Fyne Audio F1-8 Review

December 25, 2023 Comments Off on Fyne Audio F1-8 Review

Fhttps://www.hifichoice.com/content/fyne-audio-f1-8

Sensitivity of 91dB and a nominal 8ohm impedance suggest an easy drive, but the F1-8 naturally cries out for a quality system. Assembling the best supporting cast at my disposal, digital feeds are handled by Chord Electronics’ Hugo TT2 DAC (HFC 468) while amplification duties are shared between Hegel’s Class A/B H120 (HFC 460) and Primare’s Class D I25 Prisma (HFC 461) integrated amps. Not high-end enough to require oxygen, but a great fit as it transpires.

What’s clear from the start, music has that ‘natural fibre that breathes’ quality – nothing seems contrived or dialled-up to impress. The speaker conjures scale and dynamic freedom that would be remarkable in a strapping tower, but also incorporates an ability to unearth detail right down to the noise floor and project solid, full-blooded images into the room with almost tangible dimensionality and exacting precision. On Chick Corea’s compilation of jazz/classical live performances, Play, the grand piano simply sounds real with thrilling attack, harmonic colour and texture and lower octave power – a quite stunning achievement for a standmount, even one as rotund as the F1-8.

Simaudio Moon 791 Streaming Preamplifier $9500 REVIEW

December 24, 2023 Comments Off on Simaudio Moon 791 Streaming Preamplifier $9500 REVIEW

https://www.soundstagehifi.com/index.php/equipment-reviews/1842-simaudio-moon-791-streaming-preamplifier

That the MiND Controller app showed the DSD resolution is one indication of the tight integration of Roon, MiND 2, and the 791. Another is that Roon also transfers each album’s graphic to both the MiND Controller app and the 791’s front-panel display. This integration goes beyond the sharing of playback information: a volume-level change in Roon is synced with the app and the 791 with minimal lag. I also noticed that the track-skip function on both the BRM-1 remote control and within the MiND Controller app was synced to the one in Roon. Finally, I discovered that when the 791 is on standby, an audio signal from Roon will kick it back to life and automatically select the MiND input if another is selected, which is all very convenient.

PMC prodigy1 Loudspeaker Review

December 23, 2023 Comments Off on PMC prodigy1 Loudspeaker Review

https://www.hifinews.com/content/pmc-prodigy1-loudspeaker

Then I remembered what PMC is also noted for, so it was back to the bass and the efficacy of its ATL topology. Ron Carter’s bass was so fat, so substantial – and, yes, so beautifully extended – that I wondered what the prodigy5 could add. Should it turn out that there’s even more bass from the floorstander, note that its footprint is the same and will rob you of no more vertical real estate than the prodigy1 on stands.

Having tasted the bass, however, I was drawn to a recording where a bassist was the main focus. The Leroy Vinnegar Sextet’s Leroy Walks! [Contemporary CR00594] is one of those intimate, late-1950s jazz LPs that makes your system sound better than it should, so I had to temper my analysis with the realisation that I wasn’t actually giving the prodigy1s a hard time. Having previously heard the LP through a system with 10in woofers, I was expecting the sound to feel diminished. It was not.

Accuphase A-300 monoblock power amplifier Review

December 22, 2023 Comments Off on Accuphase A-300 monoblock power amplifier Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/accuphase-300-monoblock-power-amplifier

Several features made the A-300 one of the easiest big amplifiers to install and repack to visit my music room. The large handles on its front and rear are a reviewer’s dream, and the very large, easily adjusted speaker terminals make connection a cinch. The packaging is equally well thought out; it includes an inner cardboard amplifier holder with thoughtfully positioned indentations that allow for easy lifting, Styrofoam protectors labeled by position (eg, bottom front), and a removable cloth cover that is light years ahead of the slippery, tight plastic component protectors—I call them condoms—that ironically make lifting and repacking heavy equipment a disaster waiting to happen. You will not pinch your fingers as you and a helper remove this amp from its heavy cardboard packaging or when you repack it.

DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/baby loudspeaker Review

December 22, 2023 Comments Off on DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/baby loudspeaker Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/devore-fidelity-orangutan-obaby-loudspeaker

Were sacrifices required to develop a smaller, cheaper ape? Of course. “Compared to the O/96, the O/baby cabinets are much less expensive to make and ‘finish,'” DeVore said. “The cabinets are made from a high-recycled-content MDF made in Europe with black pigment mixed into the pulp to make the material itself have that charcoal gray color. While this is far more expensive than standard MDF, it ends up saving costs in production, as there is no veneering the panels and no staining. We just clearcoat the gray material to get the finished product.” Functionally, “the smaller woofer is less expensive and requires a smaller internal volume to work optimally,” DeVore said. The O/baby is not as sensitive as the bigger Orangutan speakers, and it won’t play as loud.

Why I sell my Grimm Audio MU1

December 22, 2023 Comments Off on Why I sell my Grimm Audio MU1

Hegel H600 Network-Attached Amp

December 21, 2023 Comments Off on Hegel H600 Network-Attached Amp

https://www.hifinews.com/content/hegel-h600-network-attached-amp

There was very little wrong with the H590, but Hegel has still managed to create something even better. The resulting H600 is powerful on a scale you wouldn’t expect from an integrated design, and has excellent streaming options and connectivity. This is a top performer, offering supreme control and an ‘as-is’ musical depiction that will let you savour everything your chosen loudspeakers have to offer.

Audeze LCD-5 headphones $4500 Review

December 21, 2023 Comments Off on Audeze LCD-5 headphones $4500 Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/audeze-lcd-5-headphones

A headphone that helps get the music out of your head may seem ironic, but it’s a good thing when it happens. The word immersive comes to mind: The Audeze LCD-5 delivered a different kind of immersive listening experience, without any special Dolby Atmos tricks. These are headphones, sure, but (assuming the recording allows for it) they’re capable of delivering an experience that’s less headphone-like, roughly approximating the experience of loudspeakers—all over the room, not limited to two. Their sound is detailed and insightful but never aggressive, nonfatiguing, and always enjoyable.

As Audeze’s flagship headphone, the LCD-5 is pricey, but you can expect it to last for years, through several changes of its special ear cups. Its handling of microdynamics and detail makes it suitable for use not just at home but also in the studio. It fosters a keener awareness of and appreciation for differences in production, across a broad array of styles and eras. It stoked my curiosity, urging me to dig deeper into my collection: What hidden elements might be unearthed?

CAMPFIRE AUDIO BONNEVILLE $1,399 REVIEW

December 20, 2023 Comments Off on CAMPFIRE AUDIO BONNEVILLE $1,399 REVIEW

The outer purple-coloured cardboard box is unique to Campfire, which has lots of easter-eggs and an awful lot of information. You don’t get any paperwork for instructions or information. The cardboard box has all the information you need, printed everywhere you look. It’s certainly a distinct feature of Campfire’s packaging, and I’ve never seen it with any other brand.

Inside you get a breezy bag which stores the IEM, and the IEMs are inside the pocket bags individually. You get your ear tips in a paper bag, and there’s a cleaning cloth and tool to make sure your IEMs are in a pristine state at all times. Overall, the packaging is very lean but very effective. The essential packaging was my choice for shipping reasons, so I can’t complain here.

TAD Compact Evolution One TX Loudspeaker $32,500 Review

December 20, 2023 Comments Off on TAD Compact Evolution One TX Loudspeaker $32,500 Review

https://www.soundstageultra.com/index.php/equipment-menu/1214-tad-compact-evolution-one-tx-loudspeaker

While listening to Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep,” from her second album, 21 (16/44.1 AIFF, Columbia Records), I reveled in the CE1TX loudspeakers’ soundstaging prowess. From the plucks of Ben Thomas’s acoustic guitar that open the track to the Tottenham-born songstress’s powerful opening verses—presented front and center in vivid detail—and the backing drums behind her that resound with ample reverbed spatial cues, each component of the track was laid out before me with assiduous precision. This exactness did nothing to rob Adele of her vocal power as the TADs propelled her into my listening room in all her soulful glory. The backing tambourine lent a touch of trebly splash that punctuated my deep enjoyment of the CE1TXes’ efforts. I would have enjoyed a touch more shove in the mid-bass, as the hearty kick drum on the track felt a bit lightweight, but it’s also worth noting that my basement listening room—a space measuring roughly 16.5′W × 14′L × 9′H—is part of a larger, L-shaped space measuring 29′ at its longest and 37′ at its widest. Put plainly, my room tends to swallow bass energy at certain frequencies, and I suspect that was a partial contributor here.

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