Violectric HPA V550 PRO Headphone Amplifier $2799 Review
May 18, 2021 Comments Off on Violectric HPA V550 PRO Headphone Amplifier $2799 Review
The PRE-GAIN stage implemented in the Violectric headphone amplifiers ensures not only a low noise floor, but also precise control of output levels due to the ability to tailor the sensitivity of the pre-amplifier stage. The volume control is an impressive piece of engineering, as the ability to execute a 256-step volume control with .4 dB increments is nothing short of amazing. Finally, the HPA V550 PRO is a solidly designed preamplifier, and can function equally well in a traditional two channel audio system. If you are searching for a high-performance headphone amplifier then give the Violectric HPA VM550 PRO serious consideration, as there are very few products in the audio world that are built to this level of sophistication.


VIENNA ACOUSTICS BEETHOVEN BABY GRAND REFERENCE LOUDSPEAKERS£6,849 REVIEW
May 17, 2021 Comments Off on VIENNA ACOUSTICS BEETHOVEN BABY GRAND REFERENCE LOUDSPEAKERS£6,849 REVIEW
Vienna Acoustics Beethoven Baby Grand Reference loudspeakers
They let the music step away from the speakers and into the room. They bring the performance to you and you to the performance. They have always been few and far between and invariably somewhere the wrong side of expensive – until now. All of a sudden, a few genuinely exceptional speakers have hit the market, shattering the glass ceiling that’s restricted affordable speaker performance. Vienna Acoustics’ Baby Grand is the tip of that wedge, setting the pace and setting the standard. This is one speaker where you need to trust your ears. Hear them doing their thing, and like me, you really won’t believe your eyes – whether you are looking at that slim cabinet or the price ticket hanging from it. Prepare to be surprised – and impressed: very impressed indeed!

Acora Acoustics SRB Review
May 16, 2021 Comments Off on Acora Acoustics SRB Review
The Acora Acoustics SRB
Acora claims a sensitivity of 86.5db/1w/1meter, but being a two-way design, they are easy to drive. Auditioning a number of amplifiers from Boulder, McIntosh, Nagra, Octave, and Pass, you can rest assured that a pair of SRBs will work well with whatever you are using, but they will reveal whatever is lacking in your upstream components. Their natural tonal balance and slightly forward tonal position allows you the option to fine tune your system elsewhere. Should you be a fan of a bit warmer overall sound, it will be easy to mate them with a warmer sounding amplification chain that will reflect this. And vice versa. There was nothing in our current collection of amplifiers, from 30wpc to over 400wpc that didn’t play well with the SRBs.

Pass Labs XA30.8 $6800 Review
May 16, 2021 Comments Off on Pass Labs XA30.8 $6800 Review
The liquidity that the XP12 and XA30.8 provide was not the match needed in my system in this room. The Sigma SSP presentation is a little darker and more angular than I’d want overall. If I were stuck between the two with a “nice” $250 DAC in a system in which every other individual component is literally twenty times more costly… I’d probably pick the Sigma SSP to match the XA30.8. With a source commensurate with the rest of my system… there should be no surprise here.

The Hi-Fi Show: Room Tours & Gear from the Audience
May 16, 2021 Comments Off on The Hi-Fi Show: Room Tours & Gear from the Audience
Cambridge Audio Evo 75 $2250 Review
May 15, 2021 Comments Off on Cambridge Audio Evo 75 $2250 Review
https://www.whathifi.com/us/reviews/cambridge-audio-evo-75
Turntable owners will notice no mention of a built-in phono stage – sadly, that’s not an oversight on our part. As well as delivering double the power output and featuring a different ESS Sabre DAC chip, the step-up Evo 150’s selling point is the inclusion of phono, asynchronous USB and balanced XLR inputs, a second optical input, plus two sets of speaker terminals for running two pairs of speakers simultaneously. Vinyl-loving Evo 75 owners will have to connect a deck with a phono stage to the RCA input, or buy a separate phono stage.

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