Stereophile’s Products of 2020

December 20, 2020 Comments Off on Stereophile’s Products of 2020

https://www.stereophile.com/content/stereophiles-products-2020

The finalists in the Overall category included that Sonus Faber speaker and the Jeff Rowland Design Group Consummate preamplifier, which cost just shy of $9000. (The Levinson DAC was the overall winner.) Those were the most expensive products to win a category in 1992. The least expensive was the $499 Audio Power Industries Power Wedge, which won in the budget category. (This year’s Budget winner cost $100 less.) The average price of 1992’s winners—excluding the budget category—was $6259.

REL No. 25 Subwoofer $7500 Review

December 20, 2020 Comments Off on REL No. 25 Subwoofer $7500 Review

I have heard several flagship speaker systems with independent standalone bass columns that were pretty amazing. Actually, they were downright spectacular! This includes models from Infinity, Genesis, MBL, and YG Acoustics. However, you have to remember that a No. 25 stack goes well beyond what these bass columns can offer, and it’s not just the much larger 15 inch drivers. Each stack of No. 25 subs have multiple 15 inch drivers and 1000 watts managing each individual driver. Let’s not forget the available fine tuning for gain, equalization, and crossover functionality for each unit. This yields plenty of horse power and dialed in flexibility that is not generally available in any other standalone design!

The potential is there. This stacking strategy can also work with several other models in the REL lineup. If your room and space requirements will only allow for something smaller in scale or budget, there are many options. Obviously, it can be very subjective, but many have stated that the cost and value of such six-packs can provide better overall system improvement than an upgrade to a much more expensive primary speaker. You can also add units as the budget will allow. Again, there are multiple paths to all the glory. I will keep the readers updated on this.”

GOLD NOTE DS‑10 STREAMING DAC PREAMP AND PA‑10 POWER AMPLIFIERS REVIEW

December 20, 2020 Comments Off on GOLD NOTE DS‑10 STREAMING DAC PREAMP AND PA‑10 POWER AMPLIFIERS REVIEW

http://www.hifiplus.com/articles/gold-note-ds10-streaming-dac-preamp-and-pa10-power-amplifiers/

In a way, I’d argue that the DS‑10/stereo PA‑10 combination is more of a stepping-stone to the mono amps than a solution in its own right. In part, this is because for just a few hundred pounds more, Gold Note’s own IS-1000 integrated amplifier offers a lot of the same performance and sound quality standards, line inputs, and a more powerful amplifier stage. This isn’t a trouncing, as the DS‑10’s standalone DAC performance edges past that of the IS‑1000, the IS-1000 lacks a headphone amp and the PA‑10 is a slightly more graceful sounding amplifier than the integrated. Also, if you are performing a ‘bitza’ upgrade from existing equipment, then the DS‑10 is an obvious digital hub add-in to a system, but in the main if you are set on the Gold Note sound and it’s a choice between the DS‑10/stereo PA‑10 (with no future mono upgrade in the pipeline) or the IS-1000, I think most will go for the IS-1000. Adding in the second PA‑10, however, changes things dramatically. That extra dimensionality to the soundstage, the even greater control over the loudspeakers and its concomitant ‘grip’ on the bass, and the fluidity of midrange simply make so much more sense. All those elements are there in the PA‑10 (and, for that matter, the IS-1000), but they are more brightly lit when you go mono. And there’s even a PSU10 power supply for the DAC, so that should improve performance still further.

AudioQuest Niagara 3000 AC power conditioner Review

December 19, 2020 Comments Off on AudioQuest Niagara 3000 AC power conditioner Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/audioquest-niagara-3000-ac-power-conditioner

Upon connecting the XPA-1L’s to the Niagara 3000, I was struck by an improved level of clarity and authority and perhaps a touch of previously unheard sweetness; listening through them suddenly became a more engaging musical experience. I’d been using recent SACD acquisition, the Shostakovich Symphonies Nos. 1 and 15 (SACD, BIS 7318599916439) with Mark Wigglesworth and the Netherlands RPO, as a demo disc for friends with the Bel Canto e1X and the Maggie LRS loudspeakers. With the Niagara 3000 in place, it was now possible to experience the delicacies and dynamics of this music to a degree previously unheard.

I played a few LPs with the PrimaLuna EVO 300 integrated amp connected to the Zu Omens, among them, the new Craft Recordings vinyl reissue of Collective Soul’s eponymous second album (Craft Recordings CR00290). The opening track, “Simple,” is powerful and dynamic, easily the best song on the album. With the Niagara 3000 in the loop, analog playback was the best I’d ever heard here. Even though the Musical Surroundings Phonomena II+ phono pre has a dedicated linear power supply, plugging it into one of the 3000’s source receptacles vanquished the touch of electronic haze that normally appeared in my system around the midpoint of the volume dial. That haze is now gone, at all volume levels.

Bowers & Wilkins PX7 Carbon Edition Headphones REVIEW

December 19, 2020 Comments Off on Bowers & Wilkins PX7 Carbon Edition Headphones REVIEW

I guess I can say this is next feature is included, but not really, though it is free to download. It is the Bowers & Wilkins headphone app. And before you recoil into your chair with a defeated sigh, the app is not a mandatory fixture of the Bowers & Wilkins PX7 Carbon Edition headphones feature set, but it does indeed offer a extra optimizations and few useful features. Notably the ability to tailor the amount of ambient noise allowed to enter the headphones while noise cancellation is active. Another enjoyable feature is the provided set of B&W Soundscapes, which include things like ocean noises, campfires, and rain forest drizzle. Soothing and calming sounds for sure, and a nostalgic reminder of why noise-cancelling headphones originated. For a sense of peace and quiet.

AirPods Max review

December 18, 2020 Comments Off on AirPods Max review

Grandinote Shinai integrated amplifier $15,000 Review

December 18, 2020 Comments Off on Grandinote Shinai integrated amplifier $15,000 Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/grandinote-shinai-integrated-amplifier

It has the spirit of a revealer. It speaks the truth—not ruthlessly, but honestly. It showed me, with conspicuous clarity, the sonic differences among music formats, speaker models, song-to-song recording quality, that section on an LP where, on my rig, the sound seemed to have spontaneously gotten much better, and the Shinai’s own conspicuous improvement after 45 minutes of playing music. More importantly, it revealed myriad strains of musical information I’d not known were there.

It also forced me to face up to the fact that my tubed electronics were sweetening and homogenizing the sound.

Does the Shinai’s tube-based circuitry make it sound like a tube amp? Not exactly. The Shinai sounds like its own thing, worthy in its own right. It’s rich but not in the voluptuous, warm way of my combo of Audible Illusions preamp and vintage ASL monos. The Shinai is more neutral sounding. The Shinai did some things better than my tube gear—definition, detail, space, scale, touch—at a price I think fair considering that, for the money, one gets a line stage and two powerful-sounding (even if rated at just 37Wpc), class-A monoblocks, designed and hand-built in Italy.

Seperate Power Plants or long power cables?

December 18, 2020 Comments Off on Seperate Power Plants or long power cables?

Aequo Audio Stilla 31.000 euro Review

December 17, 2020 Comments Off on Aequo Audio Stilla 31.000 euro Review

As with the original, the Stilla’s tweeter is fitted with a dispersion cone to eliminate unwanted effects in the top octave, and also to fix the middle of the dome tweeter section against resonance. The membrane is driven directly by the voice coil as with any other tweeter but with a larger flexible surround than is the norm and with its center point fixed in position. That is something that I am not aware of anyone else doing. For the Stilla specifically, the acoustic lens was optimized by using fast 3D prototyping to make it work with even more demanding (smaller) rooms and to adjust time alignment of the slightly less tall speaker to best fit the various possible listening heights.

The mid-bass unit is made from mineral-filled PP and is fitted with a super-high-speed ferrite motor. The unit is mounted in a closed section with a tapered backside to avoid parallel walls and minimize the returning sound waves from the rear of the cabinet. Special Baileys longhair sheep wool is applied to dampen some of the remaining energy without the loss of natural and high sensitivity reproduction of
midrange frequencies.

Audio Research Reference 160S Stereo Amplifier Review

December 17, 2020 Comments Off on Audio Research Reference 160S Stereo Amplifier Review

https://www.soundstageultra.com/index.php/equipment-menu/997-audio-research-reference-160s-stereo-amplifier#most-read-equipment-reviews

It’s at the extremes of the audioband that tube amps in general have gotten a bad rap, and some of them have deserved it. So I next dug into the highs, to hear what the Ref 160S could do with the upper registers. I played the Clarinet Concerto No.1 in B-flat Major (“Sant’ Angelo”) — Andreas N. Tarkmann’s arrangement for solo clarinet and chamber orchestra of arias from Vivaldi’s operas and oratorios, and performed by soloist Martin Fröst and Concerto Köln (24/96 FLAC, Sony Classical/Qobuz). The sound of Fröst’s clarinet remained composed and fluid, sounding splendidly continuous and dense through the Ref 160S. The strings were delicate and easy to listen to, never grating or harsh, neither forced nor lacking in detail. It was all so easy to enjoy — and I did.

Next I cranked it up with some Lady Gaga: her hit single “Rain On Me,” from Chromatica (24/48 FLAC, Interscope/Qobuz). This duet with Ariana Grande has a strong pop beat that, to sound right, demands a system that can deliver good midbass punch. The combination of the ARC Ref 160S and Vimberg Tonda speakers reproduced this track at peaks in excess of 90dB at my listening position, sounding terrific all the while. I heard no limitations in dynamics, and the midbass in particular had solid weight — I could feel the punch in my body — while Gaga’s and Grande’s voices sounded full, and filled my room. I wasn’t overdriving the system — I didn’t want to push the limits of amp and speakers far enough to actually damage them — but at 90dB the sound was effortless, with still more headroom than I could use. We’ve all heard that this sort of effortless quality inspires confidence in the ability of the components of a system. That’s what I felt.

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