It
seems like Zen projects become popular again after almost 10 years from
their beginning. And since competition is knocking on a door (Jam knows
what I'm talking about) I decided to present here my first Zen amp,
which I built after reading the original article in AA '93.
The
case was as usually influenced by the heat sinks type, which BTW, I
bought dirt cheap at CAD$10, surplus. I was still under the impression
that Wima caps supposedly sound pretty good, but later added MITs, which
clearly improved the sound. I also used good grade Nichicon Muse as
coupling electrolytics.
These
were the times when I was a fan of PCBs and a perfect order in all my
constructions. So you don't see much wire. Even binding posts are soldered
directly to PCB. The filtering capacitors are mounted on separate board,
which through brass spacers connects to main board. Everything is pretty
tight but I still found the place for inductors. Heat sinks can be easily
removed for access in case of troubleshooting.
The
chassis influenced by Aleph designs was done from 1/4" aluminum
and anodized black, everything hand made. This is actually my favorite
Zen amp and I will probably never get rid of it. One advantage is its
small size. The sound has unique flavor, although I prefer more forward
character of A75. Aleph 5 sound (which I built recently) is IMO between
Zen and A75.
One
last pictures showing the detail of capacitor mounting and removed front
plate. This is probably the simplest way to put together solid chassis,
if you don't mind of course 1/2" aluminum bars. Transformer, soured
from Plitron, is mounted to bottom plate, which is not removable.