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For a long time I wanted to return to my first
Love, vinyl playback, and at the same time I wanted to immerse myself
into a new electronic project where I can re-acquaint myself with PCB
construction. Searching on the web and into my favorite audio forum,
DIYaudio, I decided in august 2003 to build my own Aleph Ono. I already
built a nice Aleph30 and really like the Pass Labs sound, so the Ono was
a natural choice for me. The newest XONO received excellent reviews, so
I also decided to upgrade to the more sophisticated approach of the XONO
with fully dual mono supplies and separate preamp enclosures.
Since I was not really an expert at the
time on PCB design, I choose the base design of a DIYaudio member, Ed
Robinson. His design was excellent with extensive ground plane, double
layers, star ground, short signal path, etc. It includes a fully DC
coupled modification to remove the MM section coupling caps. His project
also already included a nice parts list to help order all the parts.
Ed's design includes separate
pre-regulator, regulator and preamp PCB. To reduce supply noise as
possible, I decided to mount the pre-regulator, and the power
transformers into the supply enclosure. Then using a standard DB-25
cable (like PassLabs supply), I transfer the DC only into the preamp
enclosure. There the regulators PCB supply the preamp PCB with clean and
hi-current dc voltages. I included some of my own design to complete the
separate supply, a transformer PCB and what I called a connectors PCB to
mount the DB25 connectors, feed all the supply voltages. It includes a
digital supply for an upcoming PassLabs X-Preamp that I what to use with
the same power supply. Everything in this preamplifier has been
homemade, except the nice preamp enclosure that was professionally made.
Components quality is very good, using RN60D resistors, RTE and film
caps, etc. I was not prepared for the complexity of this fully analog
project. I learned a lot: making PCB, matching FET, choosing FET type,
finding supplier of difficult to obtain parts, selecting LED's for the
correct voltage. It was a lot of work but very rewarding at the end.
This is the best phono preamp I ever listen too. You hear details that
you ignored were there. The timing is perfect and the noise floor is so
low it is almost silence. Clean, precise and full of dynamic, it leaves
the CD sound in the dust. I would like to thank Nelson Pass, Wayne
Colburn for sharing their great design and helping us to get closer to
the real music.
Sylvain Bergeron
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