INTERVIEW HANS OLE VITUS NIELSEN
Brand: VITUS AUDIO |
ANS OLE VITUS NIELSEN, usually called Hans Ole, known for his surname – Vitus (it will become clear at the end of the interview), is the founder, owner and main engineer of the VITUS AUDIO company. It is one of the most important high-end world manufacturers, with a seat in the Danish city of Herning. The company was set up in 1995, but it presented its first three products in the year 2003: the battery-powered RP-100 phono stage, the RL-100 line preamp and the SM-100 power amp in the form of monoblocks. A premiere of the SIA-030 amplifier at the High End 2019 exhibition in Munich Vitus Audio specializes in amplifiers, but it also offers perfect digital-to-analogue converters and Compact Disc players. During the High End 2019 exhibition in Munich, the company presented its latest product, the SIA-030 integrated amplifier having a characteristic orange anodized finish. As Hans Ole says, it is his most important product in years – one that starts a new generation of Vitus Audio devices. The device weighs 65 kg and it is quite small. It operates in two modes: 30 Wpc class A or 200 Wpc class AB. We talked about the new amplifier, problems that contemporary industry poses for manufacturers and ways of solving them at my home in the second half of September. The SIA-030 was operating in the “High Fidelity” reference system and we were about to listen to it together, while Hans Ole and I were drinking beer from a small Polish brewery. HANS OLE VITUS NIELSEN as interviewed by Wojciech Pacuła. HANS OLE VITUS NIELSEN with his latest SIA-030 amp, next to the “High Fidelity” reference system WOJCIECH PACUŁA: You are constantly flying somewhere… Is it an interesting event again? However – correct me if I’m wrong – you are travelling more than before? The SIA-030 – the first unit with an untypical orange anodized finish (High End 2019) One of the noticeable changes is the use of a color display… Generally speaking, I do not like wasting my time on unimportant things. However, if something is obvious, I try to change it. I have a lot of information from the market – people say that they dislike “this” or “that” and if there is a large enough number of “these” and “those”, I try to address them. If it does not mean too large a compromise for me, I do it. Naturally, not everything is possible to do, though. For example, the colors of the buttons cannot be changed, even when people order devices with special finishes – e.g. orange, gold or titanium – not because I do not listen to people, but due to the fact that the buttons are anodized and we cannot order a different anodized finish for such a small number of elements. There must be a logical explanation for every change. It cannot be denied that you are proud of the new amplifier. When I saw the SIA-030 for the first time at the exhibition in Munich, I thought it must include a classic amplifier, as such a small casing cannot include its regulation circuit, especially owing to the fact that it is a very powerful device. Our sticker on the glass of the Vitus Audio company room (High End 2019) There is a new dampener in the SIA-030, isn’t there? The most important thing, however, is probably the fact that the amp is not big? Otherwise, we need to choose between our wife and the device (“It’s either me or these boxes”) You are always very direct, without beating about the bush, aren’t you? :) Let’s return to the amplifier – does the preamp have a separate chamber? Looking inside, we will mainly see the power supply unit. |
The need to place everything in such a small casing was the cause of delaying the premiere of the SIA-030 by a year and a half! If I had wanted to keep to the schedule, the amp would have to be twice as big. Unfortunately, we did not figure out how to put everything together in a short period of time. The way we do it is that I come up with the ideas and my engineers give their counter-proposals. And we play such a game of table tennis until the ultimate idea is born. That was really great. In this case, I was the “braking power” – I told my engineers that the amplifier could not be bigger than it is now. That is why it is a huge technological leap for us. SIA-030 in its final form, in a black anodized finish By the way, I will tell you a funny story. The first four units that we made for the exhibition in Munich are 3mm higher than the ones we made afterwards. It is because right after we completed building the prototype (the orange amplifier that we presented at the exhibition in Munich), we changed our radiator supplier. Everything looked as it should on paper, but we had apparently understood certain guidelines in different ways and the new radiators were 1 millimeter wider than the previous ones. So, in total, we have two more millimeters plus another one to fit the elements together. As a result, we had to redesign the casing and re-programme our machines. Therefore, it can be said that all the new amplifiers are a version of Mark II (laughs). I do not really know how we managed to prepare the SIA-030 for the exhibition. We started assembling all the elements into one whole in February this year. We had had a working prototype for a long time, but we had not been able to figure out how to put all this together to make it take up so little space. Luckily, we managed to do it. It was hard, however – we finished assembling the first amp in the orange casing a few hours before we packed it into a car that took it to Munich. We had not prepared the amp early enough to simply send it. To be honest, when one knows how this amplifier is made and know how much money has been invested in it, its price does not seem to be high. I will tell you, for example, that we had to buy a new measurement system for this project. We optically measure each board. Our SME components are soldered using the most expensive method called Vapor Phase, not the so-called reflow soldering (reflow oven) that is used by almost everyone. The latter is simply a toaster that heats all the elements and the solder paste. A drawback of this method is that not all the solders have the same temperature while being heated, due to which some of them are faulty. This phenomenon even has a scientific name – the shadow effect. An advantage of this method is that it is fast. When it comes to Vapor Phase, it lets you solder everything with ideal precision, but it is slow. At the moment, it is actually only being used in the defense, aviation and medical industries, i.e. where quality is more important than quantity. One can, of course, counteract the shadow effect problem to some extent by properly arranging elements on a board, separating larger elements from smaller ones, which can be observed in many devices. However, if we are seriously talking about audio, you cannot work like this. If we have, for example, a voltage amplification stage, capacitors must be located right next to active circuits. Otherwise, dynamics will be limited. Messing with your project results in situations when companies have a lot of discards, i.e. faulty boards. 10 or even 15% discards is an acceptable norm. Manufacturers need to accept that since the way boards are made does not permit any other scenarios. We have a maximum of 3%. The SIA-030 in our “High Fidelity” reference system One more phenomenon needs to be discussed here. After 2008, when the sales of electronic devices dropped dramatically, the quality of components also decreased. We were getting capacitors that caused short circuits or had other parameters that they should have had. We once received a batch of capacitors for remote control purposes and almost all of them were destroyed after the boards were turned on during tests. It appeared that although the maximum voltage value printed on them was 16 V, they actually only sustained 6 V. We learnt that the problem is a progressively worse quality of materials used, which has an effect on the quality of the components themselves. We need to face such problems, buying more and more expensive elements. Of course, it is not the case that other people are always responsible for everything. For some time, in the SIA-030 we had a problem with the preamp, or rather the dampener, to be more precise. We do not use classic relays there, but ones that have two solid states. A standard relay only consists of a coil and contact – in order for the contact to be closed, current must flow through the coil, which means noise. We have used relays that only need an impulse to switch. However, when voltage in the mains drops, their supply voltage may also decrease and then they start to switch themselves. The microprocessor resets them all at once, but that means current of 1.7 A, while the dedicated power supply unit sustains 0.5 A. So, there is a problem. However, we analyzed that and re-programmed the microprocessor, so that the problem does not exist now. This shows, however, that nobody is perfect (saying so is bullshit). Perfection is only talked about by PR specialists. There is always something you’ve failed to address. Do you make the boards yourselves, just like the casings? That is why the SIA-030 should cost more – and it is not only my opinion. One of the latest changes in Vitus Audio was employing a CEO, so that I can deal with engineering and promotion. It is a man who used to be a consultant at Scan-Speak. It is a complete novelty and it has not been publicly announced yet – “High Fidelity” is going to be the first to spread the information. He had been working with us as a consultant since March and after we had worked together for some time, we both concluded it is OK, that we understand each other and do not get offended even if we go too far in an argument :) So, he has officially been working for us since August 15th. HANS OLE VITUS NIELSEN and the author of the article, listening to the SIA-030 in the “High Fidelity” reference system Anyway, he carried out calculations regarding the SIA-030 and concluded that, taking into account standards accepted in the audio industry and industries related to it, in order for us to gain good profit, the amp should cost €70,000. So, if the SIA-030 was being created today, its price would be much higher. He was a bit offended at me, as I did not want to change the price, but, as I have already said, we accept each other’s decisions and move on. Who designed the streamer and phonostage modules? Let me ask you about something completely different at the end. Should your name, Hans Ole, be hyphenated or not? I am asking as I’ve seen both spelling versions… In fact, my full first and second name are: Hans Ole Vitus Nielsen. Almost nobody uses them like this, as it is all too long, but that is the right version. When I was working for Texas Instrument, I asked them to shorten this on my business cards to Hans Ole Vitus. Before, they had had a problem – my full name was too long to be printed on a card and American corporate standards did not allow them to make a business card using a smaller font than the one officially selected for this purpose. It was my best decision as a sales representative. It is because when people took my card during meetings at large companies, they did not know what Vitus means at all. So, I would write “Hans Ole Vitus Nielsen” in capital letters on the board and very often it was the only event people remembered from the given meeting – a big guy with a strange surname. And when they were to call a supplier, they called me (laughs). Thank you for your visit and see you in Warsaw at the Audio Show 2019! |
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