Greetings,
Presenting my latest addition to my audio setup - A DIY ELekit TU-879S integrated pre-power amp kit. Actually I got this 6 months back and finished building this only in Jan, because I procrastinated after assembling and soldering 80% of it. Actual effort should be 3 days into 6hrs max. The kit was purchased from Victor of VKMusic in Canada for $580 and shipping cost me about $145 and with some extra PIO upgrade caps and sockets thrown in total came to $800 approx, shipping to Bengaluru.
Image courtesy: 6moons (I did not take any original pictures yet)
Links and reviews with some more assembly pics here :
My complete setup is now:
The sound is accurate and sharp, without being edgy, and the timbre authentic. The bass is deep and well textured. Unlike before, the sound of the Mridangam is now huge and awe inspiring even without a sub (on a good/audiophile recording) - not talking about loudness and volume but in terms of depth and insight. Listening to the percussionist teasing bass notes out of the drum is now like looking into a deep dark well on a moonlit night with your eyes adjusting to the darkness, and seeing things from one fleeting moment to the next. The highs are also now much better etched and defined and cymbals splash out a bit now compared to the highly recessed treble sound before. Perhaps not a match for a two way with tweeter but atleast it has some air and a hint of crispiness now. The mids are as good as ever, transparent and clear, more resolving and insightful than before on vocals, any day better than any two or three way's I've heard- but thats mostly the fullrange speaker doing its magic with this tube amp ensuring that the music remains unmasked.
Another reviewer described it thus:
The other aspect I am impressed about is the good quality of components that come with this kit (Polypropylene caps where it matters). The minute attention to detail that went into the complete inventory of parts is impressive. Extremely well thought out down to the tiniest part, the finished assembly is way beyond what an ordinary bare-bones DIY kit will supply, and the final result of the build is comparable to any factory finished gear one could buy off the shelf at a much higher price. Easy to solder and assemble for anyone with a sight knack for DIY - its much more fun than buying gear off the shelf, not knowing whats inside.
Here is what 6moons had to say about the DIY kit
hyeah:
The tubes supplied with the kit are a Shugang 12Ax7B for the preamp section and two Electo-Harmonix 6L6GC power tubes. The 12AX7B is the 9th revision from Shugang and as I find it is a really really good preamp tube. Initially I was skeptical if the stock tubes that come with any kit would give it what it takes. So I also ordered a Jan-Philips 5751 mil grade NOS (at more than twice the price of a Shugang) and a pair of SED winged "C" power tubes, thinking they would take the sound into yet another level. But I wrong about both! First, after about 12 hours of listening over a few days, I plugged in the 5751 and immediately noticed something was not right. I played back the same series of albums I had in the afternoon and soon it dawned upon me that I was listening ot the same weakness in the sound that I have been aspiring to get rid of from my earlier gear since many years. With the 5751 NOS, the music lost the message, in comparison to the Shugang. It is an aspect often mistaken for smoothness, and sometimes preferred for it, by those that haven't yet realized a system that positively revels in accuracy of reproduction. The attack and definition went soft and the timbre and texture of notes was somewhat masked. The Shugang 12Ax7B to contrast is a really good tube in terms of attack, accuracy, liveliness and definition. To me it presents just right amount of raw edge without making the sound harsh. And it is very low noise - the musical notes are surrounded by a black silence. No hint of an audible noise floor here. So much for the famed mil grade tubes
The famed SED Winged =C= tubes were the other disappointment. Supposedly endowed with a hint (the right amount) of ripe bloom and complex harmonics, the audiophool in me imagined an experience similar to a fine wine tasting experience - "complex ... a hint of fruitiness... balanced... with body... toasty..." etc. etc., Alas! Again it made the Elekit sound quiet ordinary and similar to my earlier gear - a Myref RevC/E Gainclone. With the 5751 in the preamp section, a sense of masking was the more predominant flaw, while with the SED power tubes, the atmosphere and excitement was gone, and so was the attack as before. The EH's to contrast, provides a good amount on leading edge attack followed by air around the notes. The SEDs simply made the music duller in effect, the life in the music was taken away, lacking the air and atmospherics like my earlier solid-state gear. They say a tube requires a well matched circuit to bring out its magic, and I read somewhere that the SED requires a higher plate voltage to bring out the harmonics. But while I believed that about tube types, possibly it also applies to tube brands? The Elekit is self-biasing and I don't have a choice there, but I am not crying over it anyways since I found a magical combination with the originally supplied EH's and Shugangs.
Moreover, the Shigaraki dac is reputedly softer on the leading edge, compared to other high end dacs, and I guess I need the tubes with a good attack and bite to complement my system as a whole, so there is no progressive blunting of leading edge of notes down the chain... As a fun upgrade, I also have a quad pair of PIO Vitamin-Q caps that intend to replace as the input and output coupling caps in about 6 months down the line. Maybe they will add more body than there is with the accurate sounding EHs retaining their magic. Not that the EHs are sounding too thin - the other side of the coin when it comes to accurate reproduction. But simply because more may be possible... Then maybe if I ever have money to splurge, I will try the JJ Tesla 6L6s and KT-66 years down the line. Having tried 4 other NOS 12AU7s in another preamp kit earlier as well, its no more NOS for me ever - its like a lottery - they just burn a hole in the pocket and don't deliver. It also dawned upon me was that how easily I could have misjudged the Elekit if the "wrong" set of tubes had been supplied. I am so glad that the kit came with these and not some other! In practical terms that means one will not have to spend extra bucks in tube rolling to get a great sound out of this kit.
A year back I would not have known the difference and gladly made a song and dance about the sound with the 5751 just because it was a "toob" amp paired with a full-ranger - that legendary match made in heaven. But having auditioned the RWA signature 30.2 in my chain and doing an A/B with a 12AU7 based preamp in the original chain, I was wiser for it. In fact it was this realization about tonal accuracy and purity that led me to purchase a new DAC - the Shigaraki, a few months back. My decision about the Shigaraki was based not just on reports of its sound quality as perceived by the analytical mind, but balanced by its appeal to the intuitive mind as reported in various reviews like the one on 6moons. For example its reputed ability to paint the forest on the musical canvas and not miss the trees, and its ability to deliver a cohesion in the sound or the sum of the parts rather than the parts deconstructed. With this Shigaraki, I am happy that I can no longer hear artifacts in the SQ - a good analogy for what the average dac delivers is the debris in a comets tail. With the average budget dacs I heard, there was always something trailing the leading edge of notes that sounded like impurities. Almost inaudible but discernible if your senses became aware and your perception enhanced. With the new dac I am happy to say, the impurities are no longer present. Next step is to achieve the solidity of focus that a budget transport like the Marantz cd6002 cannot deliver, but that will be my last upgrade. Before that I will hopefully be acquiring a balanced power supply DIY kit from Transcend. And hopefully that will also inch me closer towards my quest towards vinyl like solidity in imaging focus, and improve the way the transport delivers. Waiting for dollar prices to drop to 44 levels though.
Aside from the dac, my decision for a tube amp kit goes way back in time, to when I got a pair of full-range speakers years back. That was based on my deep fondness for a 1970s Bush valve radio and its magical sound. However I had a hard time accepting the price of tube gear and a lot of trepidation about whether to afford Single-ended gear lacking slam, attack and punch, or a Push-Pull lacking the immediacy and musicality. After more than a month of listening, my impression about the TU-879S is that it does quiet a bit of both - provides the slam, kick and dynamics along with communicating some musical essence in the playback. This kit is actually a Single Ended Pentode design. The improvement over solid-state is so dramatic, the immediate lesson learnt is never to pair a full range speaker with solid state - even with the so called SS gear with supposedly tube like midrange qualities. The Gainclone I have been with so far (now dismantled for Rev-E upgrades), will now be put for TV viewing along with the Pass B1 when I build it.
--G0bble
Presenting my latest addition to my audio setup - A DIY ELekit TU-879S integrated pre-power amp kit. Actually I got this 6 months back and finished building this only in Jan, because I procrastinated after assembling and soldering 80% of it. Actual effort should be 3 days into 6hrs max. The kit was purchased from Victor of VKMusic in Canada for $580 and shipping cost me about $145 and with some extra PIO upgrade caps and sockets thrown in total came to $800 approx, shipping to Bengaluru.

Image courtesy: 6moons (I did not take any original pictures yet)
Links and reviews with some more assembly pics here :
My complete setup is now:
Marantz CD6002 --> BlueJeans/Belden 1694A digital Coax --> Shigaraki 4715 DAC --> Nordost Blue Heaven IC --> Elekit Tu-879S --> Chord silverScreen spk cable --> Audire Fostex 166E Bass-Reflex speakers
The sound is accurate and sharp, without being edgy, and the timbre authentic. The bass is deep and well textured. Unlike before, the sound of the Mridangam is now huge and awe inspiring even without a sub (on a good/audiophile recording) - not talking about loudness and volume but in terms of depth and insight. Listening to the percussionist teasing bass notes out of the drum is now like looking into a deep dark well on a moonlit night with your eyes adjusting to the darkness, and seeing things from one fleeting moment to the next. The highs are also now much better etched and defined and cymbals splash out a bit now compared to the highly recessed treble sound before. Perhaps not a match for a two way with tweeter but atleast it has some air and a hint of crispiness now. The mids are as good as ever, transparent and clear, more resolving and insightful than before on vocals, any day better than any two or three way's I've heard- but thats mostly the fullrange speaker doing its magic with this tube amp ensuring that the music remains unmasked.
Another reviewer described it thus:
The kit from VKMusic comes with an Original R-core licensed from Kitamura Kiden and manufactured by a subsidiary called Phoenix in Japan. (the kit from another famous online retailer doesn't). Victor obtained a 230V version for me as the stock one comes with 100V. I was really surprised on seeing it - although it is meant for a pre-power amp, it is as tiny as the local r-core we got for our Pass B1 preamp group buy. The output however has immense slam, dynamics and power for its size, equivalent to a larger heavy transformer. At 8.5W per channel, the amount of power it supplies drives the speakers wonderfully at between 9 to 10 O'clock on the volume pot in my 18ftx14ft living room, and at 12 O'clock on the volume, my Fostex 166E speaker drivers start to distort even before any audible compression from the tubes and output transformers. I guess that's the magic behind the original inventor's r-core with their R&D, compared to other manufacturers.They have achieved a size and weight reduction in the core without a corresponding drop in scale and power.This amplifier is free from coloration or excessive bloom in the midrange region, although it does have a slightly lean presentation. Clarity, detail, and accuracy are timely descriptors for the TU-879S, and this makes for a reasonably accurate rendition of the music.
elkit
The other aspect I am impressed about is the good quality of components that come with this kit (Polypropylene caps where it matters). The minute attention to detail that went into the complete inventory of parts is impressive. Extremely well thought out down to the tiniest part, the finished assembly is way beyond what an ordinary bare-bones DIY kit will supply, and the final result of the build is comparable to any factory finished gear one could buy off the shelf at a much higher price. Easy to solder and assemble for anyone with a sight knack for DIY - its much more fun than buying gear off the shelf, not knowing whats inside.
Here is what 6moons had to say about the DIY kit
And I couldn't agree more!Pure at heart, seeing things through a young mind, back to basics, simple is best, disciplined and logical, fun and educational... all these qualities are intrinsic to science projects and were exactly what I experienced with Elekit while assembling my own TU-879S.

The tubes supplied with the kit are a Shugang 12Ax7B for the preamp section and two Electo-Harmonix 6L6GC power tubes. The 12AX7B is the 9th revision from Shugang and as I find it is a really really good preamp tube. Initially I was skeptical if the stock tubes that come with any kit would give it what it takes. So I also ordered a Jan-Philips 5751 mil grade NOS (at more than twice the price of a Shugang) and a pair of SED winged "C" power tubes, thinking they would take the sound into yet another level. But I wrong about both! First, after about 12 hours of listening over a few days, I plugged in the 5751 and immediately noticed something was not right. I played back the same series of albums I had in the afternoon and soon it dawned upon me that I was listening ot the same weakness in the sound that I have been aspiring to get rid of from my earlier gear since many years. With the 5751 NOS, the music lost the message, in comparison to the Shugang. It is an aspect often mistaken for smoothness, and sometimes preferred for it, by those that haven't yet realized a system that positively revels in accuracy of reproduction. The attack and definition went soft and the timbre and texture of notes was somewhat masked. The Shugang 12Ax7B to contrast is a really good tube in terms of attack, accuracy, liveliness and definition. To me it presents just right amount of raw edge without making the sound harsh. And it is very low noise - the musical notes are surrounded by a black silence. No hint of an audible noise floor here. So much for the famed mil grade tubes
The famed SED Winged =C= tubes were the other disappointment. Supposedly endowed with a hint (the right amount) of ripe bloom and complex harmonics, the audiophool in me imagined an experience similar to a fine wine tasting experience - "complex ... a hint of fruitiness... balanced... with body... toasty..." etc. etc., Alas! Again it made the Elekit sound quiet ordinary and similar to my earlier gear - a Myref RevC/E Gainclone. With the 5751 in the preamp section, a sense of masking was the more predominant flaw, while with the SED power tubes, the atmosphere and excitement was gone, and so was the attack as before. The EH's to contrast, provides a good amount on leading edge attack followed by air around the notes. The SEDs simply made the music duller in effect, the life in the music was taken away, lacking the air and atmospherics like my earlier solid-state gear. They say a tube requires a well matched circuit to bring out its magic, and I read somewhere that the SED requires a higher plate voltage to bring out the harmonics. But while I believed that about tube types, possibly it also applies to tube brands? The Elekit is self-biasing and I don't have a choice there, but I am not crying over it anyways since I found a magical combination with the originally supplied EH's and Shugangs.
Moreover, the Shigaraki dac is reputedly softer on the leading edge, compared to other high end dacs, and I guess I need the tubes with a good attack and bite to complement my system as a whole, so there is no progressive blunting of leading edge of notes down the chain... As a fun upgrade, I also have a quad pair of PIO Vitamin-Q caps that intend to replace as the input and output coupling caps in about 6 months down the line. Maybe they will add more body than there is with the accurate sounding EHs retaining their magic. Not that the EHs are sounding too thin - the other side of the coin when it comes to accurate reproduction. But simply because more may be possible... Then maybe if I ever have money to splurge, I will try the JJ Tesla 6L6s and KT-66 years down the line. Having tried 4 other NOS 12AU7s in another preamp kit earlier as well, its no more NOS for me ever - its like a lottery - they just burn a hole in the pocket and don't deliver. It also dawned upon me was that how easily I could have misjudged the Elekit if the "wrong" set of tubes had been supplied. I am so glad that the kit came with these and not some other! In practical terms that means one will not have to spend extra bucks in tube rolling to get a great sound out of this kit.
A year back I would not have known the difference and gladly made a song and dance about the sound with the 5751 just because it was a "toob" amp paired with a full-ranger - that legendary match made in heaven. But having auditioned the RWA signature 30.2 in my chain and doing an A/B with a 12AU7 based preamp in the original chain, I was wiser for it. In fact it was this realization about tonal accuracy and purity that led me to purchase a new DAC - the Shigaraki, a few months back. My decision about the Shigaraki was based not just on reports of its sound quality as perceived by the analytical mind, but balanced by its appeal to the intuitive mind as reported in various reviews like the one on 6moons. For example its reputed ability to paint the forest on the musical canvas and not miss the trees, and its ability to deliver a cohesion in the sound or the sum of the parts rather than the parts deconstructed. With this Shigaraki, I am happy that I can no longer hear artifacts in the SQ - a good analogy for what the average dac delivers is the debris in a comets tail. With the average budget dacs I heard, there was always something trailing the leading edge of notes that sounded like impurities. Almost inaudible but discernible if your senses became aware and your perception enhanced. With the new dac I am happy to say, the impurities are no longer present. Next step is to achieve the solidity of focus that a budget transport like the Marantz cd6002 cannot deliver, but that will be my last upgrade. Before that I will hopefully be acquiring a balanced power supply DIY kit from Transcend. And hopefully that will also inch me closer towards my quest towards vinyl like solidity in imaging focus, and improve the way the transport delivers. Waiting for dollar prices to drop to 44 levels though.
Aside from the dac, my decision for a tube amp kit goes way back in time, to when I got a pair of full-range speakers years back. That was based on my deep fondness for a 1970s Bush valve radio and its magical sound. However I had a hard time accepting the price of tube gear and a lot of trepidation about whether to afford Single-ended gear lacking slam, attack and punch, or a Push-Pull lacking the immediacy and musicality. After more than a month of listening, my impression about the TU-879S is that it does quiet a bit of both - provides the slam, kick and dynamics along with communicating some musical essence in the playback. This kit is actually a Single Ended Pentode design. The improvement over solid-state is so dramatic, the immediate lesson learnt is never to pair a full range speaker with solid state - even with the so called SS gear with supposedly tube like midrange qualities. The Gainclone I have been with so far (now dismantled for Rev-E upgrades), will now be put for TV viewing along with the Pass B1 when I build it.
--G0bble
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