necessity thanks in
part to some old football injuries (peewee
football, but football nonetheless).
So how does it sound?
Before the upgrade, I was very happy with my
two Thor pieces. I didn’t feel as though I was
lacking in any one area of the music and my
enjoyment of my system was quite high. But
after finding out through a mutual
acquaintance that I was still using the
earlier Thor pieces, Paul made me an offer I
couldn’t refuse.
I upgraded the TA-1000
first.
As I mentioned before, I’d bought a lot of
preamps home before deciding on the Thor and
had not heard anything up to that point that
caused me to regret my decision. Well, my jaw
dropped when I finally plugged in the updated
TA-1000 and began to listen to the music. The
first thing I noticed was that music seemed to
be coming from a darker, quieter background,
which made everything seem clearer and more
distinct. Through the original TA-1000, I
always felt that the performers sounded as
though they were right in my room. But with
the Mark II they were definitely more vivid
and present. On live recordings, room sounds
were much more apparent. I could easily tell
when performers walked across the stage or
were tapping their feet to set the tempo at
the beginning of a track such as “Black Magic
Woman”, on Patricia Barber’s, Companion
and the Ray Brown Trio’s, Live at the Loa.
Bass performance was greatly improved as well.
I had always felt that the original Thor had
some of the best bass performance of any of
tube preamp I’d heard. Through the Mark II,
the bass went even deeper and with a bit more
fullness. Steve Roach and Robert Rich’s
“SOMA”, from The Absolute Sound’s Hearts of
Space and “Chin Lang”, from the Lonnie
Plaxico recording Plaxico were good
examples of recordings whose bass was rendered
better through the Mark II. The upgrade did
little to the already outstanding dynamic
performance and transient response.
I remarked during my Sonic Euphoria passive
linestage review that the Thor, for an active
device, was almost as neutral. With the
upgrade, the Thor took on an improved sense of
neutrality, and the Sonic Euphopria no longer
sounded better in the area of string
reproduction. Voice reproduction also improved
with the upgrade. I could hear more of the
vocal inflections, breathing and tone than I
could before while listening to “Never Let Me
Go” and “Detour Ahead” from Jane Monheit’s,
Never Never Land and “A Case of You”, from
Diana Krall’s CD Live in Paris. Not
that I had any difficulty discerning those
attributes before, but they were more apparent
now. Stage width and depth are improved with
each performer having more dimensionality and
space between them as heard on “C Jam Blues”,
from the Charles Mingus album, Mingus at
Carnegie Hall and “Castilian Drums” from
Dave Brubeck’s, The Dave Brubeck Quartet at
Carnegie Hall.
The result of the upgrade to the Thor TA-3000
phono preamp, while not quite as dramatic as
was the linestage, was still very apparent.
Again, music appeared to come forth from a
quieter background that made the music from
vinyl sound even more “you are there.”
The high frequency performance was improved
with greater extension and air on “Kaimana”
from Steve Kindler & Teja Bell’s album,
Dolphin Smiles. Midrange performance
remained good with a slight increase in
presence on “Look What I Got”, from Betty
Carter’s wonderful Look What I Got, and
Lush Life, from John Coltrane & Johnny
Hartman . I found it easier to follow
individual instrumentalists during complicated
or dissonant passages as in avant-garde jazz
as on “Beauty is a Rare Thing”, from The
Ornette Coleman Quartet album, This is Our
Music, and the Art Ensemble of Chicago’s
Bush Magic, from their Urban
Bushmen album . Upper bass and midbass were
slightly fuller and had more impact as on,
“The Nearness of You”, from Branford Marsalis’
album Trio Jeepy, Joe Henderson’s,
“Loose Change”, from the album, The State
of the Tenor, Live at the Village Vanguard.
Classical music took on a more layered affect,
front to back, with plenty of air and
ambience. Strings sounds were very detailed,
whether bowed or plucked, and horn sections
sounded as though 16 distinct horns were
coming together instead of 6 as on Lawrence
Leighton Smith and Dmitri Kitayenko and The
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra’s performance
of, The Moscow Sessions, and Howard Dunn and
the Dallas Wind Symphony’s Fiesta.
Conclusion
A Thor TA-3000 phono preamp sounds wonderful
in any version you really owe it to yourself
and your vinyl collection to experience one at
home. The TA-1000 linestage is a little more
interesting and requires some deeper thought.
You will have to come to that conclusion on
your own. Based on what I heard in a dealers
listening room, I didn’t think the upgrades
would be worth it. My initial thought was that
it was a little bit better, but my system
already sounds good. However, after having
heard the upgraded Thor units in my system, I
had to conclude that they were worth the money
for the improvements I got. If it brings you
closer to the music and increases your musical
enjoyment then,,,,,,,,check with the
significant other and see if it’s okay and do
it. Or you could buy brand new Mark II units
that have the new and improved chassis that,
according to Paul Marks, perform even better
than updated units. Either way, you can’t lose
and will have one of the best available.

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