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Specifications:
Type:
Solid-state stereo amplifier
Output power: 100 watts RMS @ 8 ohms,
160 watts RMS @ 4 ohms
Gain: 26 dB @ 8 ohms
Input Impedance: RCA: >100 kohms, 5 Hz
to 200 kHz
Output Impedance: < 0.33 ohms, from 20
Hz to 20 kHz
Frequency Response: 10 Hz to 100 kHz,
+0, -0.5dB
THD: < 1%, 7 Hz to 77 kHz
Signal to noise: > 105 dB
Serial Number: TZ-UA1081.004
Dimensions: 440mm W X 335mm D X 170mm H
Weight: 30 kg (65 pounds)
Price: $9,898.98 introductory price,
soon to be $12,121 because of exchange
rates
Distributor Information:
Delétraz Engineering
5, chemin des Halliers
CH-1234 Vessy / Geneve
Switzerland
Telephone: 004122-784.3393
Fax: 004122-784.4394
Email: info@dartzeel.com
Website:
http://www.dartzeel.com
This is an interesting amplifier. Hervé
Delétraz, the designer and manufacturer
of the darTZeel NHB-108, is known to be
an unconventional engineer, and this is
the singular fruit of his labor over a
sixteen-year period in the consumer
audio arena. Two lengthy and, at times,
quite humorous user manuals are
provided. The Owner’s Manual is
mandatory reading to learn about
features and correct usage. The
Audiophile’s technical manual explains
the designers’ goals and delves into
the theory behind the numerous circuit
innovations and design choices.
Highlights of these choices include: no
DC servo compensation or current
limitation, no negative feedback at the
outputs, and only two bipolar output
devices per channel. This is a
purist/minimalist design regarding the
integrity of the signal. The designer
feels the timing of musical events
carried in the virgin signal is a
fragile thing, and is easily
compromised when circuits are
“improved.” A heroic effort is made to
avoid this. Beyond those two bipolar
output devices nothing touches the
signal: all fuses, switches and
contacts are outside the signal path.
Fit-n-Finish
The more I look at the darTZeel, the
more I appreciate the highly evolved
design aesthetic at work. Every detail
appears to have been thought out and
fitted into the overall idiosyncratic
concept, with quality and aesthetics
being foremost in mind, rather than an
eye on the bottom line. The sensibility
at work here reminds me of Italian
autos from the ‘50s and ‘60s, with the
emphasis on attractive colors, rounded
edges, overbuilt engines and a bit of
whimsy.
The EYES have
it
The face of the NHB-108 is
anthropomorphic in a cartoonish way.
Aside from the 24k gold-plated
Identification Plate on the top left
front corner with your name and the
serial number engraved on it, there are
two large indicator ‘Eyes’, one for
each channel, and the push button
on/off ‘Power Nose’. Again that sense
of humor is at play. Those Eyes tell
you a lot about the health of the amp.
In normal operation, the Eyes are lit
an orangey-red color, which complements
the gold chassis nicely. If an Eye
blinks at you it probably indicates the
presence of stray DC voltage in that
channel. Likewise, they’ll start to
glow brightly if you crank-up the
volume too much and soon activate the
protection circuit. On the other hand,
if the signal is below a set threshold
of 10mW under 8 ohms for 45 seconds the
Eyes dim as the amp goes into idle.
This happened occasionally while
listening to a quiet passage. Then the
music gets loud and they instantly go
bright. However, this is only a visual
cue. There is no change in the amp’s
operation and no sonic effect, but I
found it a little distracting. I’d say
idle mode comes on too quickly, and the
signal threshold is set too high. Maybe
make idle mode optional, via a switch.
The over-sized ‘Power Nose’ operates
smoothly and securely, and matches the
gold of the chassis.
Around back, there is one set of XLR
inputs, one set of RCAs, and one pair
of special darTZeel BNC inputs (these
are for use with darTZeel cables). The
WBT speaker binding posts with clear
plastic screw-down locking mechanisms
were easy to use and made for secure
connection, but they could be bigger to
accommodate larger spade lugs. I
appreciated the two sets of formidable,
matching gold-colored handles, front
and back, every time I experimented
with a new footer, etc.
Looking down through the smoked-glass
top gives an interior view of
immaculate build quality. Each amp is
handmade, but you’d never know it from
its looks. Inside are four quadrants,
symmetrically laid out to support the
dual-mono design. There is a veritable
kaleidoscope of colors, with
gold-colored, crescent-shaped, metal
bus bars, blue capacitors, red
resistors, along with two large
transformers. It even coordinates with
the exterior gold-colored high quality
anodized aluminum chassis and dullish
red heatsinks on either side. All those
critical parts are decoupled at
different frequencies by tuned rubber
suspensions.
I situated the NHB-108 on the floor
about 2-3 feet away from any other
component, a good idea because the amp
is not fully shielded. Hervé feels
fully shielded systems sound blurred
and fuzzy. That is also why a glass
cover is used - to allow residual
magnetic fields to escape. In
operation, the amp itself was totally
free of mechanical noises and there was
just an average amount of noise from
the speakers when there was no signal
playing. If noise is a problem, a
jumper wire is provided to connect both
output speakers’ grounds to kill the
residual noise. The amp got barely warm
after a few hours of use.
So how does it
sound?
Enjoyable and non-fatiguing, tonally
well-balanced and warm, satisfying and
a bit soft, these are all
characteristics of the sound of the
darTZeel NHB-108. Another way to put it
is that the amp invites you to relax
and put your feet up. You’d probably
swear there were tubes somewhere,
because you won’t hear the usual
solid-state artifacts. I was repeatedly
amazed that only a small mental shift
was necessary when I swapped between
the Master Sound 845 SET monos, my
reference tube amp, and the NHB-108. It
promoted extended listening sessions
and so made a mess of my daily
schedule.
On source material with difficult
treble, like Swingin’ and Burnin’, by
the John Cocuzzi Quintet [Wildchild! MS
06652], track two, ‘Broadway’, has a
very prominent ride cymbal. Its image
is large and forward, and can easily
get out of control to the point that
it’s all you hear. This never happened
with the darTZeel. The treble is
present in proportion to the other
bands and all of the cymbal’s events
were audible and finely differentiated,
but it never got in your face. This has
to do with the tube-like warmth and
sweetness of the highs and lack of
hardness or edge. On track three, ‘What
Did I Do To Be So Black and Blue?’ a
clarinet joins the ensemble. Allan
Vaché does not play in a timid manner.
His clarinet bursts forth and quickly
lets you know about the health of your
system’s high frequencies and dynamics.
The clarinet’s treble forte can pierce
right through you and possibly cause
that stunned, glazed over expression
you sometimes see audiophiles sporting
at listening sessions. These guys are
suffering from treble slash and burn.
This happened much less with the
NHB-108 in the chain, and a footer or
wire change was all that was required
to take care of it. But even when the
treble was piercing, it avoided the
grainy break-up and iciness of other
amps, and had more of the startle
quality of a shout.
The NHB-108 actually does a superb job
with Elizabethan viol music. This is a
difficult task under the best of
circumstances and generally I avoid
playing this musical genre with SS
amps, the results being less than
engaging. It demands convincing string
tone, an area that has always been
problematic in reproduced sound.
I’m listening to Goe Nightly Cares,
music of John Dowland and William Byrd,
performed by Fretwork, the pre-eminent
viol ensemble [Virgin Veritas CDVB 7243
5 61561 2]. I’m somewhat shocked to
find that the NHB-108 manages to pull
this off quite acceptably with the
correct tonal balance, full overtone
complement and the removal of what we
commonly call a solid-state signature.
I’ve already mentioned the treble. The
mid-range comes from the same origins.
The NHB-108 has got the sweetest, most
naturally detailed mid-range and treble
of any SS amp heard hereabouts. I could
almost swear I’m hearing that tube
byproduct effect of even order
harmonics being injected into the mix.
This means that string tone on
classical music is the best I’ve gotten
from solid-state. It also means the
NHB-108 deviates from neutral in a
euphonic direction, just like many fine
tube amps.
By the way, if you like this early
music, check out The Spirit Of Gambo,
music of Tobias Hume [Glossa GCD
920402], played by the Labyrinto viol
quintet. The compositions are equally
sophisticated and performed with
excellent ensemble playing. This CD has
the added thrill of soprano Emma Kirkby
on a few tracks. Some people feel her
best years are behind her, but on this
1995 recording she’s audibly in very
good form. The recording is more
closely miked than Goe Nightly Cares
and has better sound overall. You can
hear the guys grunting and snorting:
after all, playing a viol is hard work,
no? Our aesthetic sensibilities have
traveled far in the 400 years since
this music was popular, circa 1600.
Today we find its intervals and meters
eccentric, unfamiliar and modern
sounding. Personally, I find it has an
otherworldly, ethereal quality and it
transports me to a place far from my
usual GPS location.
When I don the critic’s hat, it occurs
to me how excellently the NHB-108s
treble is integrated with the mid-band,
to the extent that you’re not aware of
the treble, per se. These two bands
blend so harmoniously they seem to be
organic.
The bass is proportionally represented
and shares the warm, sweet, soft
qualities. The NHB-108s 100
watts/channel give you adequate
dynamics for most orchestral music.
Crescendos come across very well
without breakup or strain. Transient
performance is also very good. It’s
interesting that Hervé managed to get
good dynamics and speed yet still keep
the overall soft quality. Mind you,
it’s not the slam factor or speed of
the YBA Passion 1000, my reference for
SS slam. The real finesse of the
NHB-108 is in its mid-range and treble
tonal reproduction. Elizabethan viol
music demands excellent string tone,
not cutting edge slam and transient
speed.
The sound stage has excellent width and
depth and is continuous from left to
right. There are no artificial holes
between instruments and those
instruments have soft boundaries.
Detail retrieval is high up there, in
spite of the soft-edged images. You can
discern the hairs on the bow apart from
the sound of the instrument, if that’s
your thing.
Speakers,
wires and tweaks
Relatively simple, 8-ohm load speakers
like the EgglestonWorks Rosas and the
Kharma Ceramique 3.2 were the best
mates for the NHB-108. The Ayon
Signatures, a 4-ohm load, also sounded
good.
I found the Von Gaylord Live
Performance AC conditioner energized
the amp’s performance. The residual
grain and edginess were further
diminished, instruments put on weight
and were fleshed out, and the bass
improved. There was more liquidity
overall with the Live Performance.
However, the NHB-108 was more revealing
and gave a bigger soundstage plugged
straight into the wall.
This is one of those components that
will appeal to the set-it-and-forget-it
audiophile because it’s very easy to
setup. I did try several different
footers. Best results were achieved
placing it on a Mapleshade maple slab,
sitting on a set of Mapleshade
IsoBlocks, or using the IsoBlocks
alone.
The Golden Sound Red power cord lent
its usual performance boost. For the
most part, Harmonic Tech Magic
interconnects and speaker cables were
employed.
There’s just that very long break-in
time to get through, which I’ve read
elsewhere, can extend for a month or
two. My unit came from another reviewer
and so had plenty of time on it.
Initially, it sounded good after a few
hours, but a bit closed in. It required
a full week of 12-hour days to really
open up.
Conclusion
Well, here it is finally, a solid-state
amplifier that truly captures that
tubey sound.
Such a commingling of qualities, we
might have to invent a new category.
The darTZeel NHB-108 possess the best
treble of any solid-state amp I’ve
encountered. The mid-range is also
first rate. I haven’t come across a
solid-state amp that does small group
classical, acoustic music or jazz
combos as well.
The one thing that does bother me about
the darTZeel NHB-108 is the cost. The
$9,898.98 introductory price(!), soon
to become $12,121, is a lot of cash.
However, if you love the sound of tubes
but won’t venture there, for whatever
reason, the darTZeel NHB-108 is the
closest you’re gonna come to filament
bliss.
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