Pro-Ject Signature 12.2 turntable/arm Review
March 25, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.hifinews.com/content/pro-ject-signature-122-turntablearm
Contributing to this moreish sound is the turntable’s superlative bass. The Signature 12.2’s innovative drive system and bearing, plus that weighty platter, combine to give good speed stability [again, see PM’s Lab Report] and a low end that is precise and richly textured. The rhythm section in Caro Emerald’s ‘Back It Up’ [Deleted Scenes From The Cutting Room Floor; Grandmono Records STEMRA GM006] bounced along, snappy and tight and deep. Meanwhile, Caroline van der Leeuw’s vocals stood proud of the accompaniment, and the Signature 12.2 brought bags of scale, punch and drive to the whole piece.
Even better, Neil Peart’s drums on Rush’s ‘Leave That Thing Alone’, from 1993’s Counterparts [Atlantic 7567825281], had floor-shaking impact. Geddy Lee’s basslines were sinuous, fluid and distinct. Turntables with less accomplished drive systems can cause the notes here to subtly merge into each other, but Pro-Ject’s deck was having none of it.
The new Night Flight LP, Exit Stage Left [Roof Jump RJR001LP] has musical magic in its grooves but the recording is somewhat ‘thick’ and stodgy. With the Signature 12.2 in charge, however, tracks like ‘A Song Upon The Window’ still had heart and soul. Again, the kick drum pummelled my speakers’ bass drivers, and the turntable stretched out the dense recording well.

iBasso DX340 Review
March 25, 2026 § Leave a comment
Chinese brand iBasso is looking to take the fight to the likes of Astell & Kern and FiiO with its latest premium portable music player.
The new DX340 is, says its maker, made “for discerning users who demand both sonic excellence and intuitive usability” teasing flagship performance and engineering in a portable, “elegant” form.
Powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 665 processor, the new player offers 256GB of internal storage, although this can be expanded to up to 2TB via the provided microSD slot.

PARAGON SIGHT & SOUND, HARMONIC RESOLUTION SYSTEMS — THE FOUNDATION OF PERFORMANCE
March 24, 2026 § Leave a comment
For this system install by Paragon Sight & Sound, Harmonic Resolution Systems (HRS) played a central role in both performance and protection. With a full HRS VXR Frame system, custom amp stands, and M3X2 and S3 isolation bases supporting each component, Paragon Sight & Sound created an environment where every piece of equipment can perform …



Dynaudio Confidence 20 Active Space loudspeaker $24,000 Review
March 21, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.stereophile.com/content/dynaudio-confidence-20-active-space-loudspeaker
The second is an analog sensitivity control with three settings (Low, Mid, High) to match speaker sensitivity to source output voltage. The third provides sound adjustment with three tone settings: Dark, Neutral, and Bright. I preferred Neutral with most music and Dark with certain ’70s pop albums and early digital recordings. The fourth knob is a room-position control with three settings—Wall, Corner, and Free—to adjust for speaker placement near (or not near) room boundaries. The fifth knob offers sample rate conversion, which can be set to leave the source sample rate intact for the highest sound quality or to convert the files to enable gapless playback of tracks with different sample rates. The sixth and final control is a light switch that sets the illumination of the Y-shaped Dynaudio logo on the front of the stand to Off, On, or Dim. The light glows white during playback, flashes red if there’s clipping at the analog input, pulses red rapidly if thermal protection is activated, and extinguishes itself after 20 minutes without a signal. I never saw it turn red.

OMNE Audio Hendeka. $749 Review
March 21, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.headfonia.com/omne-audio-hendeka-review/
Priced at $585 USD, the Hendeka occupies what the community has started calling the upper mid-fi segment. In any earlier era of audio, this would simply have been called high-end. Inflation, as they say, is a relentless companion.
The boutique headphone market can be genuinely unpredictable. Small manufacturers often chase bold tuning philosophies, and in doing so, sometimes sacrifice versatility for the sake of a strong identity. The Hendeka could easily have fallen into that trap. Instead, it strikes a thoughtful balance between excitement and refinement – and that balance reveals itself quickly.
From the moment you pick it up, the Hendeka feels like something built by enthusiasts rather than a corporate committee. There are visual and tactile cues everywhere that suggest genuine care: the way the earcup geometry sits in your hand, the weight distribution, the finish quality on the 3D-printed components. At the same time, it avoids looking unfinished or experimental – a concern that follows many boutique builds, whether fairly or not.

JBL Summit Ama loudspeaker Review
March 19, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.hifinews.com/content/jbl-summit-ama-loudspeaker
JBL’s huge, varied range of loudspeakers can make it hard to work out what belongs where, but one look at the oh-so-stylish Summit Ama will tell you it’s a flagship model. It has all the attributes of one too, from the quality of its craftsmanship (including the partnering stands) to a pristine performance that brings out all the life and energy of your recordings. A peaky blinder, if you’ll pardon the pun…

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