Magico S2 loudspeaker $37,400 Review
April 22, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.stereophile.com/content/magico-s2-loudspeaker
After a good two months with the Magicos, I went back and forth about what I’d heard. My reference Focal Scala Utopia Evos remain superb speakers—generous, full-bodied, with intoxicating ease and power. The Estelon X Diamond Mk IIs I’ve been living with are just as compelling, delivering spectacular resolution and visceral impact. Both speakers do many things brilliantly.But the Magicos have forced a reckoning. Their sealed-enclosure approach revealed what I hadn’t fully appreciated: namely, the precision that comes from eliminating port artifacts; the clarity that emerges when group delay drops to almost nothing; the transient energy that makes music feel especially immediate.If I were forced to choose new reference speakers, and assuming the M6s (that I still quietly pine for!) are out of reach, the S2s would be serious contenders. That’s not because the Magicos do everything better than the Focals or Estelons. It’s because they reveal a different kind of truth. Provided you give the S2s serious amplifier power and place them carefully, they offer uncompromising engineering fully in service of accurate music reproduction, shunning embellishments. I could damn sure live with that.

Doshi Audio Evolution Stereo power amplifier Review
April 22, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.stereophile.com/content/doshi-audio-evolution-stereo-power-amplifier
Doshi described the biasing process. “The front panel has four buttons around the display: Top left, power; top right, mute; bottom left, display on/off; bottom right, function. To activate the display, press the bottom left button. Now the display will stay on until the button is pressed again. Use the function button to step through the five functions: 1—hours elapsed, 2—bias for tube pair V1 (first LED below the window is lit), 3—bias for tube pair V2 (second LED under the window is lit), and so on until the V4 bias. Pressing the button for the sixth time will bring it back to elapsed hours and no LEDs lit up.”The bias settings for the amplifier can be adjusted for a slightly different sound to match system and personal taste. Typically, settings from 170 to 200 on the display are safe to use, with 180–185 being the norm. Lower settings will lean out the sound, and higher settings will fatten it up for a more ‘tubey’ presentation.”I biased the tubes near 200, which sounded best to my ears. The rest of the system was the J.Sikora Standard Max Supreme turntable, Allnic-H-5500 phono stage, Ampsandsound Yosemite preamplifier—which according to the manufacturer has a modest (for a tubed pre) output impedance in the 300–600 ohm range, depending on what tube is used in the last position—and DeVore Fidelity Super Nine loudspeakers.

WILSON AUDIO — AUTOBIOGRAPHY PENTAMAG MIDRANGE TIME ALIGNMENT
April 21, 2026 § Leave a comment
Both the upper and lower PentaMag midrange modules are independently adjustable via the module alignment sled system. Each alignment indicator, all of the sled gears, and reference alignment scales are calibrated and easy to read by simply adjusting the rotating cam grip. The MTM crescent frame is similarly equipped. This innovative alignment hardware enables time domain precision that exceeds both the Wilson Audio WAMM Master Chronosonic and the Chronosonic XVX.

Canor Virtus A3 integrated amp with DAC Review
April 21, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.hifinews.com/content/canor-virtus-a3-integrated-amp-dac
To assess the amp’s internal DAC, an Eversolo DMP-A8 [HFN May ’24] was employed as a digital transport, feeding the Virtus A3 via USB and streaming mainly from Roon. (As most amplifiers and DACs feature a USB-B port, the USB-C connection here required a moment of mental recalibration – and a hunt for a different cable.) Playing Riceboy Sleeps [Parlophone 50999 963002; 44.1kHz/24-bit], the 2009 collaboration between Alex Somers and Sigur Rós stalwart Jonsí, the amp gave a natural and lifelike portrayal of the album’s calming, ambient soundscapes. Through the Monitor Audio speakers, ‘Atlas Song’ encircled me with layers of Icelandic-style singing, and instruments (including piano and strings) retaining a discrete character.
The Virtus A3’s DAC stage also deftly handled the delicate detail throughout Chopin’s ‘Nocturne in B Minor, Lento Con Gran Espressione’, arranged by Mischa Maisky and played by cellist Camille Thomas [The Chopin Project: Trilogy, Deutsche Grammophon DG4858451; CD resolution]. A slight touch of warmth made the piano from Julien Brocal less direct, but overall, there wasn’t any sense that resolution had suffered.

Campfire Audio Iris Review $349 Review
April 19, 2026 § Leave a comment
Iris is a bass-first IEM, and it does not hide it. The low end is big, deep, and pretty addictive. You get a real rumble, plus a nice hit, so it feels fun and physical. But it is not a messy bass. It does not bloom all over the place.
Midrange stays in a good spot. It is not pushed forward, but it is also not missing and gets its due space. The stage is roomy, so the midrange does not feel crowded even when the bass is doing its thing.

Matrix Audio mini-i Pro 4 Music Streamer $999 Review
April 19, 2026 § Leave a comment
Matrix Audio is known for its in-house design of premium high-performance streamers and DACS and recently, a series of all-in-one desktop components. Their latest venture, the mini-i Pro 4, brings their know-how to the desktop with a compact network streamer DAC/AMP that performs each of its functions not just well, but exceptionally well. As a DAC, it paired beautifully with the flagship Pass Labs HPA-1. With headphones and IEMs, it provided not just excellent power and finesse, but synergy with the DAC and network streamer.


You must be logged in to post a comment.