Hercules II Power Supply
Stamford Audio are pleased to announce that following Edmund's move from Hong Kong to the UK he has restarted production of the Hercules Power Supply
Combining 33 and 45rpm switchable to 220 and 110 Voltage
50/60hz (21mm motor pulley)
OVERSEAS WORLDWIDE £25 SHIPPING
Please note if you have a older 17mm (in USA) then you will need to change the Motor
Taking the Ethos of the Valhalla and
improving upon it, Stamford Audio are able offer the Hercules II power
supply for the LP12 which very handily, sits over the mountings already
present on the Chassis. The Hercules II replaces the Valhalla board
completely and can be fitted in a very short time, merely requiring the
mains lead and motor wires to be disconnected and refitted to the new
board once in place.
Also supplied is the new on/off switch that replaces the LP12's original
item and this has two LED fitted rather than the one to show the
selected speed as the Hercules II offers 33 and 45 rpm.
Even handier is the fact that both speeds are selected through this
single button, from standby mode you simply press to switch on at 33 and
light the red light, or press for 5 seconds to switch to 45 rpm and
light the blue LED.
Manufactured in the UK for Stamford Audio
Sound quality
The improvements made to the LP12 are evident even before the stylus
hits the groove, as the motor seemed to be spinning much more smoothly
once the Hercules II was warmed up and running.
Previously a hand on the top plate near the motor would pick up a very
gentle vibration, but through the Hercules II there was none.
Sonically the changes were just as noticeable. Suddenly the hole that I
had noticed in the middle of the sound stage was filled in putting
vocalists and instruments in their proper place. Paul Desmond was now
rock-solid center stage playing the saxophone on the Dave Brubeck
Quartet's Take Five with the surrounding drums and double bass much more
focused in terms of image stability.
The Hercules II also improved the bass end. Although not digging a great
deal lower, the upper end of the low frequency spectrum was much
tidier, improving the sense of pace, removing the rather flaccid nature
noted previously and generally tightening things up very well indeed.
All in all, the Hercules II kept the innate nature of the LP12 but made
it sound much more confident. It also made an improvement over another
earlier noted weakness, that of rather softer tracks. Where the Valhalla
seemed to lose interest in this type of material, the Hercules II kept
the atmosphere up and was able to tease small subleties out of the back
ground.
Conclusion
For your money you get improved sound staging, increased 'confidence' to
performance, better pace and switched 45rpm. Even if you are happy with
your old valhalla LP12 and hadn't even thought of upgrading it, you
might be surprised at the improvements a mere £249 investment will
bring you.
The Hercules II is universal so will work with 230/240v or 110v just by changing the fuse on the board.