Whitestone Audio Instruments P331 Tube Loading Amplifier
Run your tracks, stems, and mixes through the Whitestone Audio P331 Tube Loading Amplifier to impart distinguished character and defining depth to your audio without relying on traditional compression or EQ processing. With premium Class-A circuitry, dual 6SN7GT vacuum tubes, and precision digitally controlled analog relays, the P331 combines the heart, soul, and vibe of vintage analog gear with the predictability and repeatability of digital switching.
Ensuring versatility that can fulfill the desires of engineers working across the spectrum of genres, the P331 features selectable feedback/feedforward loading modes, three signal padding choices (no padding or automatic padding pre- or post-tube), and a lift circuit designed to enhance the lows, highs, or both. Furthermore, you can run the output in its default transformerless state to maintain transparency or select between two output transformer settings to add more color and texture. The P331 is topped off with dual analog VU needle meters to complete its classic appearance.
NAMM TEC Award Nominee
Soul
In 1939, just a few weeks after the start of WWII in Europe, RCA Radiotron introduced the 6SN7 octal (8-pin) double triode tube to the American market. This was the birth of the true common ancestor of all modern double triodes used in high-fidelity amplifiers. The 6SN7 is still in production after over 80 years, for good reason.
6SN7 vacuum tubes of the 1940s vintage were chosen for this amplifier due to their lower distortion capabilities that exceed that of the standard and ubiquitous 12A*7 variety. The 12A*7 varieties were incarnated due to commercial needs such that they were “better, cheaper, and lighter” at the expense of embodying more distortion. With the advent of feedback, tube amplifiers could be mass produced with these less expensive 12A*7 style tubes using more feedback to reduce distortion.
While feedback reduces distortion, it also lowers overall amplifier gain. It might have been considered heresy to reduce the gain through feedback (and reduce distortion) in earlier tube designs since minimal gain was still extremely expensive prior to the 1950s. Thusly, earlier tube designs were lower distortion on purpose; especially for their critical role in modulation-based communication systems that had more stringent requirements than the average 1950s guitar amplifier tube.
Notwithstanding, ultimate circuit topology can bring out more second harmonic characteristics than usual with any tube design. Hence the impetus for the variable circuit topologies within the P331 Tube Loading Amplifier to allow the user to do so as necessary or not at all.
Heart
Brains
Whitestone Audio took the best of vintage analog technology and married it to the best of modern computer-optimized circuit design. This allows a level of precision and clarity which was simply unimaginable when tubes of this vintage were originally developed.
The P331 is full digitally controlled analog. Each parameter is fully repeatable and can be recalled via front-panel rotary and toggle switches commanding over 80 sealed precision relays. No audio runs to the P331’s front panel and only the finest components are used throughout the audio path.
Loading
The Loading circuit is part of the fully differential (balanced) Class-A tube amplifier. It was designed to coerce an audio signal to hit the tube at different points on its response curve. As the gain increases through the tube, the signal is padded down in equal measure. This helps to ensure minimal audible level gain or loss, allowing you to audition the enhancement the tubes are imparting without drastic changes in level.
There are two modes of operation for the Loading circuit: Clean and Bloom.
- Clean (Feedback Mode): Utilizes the manipulation of feedback to affect internal tube gain, subtle non-linearities, and even-order harmonics.
- Bloom (Feedforward Mode): Utilizes the manipulation of plate loading to affect internal tube gain, slightly less subtle non-linearities, and even-order harmonics.