The newbie in love with tube sound but scared by wattage numbers

OK, this is my first post. I've been hanging around STereophile.com forever, and I've been a newbie stereophile since I heard my college roomate's father's system.

I'm only 27 and wanting to put together my first system. I plan on building it "piecemeal" so that I can truely learn about each component and the way it affects (effects, affects, whatevers) my overall system.

Tweeter Polarity

Forums

I have a pair of B&W Silver Signatures. The tweeter domes were pushed in, so I had them replaced. However, when I picked them up I was told there was no indication of polarity on the diaphragms from B&W, so I would need to up figure out the tweeter polarity.

I figured, no problem, I'll hook them up with some jumpers and figure out what sounded correct. Unfortunately, different source material sound differently, and I can't tell what is correct (in comparison to the woofers). Some material sounds correct, and some material I need to swap to get is to sound correct.

interconnect buzz

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I keep getting a faint buzz from my speakers even when my system is on but idle with nothing playing. I've determined it is coming from the power amp through my interconnects. My power amp is a B&K Reference 200.5 and my preamp is a B&K Reference 30 and the speakers are Paradigm Studio 100. The interconnects are Xios brand. It seems that by moving the interconnects away from other cables in my system that the buzz goes away. Right now I have them positioned so that the buzz is not audible but here is my question and reason for posting.

Klipsch Heresy III

Newbie here. Just got my new system together and had some questions. The heart of my system is a Jolida 202A and an Audio gd 19 MkIII "B" DAC. I have the $300 NAD cd player I don't use much. Speakers are Polk Audio RTi A5s and the DSW Pro 600 sub. I want to know the good and bad about the Heresy III. I am entrigued by this "old school" speaker and the amazing efficiency. As far as the price goes I'm sure it would be an upgrade from my A5s?

Thanks

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Specifications

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Specifications

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Measurements

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Measurements

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Tom Norton's Reference System

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Tom Norton's Reference System

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Martin Colloms

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Martin Colloms

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Page 2

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Page 2

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

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