Hi - Fi World (May)

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HI-FI WORLD OL ENTERPRISE ARM * ECS PREAMPLIFIER * HARBETH HL-COMPACT 7ES-3 SPEAKERS

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

MAY 2007

UK £3.80

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FREE READER CLASSIFIED ADS IN THIS ISSUE!

COMPETITION SIMON YORKE S9 TURNTABLE, CD PLAYER GROUP TEST

WIN A FANTASTIC ROTEL RB-1092 WORTH £1,595!

MERIDIAN F80 compact system

SIMON YORKE S9 turntable

MAY 2007

VOL. 17 No. 03

CD PLAYER SUPERTEST:

> Cambridge Audio 740C > Creek Classic CD > Roksan Caspian CD ISOPHON CASSIANO > Vincent CD-S6 MK loudspeaker

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Meet the new breed of 2-channel amplifiers and Super Audio CD player Based on the acclaimed A-400 amplifier, these new models have been redesigned for the 21st Century. Uncomplicated features and simple linear circuit design are encased in a stylish but rigid construction, giving pure unadulterated sound for your enjoyment.

www.pioneer.co.uk/evolution


welcome EDITOR David Price tel/fax +44 (0) 1275 371 386 e-mail: editorial@hi-fiworld.co.uk

ASSISTANT EDITOR Adam Smith editorial@hi-fiworld.co.uk e-mail:

DESIGN EDITOR Faiza Chunara tel: +44 (0) 20 7625 3129 fax: +44 (0) 20 7328 1844 adproduction@hi-fiworld.co.uk e-mail:

PRODUCTION EDITOR David Noble tel: +44 (0) 20 7625 3134 fax: +44 (0) 20 7328 1844 classifieds@hi-fiworld.co.uk e-mail:

ADVERTISING tel: fax: e-mail:

+44 (0) 20 7372 6018 +44 (0) 20 7328 1844 advertising@hi-fiworld.co.uk

ACCOUNTS Sharon Mehlhorn tel: +44 (0) 20 8841 8892 fax: +44 (0) 20 8841 9144 accounts@hi-fiworld.co.uk e-mail:

PUBLISHER Noel Keywood e-mail: publisher@hi-fiworld.co.uk

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WRITERS Dominic Todd, Patrick Cleasby, Steven Green, Channa Vithana, Paul Rigby, David Allcock, Martin Wolszczak.

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verdicts

£

Packed as this issue is with superb sounding separates, the most interesting product I’ve come across in a long time is the new Meridian F80 reviewed on p52. And strangely, it being a humble portable music system, it isn’t even ‘real hi-fi’ at all, nor does it pretend to be. But I happen to believe it’s an extremely significant product - not just for what it is, but for what it represents... My formative hi-fi years were the nineteen seventies. This was when ‘high fidelity’ music reproduction grew from being a hobby pursued by those with soldering irons and circuit diagrams, to a mass market consumer phenomenon that became – for a time – the third most expensive purchase a family would make after a house and a car. Back then, separates hi-fi was the only place to go for music fans such as myself who'd grown up with a humble Philips cassette portable. And ten years after I bought my first BSR record player, I had upgraded all the way to a Linn Sondek. Now though, any music-obsessed fifteen year old with a passion to hear his favourites outside his portable (which is invariably an iPod) has a vast range of docks and PC speakers to choose from, not to mention Apple’s own iPod Hi-Fi. So how is he (or she) supposed to come across real hi-fi equipment from the likes of Linn, Naim, Arcam, Cyrus or Meridian? Thanks to the F80, he now has an aspirational entry point. He'll never have heard of Meridian before (or seen any of the stunning designs Allan Boothroyd and Bob Stuart have come up with since the mid-seventies), but you can bet your big end he knows Ferrari. He’ll see this new Meridian in magazines and say to himself, “I want one”... Avidly scanning every review in his local newsagent, our embryonic audiophile will begin to realise it was designed by Meridian together with Ferrari. He’ll want to read more about the British hi-fi specialist, and will start looking at their serious hifi systems. Suddenly, he will find a way to hear music beatifully reproduced. That’s why I welcome the Meridian F80 with open arms. Cynics on internet forums will say it’s a ‘sell out’, but I pray for them in their darkness. What the hi-fi industry needs is products like this, that appeal to a broad audience. Not everyone will approve of Meridian’s Ferrari tie-up, but I’m all for taking the racing line. David Price, editor

testing To ensure the upmost accuracy in our product reviews, Hi-Fi World has extremely comprehensive in-house test facilities, and our test equipment - from big names like Rohde & Schwarz and Hewlett Packard - is amongst the most advanced in the world. Loudspeakers are measured using a calibrated Bruel & Kjaer microphone feeding a Clio-based computer

OUTSTANDING

simply the best

EXCELLENT

extremely capable

GOOD

worth auditioning

MEDIOCRE

unremarkable

POOR

seriously flawed

VALUE

keenly priced

analyser, using pulsed and gated sinewaves, in a large room to eliminate the room’s influence. Pickup arm vibration is measured with a Bruel & Kjaer accelerometer. No other UK hi-fi magazine has in-house testing, and none has access to such advanced tests across all types of equipment. That's why you can depend on Hi-Fi World reviews.

ELECTRONIC MAGAZINE Go to our website www.hi-fiworld.co.uk to buy an electronic version of this magazine, individual issues or a subscription. At present we do not offer back issues, but hope to soon. Distributed by Seymour Distribution Ltd 86 Newman Street London, W1T 3EX Tel: +44 (0) 20 7396 8000 Printed by St.Ives, Plymouth Tel: +44 (0) 1752 345 411 Our Agents in Malaysia Millennium Hi-Fi & AV Simon Chang Showroom & office, 500-1-3 First Floor Wisma Indah (Shen Court), Jalan Tun Razak 50400 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: 603 9283 8171 Fax: 603 9281 3762 e-mail: info@millennium-audio.com All unsolicited submissions and goods are at the owner’s risk. We accept no responsibility for such submissions, nor do we undertake to return them. No material may be reproduced from this magazine without the publisher’s written permission. © Audio Publishing Ltd www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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10

Simon Yorke's beautiful S9 joins the ranks of our favourite high end designs.

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Leema Acoustics Tucana - a . superb high end integrated.

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Shanling's statuesque SCD-T2000 is a great way to play SACD.

66

Isophon's Cassiano loudspeakers are serious high end floorstanders...

Cambridge Audio's brand new 740C distinguishes itself in our CD supertest.

Origin Live's Enterprise tonearm is a great place to park your pickup cartridge.

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

20/3/07 15:35:37


hi-fi world MAY 2007

contents

VOLUME 17 : NO. 03

DIGITAL

SHANLING SCD-T2000 14

Few digital disc players offer as much insight as this, says Martin Wolszczak.

CD PLAYER SUPERTEST 32

Noel Keywood auditions new mid-price machines from Cambridge Audio, Creek, Roksan and Vincent.

MARANTZ DV-9600 43

Patrick Cleasby takes a mid-price DVD universal player for a spin.

RUSS ANDREWS DAC-1 USB 47

A superb £600 digital-to-analogue convertor is reviewed by David Price.

VINYL

SIMON YORKE S9 10

Adam Smith tries a striking new transcription turntable.

BLUE ANGEL MANTIS 19

This handmade high end MC cartridge gets the treatment from David Allcock.

AESTHETIX RHEA 40

A monster US high end tube phono stage is reviewed by Noel Keywood.

ORIGIN LIVE ENTERPRISE 50

David Price auditions Mark Baker's latest and greatest flagship pickup arm.

ORTOFON 2M RED AND BLUE 62

Noel Keywood auditions Ortofon's first new moving magnet cartridges for decades, and compares them to Nagaoka's classic MP11.

7 NEWS

News of the hi-fi world...

27, 87 SOUNDBITES

Adam Smith tries some affordable Oehlbach interconnects and David Price plays with Timester's cute little T-200 MkII tube integrated amplifier.

18 COMPETITION

Your chance to win a superb sounding Rotel RB-1092 stereo power amplifier worth £1,595!

54 ON-LINE SUBSCRIPTIONS 50% discount for on-line copy subscription.

AMPLIFICATION

LEEMA TUCANA 20

This swish new high end British integrated is reviewed by David Allcock.

ECS PRE 58

David Price tries a massive high end preamplifier from European Circuit Solutions.

68 SUBSCRIPTIONS

Ensure your copy every month and save money too!

73, 75, 77, 79, 81 OPINION

The team get to grips with matters music, hi-fi and life.

82 AUDIOPHILE VINYL

Paul Rigby rounds up the latest vinyl releases.

LOUDSPEAKERS

HARBETH HL COMPACT 7ES-3 22

Channa Vithana reviews the latest incarnation of this classic monitor loudspeaker.

ISOPHON CASSIANO 66

A German high end loudspeaker gets its first UK review from Adam Smith.

EGGLESTON WORKS ISABEL 70

Adam Smith auditions these impressive American rockers.

98 KIT & COMPONENTS Suppliers of kit and components.

99 MAIL

Eight pages of your thoughts, views and queries.

118 DIAL-A-DEALER

A comprehensive guide to UK hi-fi retailers.

119 MEET YOUR MAKER

Who makes what and how to get in touch.

RADIO

MAGICBOX IMP 85

Steve Green tunes in to a fiendishly clever Wi-Fi Internet Radio

SYSTEMS

MERIDIAN F80 52

David Price auditions Meridian's new Ferrari-badged DVD portable.

FEATURES

EVOLUTION RUSH 55

Channa Vithana assembles a £3,000 system from Creek, Design e and B&W.

120 SPECIALIST HI-FI DEALERS Purveyors of specialist hi-fi services.

123 FREE READERS CLASSIFIEDS Find your second-hand bargains here!

128 NEXT MONTH

What we hope to bring you in the next great issue.

129 ADVERTISERS’ INDEX 130 CLASSIC CUTS

Paul Rigby checks out Ella Fitzgerald's 1963 classic 'Jerome Kern Songbook'.

OLDE WORLDE 88

Dominic Todd remembers his favourite classic loudspeaker, Celestion's SL-600.

BRISTOL SHOW REPORT 90 David Price and Adam Smith pick their favourites from February's Bristol Sound and Vision show.

DIY SECTION

DIY FEATURE PART 6 93

Peter Comeau explores the complex world of loudspeaker crossover design.

WORLD DESIGNS PREAMPLIFIER PART 5 97 Peter Comeau looks at the MC stage of the new WDPhono3.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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What’s remarkable about the new series of LP12 SE upgrades is not that it’s taken 35 years to develop them, or that they can be retro-fitted to any Sondek LP12 turntable, but the fact that they retrieve even more music from your vinyl collection than ever before.

Experience a revelation in turntable performance. For more information and details of demonstration events in your area visit www.linn.co.uk, or call 08000 277 181.

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NEWS

news news@hi-fiworld.co.uk

SUPER, MAN!

Launched at the Sound & Vision Show, Bristol, the £2,350 Naim SUPERNAIT is the latest addition to Naim’s reference series, and is claimed to deliver, “a stunningly realistic performance from its compact case”. With 80W per channel and 400VA output transient capability, it can drive difficult loads, but also brings flexibility and convenience, says Naim. In addition to six analogue inputs, it includes five digital inputs with an onboard DAC accepting sampling rates between 32kHz and 96kHz. Six analogue inputs are fitted, and any input can be assigned to one of the six input buttons. The digital board is powered off when using an analogue input, and there’s a combination minijack/ mini-Toslink input on the front panel that is auto-switching. There’s also a full remote control and a front panel headphone socket. For more details, call Naim Audio on +44 (0)1722 332266 or click on www.naim-audio.com.

INTERSTELLAR

This is the new Leema Acoustics Antila, a new £2,495 CD player featuring the company’s ‘unique MD2 Active Differential Multi-DAC technology’, employing twenty 24bit/192kHz multibit Delta-Sigma converters, and data pipelining to eliminate jitter. The Leemadesigned FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) generates a fully balanced signal entirely within the digital domain. The machine is fully LIPS (Leema Intelligent Protocol System) compliant, allowing a press of the play button to power up a Leema amplifier from standby and select the CD input. For more details, contact Activ Distribution on +44(0)1635 291357 or click on www.leema-acoustics.com.

KICK OUT THE JAMS!

Roth Audio’s Music Cocoon MC4 is a new £399 valve amplifier and iPod dock, pushing out a claimed 13W per channel. When an iPod is installed, it offers full remote control and iPod charging, or it will also accept any portable device through its 3.5mm mini-jack input, or any line level hi-fi source via the standard stereo RCA phono inputs. Overheating protection, speaker protection and fuse protection in the adaptor is provided. Vital statistics are 187x174x108mm and 1.8kg. For more information, click on www.rothaudio.co.uk.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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NEWS

BLUE FOR YOU

Marantz’s £699 ST-15S1 hybrid DAB/FM tuner is described as “beautifully built and finished”. A high-performance 24bit/192kHz multibit, Delta-Sigma Analog Devices DAC is fitted and circuit architecture includes mirror imaged, short signal paths for minimum sound degradation. A display dimmer is fitted and there’s a proprietary filter circuit that removes interference that often plagues analogue broadcasts. The dual band design uses the neat Gyro Touch dial, allied to an easy-to-read display which shows station, artist and track names, as well as additional information such as lyrics. The model exploits Marantz’s low resonance, acoustically damped all-metal 15 series chassis - no screws are visible, a thick anodised aluminium front panel is fitted and also doublelayer bottom plate and substantial shock-absorbing feet. Even the subtle “Marantz blue” backlighting operates on its own independent power supply to ensure no electrical noise interference. Both optical and coaxial digital outputs are fitted, plus a Radio Data Interface optical digital output which, it is claimed, effectively future-proofs the ST7001, allowing reception and decoding of future text, graphics and video data when connected to a suitable PC or set-top box. For more information, click on www.marantz.co.uk.

UNIVERSAL PICTURES

NAD’s new T585 Universal DVD player offers both DVD-Audio and SACD decoding, plus processing of Dolby Digital and Dolby ProLogic and support for MP3, HDCD and Windows Media Audio formats. It also supports most popular blank media such as DVD+R, DVD-R, CD, CD-R and CD-RW. Audiophile-quality 24bit, 192kHz audio D/A converters are used with high-speed FET output devices. Digital audio outputs are available in both coaxial, and optical (TOSlink) SPDIF formats, as well as I/2 S digital format via the HDMI output. The NAD T585 is also equipped with SRS’s True Surround circuit, a highgrade surround virtualiser, and features a Dual Discrete Video Circuit for “the highest possible picture quality via the Component Video output” and a high-speed dual 12bit, 216-MHz video D/A converter. Price is £800, and it’s available now in either grey or titanium finish. For more information, click on http://nadelectronics.com.

TEAC TIDBITS

NEM RACKS

Teac’s new £229 MC-DX220iDAB is a slimline ‘hi-fi’ system which combines DAB and an iPod dock, includes a CD player and plays through ultra thin NXT loudspeakers. A powered sub woofer delivers an extra 15 watts of extended bass. It sports a vertical CD load system with motorised door, and the remote has an LC display. The new RX-1 is the first radio from TEAC to employ NXT loudspeaker technology, bringing the product a futuristic appearance and fine sound to match. The side-mounted Aux input permits connection of any device with a standard 3.5mm output including iPods, MP3 players and other portable digital players. Power is 15W RMS and the RX-1 comes equipped with both DAB and AM/FM tuners. Available from leading electronics retailers now, the TEAC RX-1 is available in a choice of matt black and matt white finishes, priced around £149. For more information, click on www.teac.co.uk.

Looking very impressive at January’s Manchester Sound and Vision show were new equipment racks from NEM Hi-Fi. These make use of solid cherry wood for the frames, which are mortice and tennon jointed and glued. Each isolation shelf is made of 30mm thick polished and profiled granite 30mm thick which is supported by spiked dampers mounted in compliant rubber inserted in gold-plated bases. The three basic models consist of a four shelf rack with four legs, and three shelf units with either three or four legs. Prices range from £1,500 to £2,000 - we hope to bring you a review soon. For further details lease contact Steve Nemeth on 01623 740521 or visit http://nem-hi-fi.mysite.orange.co.uk.

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14/3/07 09:08:07


NEWS

ESOTERIC STUFF

P-03 Fans of the brand that many believe make the best optical disc devices around right now will be interested to hear of the new P-03/D-03 transport/DAC combination. Taking the design concepts from the flagship P-01/D-01 system, Esoteric have applied new DSD signal processing to create the more “affordable” P-03/D03 CD/SACD player combo. Said to be extremely versatile, it features multiple user selectable playback modes including CD audio (Red Book) playback, native DSD decoding, PCM upconversion and Esoteric’s advanced PCM to DSD signal conversion. Digital signal transfer of DSD signals is now offered with an i.LINK interface, in addition to Esoteric’s proprietary ES-LINK format. The heart of the P-03 is the “state-of-the-art” VRDS-NEO mechanism, a new version of which was developed exclusively for the P-03. A new Disc Tray Shutter mechanism was designed to shield the internal mechanism, reducing any mechanical vibration. The dual chassis design of the Model P-03 forms an integrated one-piece body, which contains separate D-03 power supply and transport compartments. As for the Model D-03 Stereo DAC, it was developed from the Esoteric monoblock D-01 design and sports completely separate L/R channel components for power, analogue audio circuits, etc. Featuring AD1955 DAC devices, D-03 is capable of processing both DSD and PCM signal formats. Compatible with various source formats including CD, SACD and DVD-A, it can operate as high as 192kHz. For information, call Symmetry on 01727 865 488 or click on www.symmetry-systems.co.uk.

TIP TOP

Designed by Jonathon Carr and handcrafted by Yoshinori Mishima in Japan, the new Lyra Skala moving coil cartridge is the company’s fifth generation product, and includes a new patent (pending). The MC has a brand new non-conductive and non-magnetic front magnet carrier, a new cantilever system, output pin design and output-pin carrier. The stylus guard is the same grooved easy slide-on affair seen on the Helikon and Titan, which allows the Skala to run permanently nude. While tracking ability has been improved over the Helikon, both output voltage and internal impedance should be the same. For more information, call +44(0)1727 865 488 or click on www.symmetry-systems.co.uk.

SPOTTED!

After three days of spinning discs in the Henley Designs room at the Bristol hi-fi show, superstar DJ Laurence Armstrong gets a little 'tired and emotional'... Nurse!

RUSSIAN REVOLUTION!

After a considerable absence, AAPTech has announced the return of the Russian firm RRR and their range of loudspeakers to the UK. Founded in Latvia in 1927, RRR started out making radios, but were later responsible for the first Soviet record player, first stereo record player and made their first transistor radio in 1961. Their loudspeaker line up comprises both surround sound setups and dedicated two-channel items. All components are built in-house, including speaker cones that are made using a special, timeconsuming process that has been in use since 1940! The range culminates in the range-topping FS100, at the reasonable price of £1,055 and we hope to be reviewing these soon. For further information, please contact Arnis or Henry at AAPTech on www.aap-tech.co.uk or on +44(0)141 334 0294.

BEARING UP

Clearaudio’s brand new Ceramic Magnetic Bearing design is claimed to avoid any point of load within a turntable, and so “eliminates bearing friction, wear and noise”. All existing and previous Clearaudio turntables, except the Clearaudio Emotion, can be upgraded with a Clearaudio Ceramic Magnetic Bearing. New Clearaudio turntables may be ordered ready fitted with Ceramic Magnetic Bearings, replacement bearings can be purchased separately or the exchange scheme can be used to receive a refund upon return of the old bearing. Prices range from £215 for the Revolution to £725 for the Master Reference, and a refund of £100 is available upon return of the old bearing. For more information, call Audio Reference on +44(0)1252 702705. www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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REVIEW

New Yorke

The S9 turntable package is the latest creation from the Simon Yorke Designs stable. Handmade by a passionate and committed designer, it promises a unique musical experience says Adam Smith...

B

efore I begin, I have a confession to make, and it is a rather shocking one for a vinyl addict such as me. When speaking to Jack Lawson of the Audio Salon a couple of months back and hearing of a new Simon Yorke turntable, I made a comment along the lines that I was pleased to hear that he was returning to the production of hi-fi turntables, only to be told that he had never stopped - oops! The reason for this is that Simon Yorke Designs (SYD) have possibly become best known over recent years for their serious transcription turntables. These are used in professional institutions for transcribing and archiving huge collections of irreplaceable analogue material from vinyl and shellac records of all sizes and speeds, and are quite different from the domestic units, which have been quietly racking up sales in the background. To give an idea of their complexity, the models that are used exclusively by the Library of Congress in Washington are the S7 professional transcription model and incorporate such features as platters

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up to twenty inches in diameter; variable speed, bi-directional drive systems that are variable from 10 to 120rpm, adjustable via an external computer and are housed in a separate enclosure on which the main turntable sits; a detachable record spindle to permit different items to be fitted to suit specific records; an Italian slate baseboard that acts as a high mass energy sink and the option of fitting up to two S7 tonearms, which are available in lengths of nine and twelve inches. Clearly these are serious units, so much so that Simon Yorke himself is shortly embarking on a trip to Washington to supervise the move of his S7 units to a new location. To me, it seems something of a shame that these units are not available to the general public, but I dread to think how much they would cost if they were... My first encounter with a Simon Yorke design was on the pages of a high end audio supplement around fifteen years ago and was the S4 model. According to the SYD website, this was in production from 1988 to 1994 and 110 units were produced. The lineage can be clearly seen in the simple but stunning

styling of the S9 but it has been comprehensively updated to bring it to the exacting standards required for an all-new model. The turntable and arm are supplied as a single unit and are not currently available separately. The weighty platter is driven around its periphery by a polyurethane elastomer drive belt from a freestanding motor assembly that can be positioned as required around the deck. This takes its power from a supplied DC adaptor but the S9 is also provided with a 9 Volt battery fitted with a suitable connector so that it can be driven from a completely isolated power supply if required. Switchable speeds of 33 and 45rpm are provided, together with screwdriver-adjustable pots for fine speed setting. A particularly nice touch is that these are of the multi-turn variety, allowing very fine control and eliminating that 'bit slower... whoops, too far, back a bit' element of fiddling that I have experienced on far too many occasions. The unit is supplied with a graphite mat for record support, and a weighty and beautifully machined record clamp that simply sits over the spindle to locate the

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REVIEW

"...the S9 picked out every last nuance and minute detail..." record securely to the mat. The S9 tonearm is a unipivot device that has an elegantly simple design. The arm tube is straight and the 'headshell' consists of two circular plates - the cartridge is fitted to the lower part and secured around the arm tube to the upper item. This is free to move up and down the armtube and also permits a small degree of horizontal rotation before tightening to set the required tracking angle. Tracking weight is easily set using the rear weight and a tracking force gauge, and both arm and cue lever height are easily adjustable. Bias is applied via the good old (and best, in my opinion) thread and weight method, but the length of purple cotton thread and crimpable weights provided for this are the only less-than-high-tech aspect of the design, and I felt looked a little out of place on the unit. Whilst being picky, the lack of an arm rest is rather unnerving at times and means a stylus guard is an absolute necessity when the unit is not in use. It should also be kept well away from any inquisitive young fingers! Needless to say, fit and finish of the whole deck is breathtaking (bias weight excepted) and it is clear that this is an item that has

been designed and made with true passion. I sincerely hoped this would be reflected in the sound and so connected it up to our system consisting of Eastern Electric Minimax phono stage, Quad QC24 and IIForty amplifiers, and Spendor S8e loudspeakers. The S9 was auditioned with both the supplied van den Hul Frog cartridge as well as our Ortofon Rondo Bronze, and the Slatedeck Garrard 401/SME312 combo was also on hand for comparison purposes.

SOUND QUALITY The S9 is not a cheap turntable, both in terms of price and construction quality, and this is immediately obvious as soon as the stylus hits the groove. The sound that immediately leaps forth from the loudspeakers is very polished and 'grown-up' for want of a better expression. The first main thing that struck me was the superb sense of space and atmosphere around everything in the mid and upper registers. This was exactly the same effect that I noticed in April 2007s edition of Hi-Fi World when testing the Roksan Nima arm and it would seem to be that this is a common feature of unipivot arms. This is most definitely a good thing as it imparts the S9 with a grand sense of scale and depth to the soundstage.

Orchestral material such as 'Mars - The Bringer of War' from Holst's 'Planets' Suite offered a spaciousness to instruments that is seldom heard outside a concert hall. As the main shift of the music moved between instruments, the basis of the piece could be heard swapping between them with excellent precision. Detail retrieval from the groove was highly impressive and swift changes from soft to loud in either direction were impeccably handled. With many a modern television channel, it seems necessary to increase the volume during programmes in order to be able to hear dialogue, only to have to turn things down again very promptly when the advertisements come blaring out in between - listening to classical music on a lesser turntable can have the same effect, but the S9 coped with everything admirably, moving from a shout to a whisper with ease. Next onto the turntable was Diana Krall's 'Christmas Songs' album and, yes I know it is spring, but this was a recent purchase and I refuse to wait another nine months in order to enjoy it! Spinning 'Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas' had me sliding down the rear of the Hi-Fi World sofa in a haze of utter bliss, as Miss Krall's sublime vocals caressed

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REVIEW was quite uncanny to hear how, as the strings were plucked, the leading edges of the notes were stunningly presented. Shutting my eyes it was easily possible to perceive that there was a large harp right in front of me, where the review system had been moments before. Finally, comparisons to the Slatedeck 401/SME setup proved interesting. Whilst the S9 could not match the sheer impact and stunning transient abilities of the Garrard in the bass department (I have yet to hear a deck that can...) the S9 offered noticeable improvements in terms of spatial abilities and soundstaging. The Slatedeck combo is not 'shut-in' at all, far from it, but it has a slightly more polite midrange and treble compared to the effortless atmospherics developed by the S9.

CONCLUSION The best turntables I have ever heard always seem to have a definite design rationale behind them that makes them succeed, albeit usually in different areas. With the Garrard 301 and 401, I would say that their strengths come from the quality and scale of build that they incorporate; for the Michell Orbe, another of my favourites, it is the attention to detail and engineering excellence. The Simon Yorke S9 is a new arrival to the list and this time it is the sheer

"the S9 is a very capable rhythm machine" lacking only the final degree of the astonishing grip of the Garrard. For the final part of the listening session, and in order to wind things down a little, I dug out a Windham Hill Records sampler from 1989 and played Therese Schroeder-Sheker's track 'Credo of Ballymacoda'. This is an instrumental featuring solo harp and the level of insight that the S9 offered to this was impeccable. It

passion and conviction of the designer that makes it what it is. The S9 is a fabulously conceived, designed and constructed unit that offers a whole new level of insight into music. Simon Yorke prefers to refer to his

decks as "record players" rather than turntables, and this would seem VERDICT highly appropriate given that it excels A superbly designed and engineered at purely making music. Although record player with formidable musical abilities, the S9 is a seminal an oft-used (and misunderstood) combination of style and performance. phrase, what I take it to mean is that it inspires you to dig through SIMON YORKE S9 £4,995 your record collection rather that Distributed by The Audio Salon sitting and analysing the sounds you +44 (0)845 4000 400 are hearing. On this level, the S9 www.recordplayer.com succeeds completely. In 1998 Simon Yorke was quoted FOR as saying that he felt his achievements - design and engineering - superlative sound were based on, “a small amount of - consistent musicality talent coupled with a large amount - styling of bloodymindedness". Listening to the S9, I would say he has the balance AGAINST spot on. - bias weight!

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my ears in a superb aural massage [ooh er! Ed.]. Her backing band sounded soft and subtle, yet the S9 picked out absolutely every nuance and minute detail offered by the album, and wrapped them around her, and me, like a big fluffy blanket. Realising I was highly likely to lose most of the afternoon if I continued this way, I reluctantly removed Miss Krall from the platter, assuring her that I would return later, and cued up another new purchase, namely the 180 gram, 45rpm reissue of Dire Straits' 'Brothers in Arms'. The opening drums of 'Money for Nothing' were exactly what was required to bring me out of my reverie and they struck home with effortless impact. Once the main part of the track started, the S9 showed that it can do bass properly as well, and swept along with great gusto. The S9 is a very capable rhythm machine on faster paced material and has a detailed and tuneful bass that digs pleasingly deep. Spinning Primal Scream's 'Screamadelica', I played 'Loaded', well aware that, when the bass guitar commences, the low frequency elements of the track can tend to become something of a blur on a less than capable turntable. Fortunately the S9 romped through, offering up depth, pace and detail,

MEASURED PERFORMANCE The results of vibration analysis on this arm, using a B&K accelerometer, clearly show it suffers significantly less from vibrational modes than most arms - a very interesting result considering its unusual construction. The main arm tube mode is at 700Hz, a very high frequency, suggesting this is a very stiff structure, in addition to being of low mass. The narrowness of the peak and its low amplitude both also suggest the tube is well damped. Generally, the absence of vibrational peaks up to 3kHz - main arm tube mode apart - suggest the Simon Yorke arm will give an exceptionally clean sound, likely with firm bass and a great stereo sound stage. It will ‘time’ well too, lacking overhang, and is likely to deliver much well differentiated fine detail, as the high frequency spectrum above 3kHz is also relatively well controlled. The belt drive platter produced a low 0.07% IEC weighted Wow and Flutter figure. There is a peak at 1.5Hz which is a small mystery, as this is not a cyclic eccentric platter/disc component at 0.55Hz, nor a pulley component at much higher frequency. All the same it is at low level and low frequency so is unlikely to have www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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much subjective impact, hence the good weighted W&F result. Speed was accurate too. All in all then, the Simon Yorke turntable and arm deliver a fine measured performance, better than usual. NK ARM VIBRATION 0.3

Arm vibration behaviour

Accel. (g) 0.2

Main arm tube mode I

0.1

0

15Hz

frequency (Hz)

6kHz

WOW AND FLUTTER

MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

13 15/3/07 13:17:52


REVIEW

New Resolution

Few digital disc players offer as much insight into both CD and SACD formats as Shanling's new SCD-T2000, says Martin Wolszczak...

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ACD has the ability to reproduce music with a high degree of realism, resolution and detail. I don’t own a turntable, but I have racks of SACDs - they’re wonderful. So needless to say, when I was asked to evaluate the latest incarnation of the 3D Shanling SCD-T2000 Vacuum Tube two-channel Super Audio CD Player, I greeted it with enthusiasm. The first generation of Shanling's Vacuum Tube Two-Channel SACD/

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CD, the model SCD-T200C was reviewed thoroughly back in November 2004 by Editor David Price. The new 3D SCD-T2000 model is similar to the old one as far as looks, build quality, standard of finish and components are concerned. Nevertheless, there are several differences between them. The Shanling SCD-T2000 still relies on Sony key parts, like the latest edition KHM-280AAA laser, as well as Sony CXD2753R decoding chip. The new player SCD-T2000 sports

one hundred and twenty ventilation holes on the top of the chassis which, according to Shanling, improves cooling and aids long-term reliability. The previous model used a dual-layer servo-board, where one layer was made by Sony, the other by Shanling. The new model uses a single 100% Shanling servo-board that allegedly improves reliability, readability and sonics. However, during my audition I came across a minor problem regarding this player’s readability. I found out the Shanling

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19/3/07 16:34:19


REVIEW would not play a couple of tracks from various SACD albums at all and on a few other occasions was skipping them, while with the same tracks my Sony SACD/DVD Swoboda Mod DVP-NS 9100ES did not have any problems at all, nor the other players I have had at my disposal. As far as looks are concerned SCD-T2000 reminds me of products of the prestige audio marque from Germany called T+A. Shanling’s build quality and aesthetics are superb. For a full description, see David Price’s original review of the SCD-T200C in the November 2004 issue of Hi-Fi World. The original SCD-T200C and the new SCD-T2000 look almost identical. The new version is still finished in brushed aluminium, but Shanling gave up on the gold touches of some parts. At the front, there is an overly small display, this time in green, instead of blue. The rear panel remains unchanged. There are two RCA unbalanced outputs for the vacuum tube output stage, and two RCA unbalanced outputs for the solid-state stage, plus one coaxial digital output terminal. Both sets of unbalanced outputs, along with the headphone jack are situated on the right side of unit; they are attenuated by high-precision, digitally controlled analogue volume control. In the box I found - apart from nicely metalcrafted remote and impressive power cord - an interesting compilation SACD sampler disc. The sole UK distributor of the hybrid Shanling SCD-T2000 is Matthew Jameson of Real Hi-Fi. Using a stock SCD-T2000 player manufactured by Shenzhen Shanling Electronic Co. Ltd of China, the 3D Acoustics modification incorporates a few vital key improvements, including 240V power transformers, Schottky fast-recovery diodes, Os-Con capacitors and tantalum resistors applied in crucial parts of the circuit. Above all the spinner comes with full factory one year UK warranty. Straight out the box this player proved easy to use and great to look at. It gives you feeling of money well spent. So what about the sound then?

SOUND QUALITY Since I began my journey with SACD I have collected about 170 discs. During my audition of this player, I spent a significant amount of time going back and forth between the vacuum tube and solid-state outputs listening mainly to Super Audio discs. As I did not audition the old Shanling SCD-T200C, I am relying on DP’s view here. So although I cannot determine whether the new spinner

is a step forward or not, I can say the new Shanling SCD-T2000 is excellent. Listening to a wide variety of SACDs, I found that with my amplifier and speaker combination, I consistently preferred the solid-state stage to vacuum tube output. There was a greater degree of articulation when listening through the solid-state output, with no loss of midrange magical presence or purity. The sound remained coherent and liquid throughout a whole audible range. The vacuum tube section seemed to soften both extremes, which did not complement my current set-up. The bottom end of the frequency spectrum was too relaxed and laidback, if you like, via the tube output. I would only suggest that anyone interested in the Shanling audition both outputs to see what suits their system and tastes best. The great thing about this player is that you can select your preference with every disc as both outputs can be run to an amplifier or power amp at the same time. As DP said in his original review, you get two players in one. On SACDs, the Shanling revealed its outstanding sound quality. In fact, this was one of the best SACD players I have ever heard. The SCD-T2000 delivered a deep and well-defined soundstage, with wonderful dimensionality, bloom and sense of air between instruments. Listening to Warren Bernhardt accompanied by Jay Anderson and Peter Erskine from the album 'So Real' (DMP SACD-15) I was impressed by the Shanling’s ability to resolve individual instrumental lines during complex passages. Whether you concentrate on piano, bass or drums you hear a totally natural spatial presentation. One of my favourite SACD recordings of all time, BluesQuest by Audioquest Music (SACD1052), demonstrated the Shanling’s musicality. Joe Beard was soulful beyond words and Sam McClain performing 'Too Proud' was just perfect - the powerful and fulsome

about openness, clarity and detail this is top drawer in every way. Relaxing to the SACD version of Norah Jones’s 'Come Away With Me' (BlueNote 724354174728) proved to a blissful and tranquil experience through the Shanling SCD-T2000. Its ability to convey her distinctive sultry voice was captured with a liquidity that was transparent and pure. Norah’s impassioned 'Turn Me

"the Shanling gives effortless insight into the capabilities of the SACD format..." bass, the sparkling, lightning-quick top end, a midrange full of texture and flavour, and Sam’s voice so smooth, intimate and palpable, hanging there between speakers. It was really wonderful. That Sam sings this number a little in his throat, as it were, is so evident via the SACD. Talk

On' had a lush, enjoyable portrayal through the Shanling, drawing out each element of the recording with a realism and ease that captivated my intellect and emotions. The Shanling gives effortless insight into the capabilities of this high-resolution digital medium.

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REVIEW

"With its high-tech appearance and exquisite attention to fit and SYSTEM: finish, this is a stunning piece of REFERENCE YBA Passion 300 amplifier JM LAB Focal Micro Utopia Be loudspeakers work..." LFD Spirolink IV interconnects Isotek Super Supreme power cables Townshend Isolda DCT speaker cables

tional CDs, performance is equally Stepping away from SACD to impressive considering the confines conventional CDs, I was pleasantly teristics. Connecting this player to of the format. Moreover the SCDsurprised at how well the Shanling a natural sounding amplifier will T2000 gives the user welcome reproduced 16bit/44.1kHz format. give you world-class performance flexibility with two output stages, Red Book discs were rendered with at the price, and is thus an essential vacuum tube and solid-state each an extremely smooth, extended highwith its own strengths and characfrequency response, maintaining that audition. palpable midrange I enjoyed during my sessions with various Super Audio discs. These attributes were apparent while With CD the SCD-T2000’s frequency SACD 2Hz-36kHz listening to Dire Straits 'On response reaches smoothly up to Every Street' (Vertigo 3426788 21.125kHz and you can see the Distortion (%) CD/SACD ). Mark Knopfler’s vocals are smoothness of the characteristic in 0dB 0.0014/0.0009 the focus here and the Shanling our high resolution convolved impulse -6dB 0.0008/0.0007 reproduced the depth and analysis. With SACD the upper limit -60dB 0.24/0.04 subtlety of his performances extended out to 36kHz (-1dB), whilst -80dB 2.8/0.81 magnificently; it was possibly the the lower limit stayed at a low 2Hz. -100dB - /9.6 best I have ever heard from this The valve output made little difference to these figures and as CD and SACD Separation (1kHz) 106dB recording. One predominant technology goes they are a good result. Noise (CD, IEC A) -110dB attribute of the Shanling is its Distortion levels were low on CD Dynamic range (EIAJ, CD) 111dB ability to accurately replicate and - as expected - very low on SACD. Output 2.13V the attack and decay of The SCD-T2000 resolves signals down various strings and percussive at -100dB with SACD, a level below instruments. 'Heavy Fuel' was that possible from CD. You can see from FREQUENCY RESPONSE reincarnated with impressive our figures that SACD is very linear. power, dynamics, punch and Our analysis shows a -30dB signal on speed. This is a common trait of CD, as usual, where a low 0.00073% was measured. The valve output stage the Shanling when playing back inevitably introduces degradation, with both CDs and SACDs formats. 0.3% distortion at peak level (0dB) comprising mainly second harmonic, CONCLUSION and a little more distortion lower down To say the 3D Acoustic Shanling too, 0.18% at -60dB for example, but SCD-T2000 player is attractive this comprised low order harmonics would be an understatement. that should be aurally innocuous. DISTORTION With its high-tech appearance, In terms of noise, channel utilisation of superior parts separation, output and dynamic range and materials, and exquisite this player was up with the best. The SCD-T2000 measures attention to fit and finish, this well in all areas, on CD and SACD. Shanling is simply a stunning Measurement suggests it will have a piece of work. With both largely neutral tonal balance and SACD SACDs and CDs, the SCDin particular should come across as T2000 is a reference quality smooth and pure. NK performer. SACDs sound superb, lending the music a Frequency response (-1dB) sense of realism and palpability CD 2Hz-21.125kHz that is enthralling. On conven-

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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A stylish and very well made player that offer superlative performance on both CDs and SACDs.

FOR - soundstaging and dynamics - build quality - CD performance

AGAINST - some SACD readability issues SHANLING SCD-T2000 £2,250 Distributed by Real Hi-Fi +44 (0)870 909 6777 www.realhi-fi.com

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www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

VERDICT

MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

17 19/3/07 16:35:03


COMPETITION

WIN A FANTASTIC ROTEL RB-1092 STEREO POWER AMPLIFIER WORTH £1,595 IN THIS MONTH’S GREAT COMPETITION!

H

QUESTIONS [1] Which class of operation does the Rotel use? [a] CLASS A [b] CLASS B [c] CLASS AB [d] CLASS D [2] What is the name of the power technology used by the RB1092? [a] Cold Running [b] Chill Thrill [c] Draft Performance [d] ICE power [3] What is the claimed output power of the RB-1092? [a] 5mW [b] 5W [c] 50W [d] 500W [4] DP says it’s a genuinely what sounding bit of kit? [a] “cool” [b] “hot” [c] “rough” [d] “svelte” May Competition Hi-Fi World Magazine Unit G4 Argo House The Park Business Centre Kilburn Park Rd. London NW6 5LF

ere’s your chance to win one of the best sub£2,000 power amplifiers we’ve heard in a long time. The Rotel RB-1092 is an absolutely cracking product, and you can win it with Hi-Fi World. Here’s what David Price said in his review in the April 2007 issue: “Rotel is the latest big name to go the Class D way, the RB-1092 using the ICEpower technology first seen on its RMB-1077 amplifier. At £1,595 it’s not cheap, but it promises a massive 500W per channel into 8 Ohms. There’s also the RB-1091 monoblock design, retailing for just £995. Both are available in either silver/black, or black finishes. Measuring 432x92x407mm, the RB1092 is sizeable device. Much of the Rotel’s bulk (and weight) is actually taken by the visually impressive matt black heatsinking. Kicking off with Supertramp’s ‘Breakfast in America’ CD, the Rotel showed itself to be a quintessentially Class D sounding device. The phrase ‘massive reserves of clean power’ springs to mind – the RB-1092 goes very loud, just as its spec suggests. Furthermore, it sounds smooth and even right across the frequency band. Bass is dry and strong and well articulated, midband expansive, detailed and dimensional

and treble was crisp and clean. Bass was very promising. It isn’t overtly imposing – the amplifier doesn’t keep reminding you of its barrelchestedness – but was never less than strong and insistent. The midband was superb. Kate Bush’s ‘The Sensual World’ was a joy, with oodles of detail, fantastic control and composure, impressive dynamics and a strong stereo soundstage. Moving back to Supertramp, and Rodger Hodgson’s voice (a tad shrill, through the wrong equipment) was very clearly depicted, lacking little in detail... Still, with its lovely taut and gutsy bass and smooth and expansive midband, the Rotel proved very satisfying to listen to. Even Dave Brubeck’s ‘Take Five’ on vinyl was a warm and engrossing experience. It is a genuinely musically communicative bit of kit... a brilliant buy – it has an

extremely accomplished sound and massive reserves of power. I suspect that half a kilowatt is too much for any normal mortal, but it’s the grace under pressure that the Rotel displays at lower levels than makes having this extra ‘cubic capacity’ under the hood worth having. It’s a genuinely svelte sounding bit of kit, capable of making very nice noises with even the most demanding of loudspeakers. To do so much for £1,595 means it represents excellent value". If you’d like the chance to win this great stereo power amplifier, then all you have to do is answer the following four easy questions. Send your entries by 30th April 2007 on a postcard to: May 2007 Competition, Hi-Fi World magazine, Unit G4, Argo House, The Park Business Centre, Kilburn Park Road, London NW6 5LF.

RULES AND CONDITIONS OF ENTRY - ONLY ONE ENTRY PER HOUSEHOLD - MULTIPLE ENTRIES WILL BE AUTOMATICALLY DISQUALIFIED - PURCHASE OF THE MAGAZINE IS NOT A PRE-CONDITION OF ENTRY - NO CORRESPONDENCE WILL BE ENTERED INTO - THE EDITOR'S DECISION IS FINAL - NO EMPLOYEES OF AUDIO PUBLISHING LIMITED, OR OF ANY COMPANIES ASSOCIATED WITH THE PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OF THE PRIZES, MAY ENTER

entries will be accepted on a postcard only FEBRUARY 2007 MARANTZ PM700KI SIGNATURE CD, SA7001 KI SIGNATURE INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER WINNER: Alan Roberts of Newcastle 18 P18 subbed§.indd 18

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 11:25:35


REVIEW

Heavenly David Allcock finds the Blue Angel Mantis moving coil cartridge makes music in an other worldly way...

SOUND QUALITY Handling the Mantis requires delicacy, as you might imagine, but installation was aided by the square body shape. Tracking weight is quoted between 1.8 and 2.0gms, and on my Graham tonearm I found 1.85gms offered the best sound balance. The Mantis sounds very good at 47k Ohm input loading, but I found the midrange was a little richer and vocals had more body at 2.5k or 1k Ohm. Once optimised, this cartridge quickly established itself as being an outstanding musical performer. The high frequencies were notable for their astonishingly smooth, detailed presentation. Whilst obviously capable of very high resolution, the Mantis MC was very refined in how it presented this information, it just let the information flow, rather

than force it upon the listener. Cymbals and tambourines were smooth and focused, with just a hint of metallic shimmer. The midrange showed richness in the lower range, VERDICT whilst Superbly engaging and fluid sounding high end moving coil, with a very the Imaging endearing nature. is superbly upper focused, midrange BLUE ANGEL MANTIS £2,495 transients are was superbly Distributed by RPM Audio lightning-fast and the balanced, with +44 (0)1323 846410 balance across the frequency excellent resolving ability, www.blueangelaudio.com range is excellent. Apart from lacking making this a super cartridge for the last ounce of bass extension, and FOR vocals, offering stunning insight into not quite having the massive dynamic - Excellent insight and detail the performance and the recording. range of the very best, the Blue Angel - Refined performance Bass was very good. Whilst not - Build quality is a cartridge which is capable of a quite as extended as the Condor XCM, it was incredibly fast and tightly musical, fluid performance which is AGAINST sure to capture your attention as it controlled, offering a level of agility - Bass extension did mine. I’ve only heard from one or two very high end cartridges in the £4,000 arena. Dynamics were limitations. It works satisfactorily and The Blue Angel has a smoothly rising also good, as the may sound interesting, but rivals lack frequency response on outer grooves, Mantis could shift from its drawbacks. NK as the red trace in our analysis shows. a whisper to ground Output peaks at +2.5dB around 12kHz, shaking loudness very Tracking force 2gms and this will ensure a bright balance. quickly, and whilst not Weight 5.5gms On inner grooves, where tracing loss quite as unrestrained Vert.tracking angle >38degrees takes effect, the Gyger II stylus shape as the Lyra Titan, this Frequency resp. 20Hz - 20kHz introduces -1dB loss, reducing the peak cartridge is more than Channel separation 12dB somewhat, as the white trace shows. capable of shocking the Tracking ability (300Hz) Like all moving coils, there is no upper listener on rim shots. lateral 63µm midband generator loss, meaning the vertical 45µm sound will have no artificial warmth Imaging was lateral (1kHz) 25cms/sec. and detailing will be strong. superbly focused, with Distortion (45µm) Tracking ability was good, if not a fine rendition of stage lateral 1% a match for the best; the cartridge depth, images precisely vertical 10% remains in the groove but distorts. placed on a stage Output (5cms/sec rms) 0.22mV Channel separation was unusually low which laterally filled the at 12dB, which will likely contract the listening room, whilst FREQUENCY RESPONSE sound stage in terms of width, but this the rear of the stage effect can also subjectively strengthen extended far beyond the images. physical wall. Vertical tracking angle was way too high at something like 40degrees out of range of the DIN 45550 test disc. CONCLUSION Distortion on vertical modulation (left The Blue Angel and right images) was excessive as a Mantis MC is an result, reaching 10% (corrected) with excellent cartridge, its CBS-STR110 at 45um. Red - Outer grooves performance justifying The Mantis has quite a few White - Inner grooves its £2,495 price tag.

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ew entrants in the world of high end cartridges are rare. The new Blue Angel Mantis moving coil has caused quite a stir due to the obsessive attention to detail paid to each and every cartridge by designer Andre Hanekom. Virtually everything, bar the cantilever/stylus assembly and the wooden packing box, is manufactured from scratch by its designer, who also builds and tests every cartridge. To do this, Andre had to install his own lathe and milling facilities, then build his own tooling to facilitate manufacture. The Mantis uses a wooden body into which is installed a plastic carrier, and it is within this carrier that the cartridge generator mechanism is located. This carrier is highly specialised, as the plastic used has been carefully selected for both environmental stability and resonant behaviour. The coils are very high purity copper, whilst high power neodymium magnets are used to ensure a healthy 0.35mv output. The cantilever/stylus assembly is brought in from Swiss specialist Fritz Gyger and uses a hollow aluminium cantilever to reduce moving mass, plus a fine line FG II profile stylus tip.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Star Quality

Leema Acoustics is very much in the ascendant, with a range of impressive looking electronics to match their established loudspeaker line. The new Tucana integrated amplifier shines brightly, says David Allcock...

L

eema Acoustics has, over the past five years, gone from a small loudspeaker company to a significant manufacturer in the British hi-fi constellation. The Tucana is their first electronics product, and makes an excellent first impression. Out of the box it is clear this is an exceptionally well built product, the chassis is very solid and even the heatsinks down each side are sufficiently substantial as to ensure they don’t ring. The front panel has only two large controls, a volume control on the left and an input selection on the right which allows three line inputs, a pair of multichannel inputs, a tape loop and an A/V direct input, which acts as a unity gain input for integration with a surround sound processor. Around the back are two pairs of heavy duty five way binding posts on the outer edge of the panel,

a single, centrally mounted IEC, nine pairs of inputs and outputs on high quality, gold plated RCA phono connectors, and a pair of connectors for Leema’s LIPS system - an intelligent control protocol conceived and written in-house to make their systems very user friendly. The Tucana is a full dual mono design utilising three transformers, one each for the left and right channels and a third which powers the control circuits, only sharing the power inlet to prevent any interference between channels and the digital data from the microprocessor control system. The output stage is said to be capable of massive current swings, up to 45 amps. By no means compact, the Tucana measures 106x440x305mm and weighs a hefty 19.4kg.

SOUND QUALITY

"I can confidently recommend this amplifier to anyone who wants a sonically superb, fit and forget integrated..." 20 P20-P21§.indd 20

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The Leema Tucana proved an excellent amplifier - period. The first thing that captured my attention was its transparency. Given the right combination of

source and material, it provided the listener with a connection to the musical event which few designs at any price are capable of - my only wish being I could have tried it with a fully balanced source. Give it a vocal performance like the under rated Nina Persson of The Cardigans, and it startles with its ability to place a vocalist in the room. The intimacy of her voice on ‘Starter’ was stunning, the close-miked vocals allowed every nuance of her breathy performance through. Given a similarly intimate, but very different, recording such as Diana Krall’s ‘I’ve Got You Under My Skin’, the sumptuous richness of Krall’s voice was almost tactile, such was its presence in the room. Soundstaging was a little more forward than I hear from my usual Krell KRC-3/Bryston combination, generally a couple of rows closer to the stage. It was still natural, that subtle change in perspective combined with the transparency to draw the listener into the original recording in a way few amplifiers are capable of doing. In this respect the Tucana surpassed the performance of any integrated amplifier I’ve heard to date, as it was unnervingly close to my Krell/Bryston duo, and

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 11:11:51


REVIEW

VERDICT Powerful, detailed and engrossingly musical sound allied to superlative build makes this is a great British integrated amplifier.

LEEMA TUCANA £2,995 Activ Distribution +44(0)1635 291357 www.leema-acoustics.com

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FOR - dynamic range - smooth yet resolved sound - current drive - build and finish whilst I could hear a little more stage depth with additional air and focus with my established reference combination, the Tucana had a rare ability to convince the listener they were listening to a real performance, even using a digital source. The Diana Krall recording is outstanding, but the Tucana was able to lift it to another level above any other integrated. Spatial relationships between the performers on ‘Devil May Care’ were precise and completely natural. The Tucana was also sensitive to the scale of the acoustic, and did not try to impose itself on every recording. Able to drive most loudspeakers to very high levels without a hint of compression, this integrated proved crushingly powerful. And whilst the Audiolab 8000S I reviewed a few months ago was capable of very fast transient response, the Tucana surpassed this with ease, requiring the likes of the NuForce Reference 9SE and Bryston 14B-SST to substantially better it. It was the perfect partner for the unique vocal ability of Kate Bush, whose performance on ‘Man with the Child in his Eyes’ not only moves around in the frequency domain, but also dynamically, leaving most amplifiers at best merely hinting at her true ability. The Tucana proved itself more than capable of keeping up with the shifts in Kate’s voice with remarkable ease and with the kind of easy, effortless style heard from very few standalone power amplifiers, it tracked the shifts like a bloodhound following even the smallest variations in dynamics with ease. The bass registers of this amplifier, even with a demanding load, are excellent. Whilst the ML Vantage uses an active bass driver, both the Leema Xavier and Hyperion HPS938 loudspeakers demand a firm hand to get the best out of their respective bass drivers. The Tucana succeeded in extracting greater levels

of performance out of these speakers transparent midrange, whilst high than almost any other amplifier I’ve frequencies are smooth and highly AGAINST heard, grabbing their bass drivers resolving. As such, I can confidently - no balanced inputs with absolute control. The HPSrecommend this amplifier to anyone 938’s reproduction of kick drums who wants a MUSIC on Marillion’s ‘Uninvited Guest’ was sonically superb, The Cardigans, ‘Gran Tourismo’ outstanding, you could not only hear fit and forget Diana Krall, ‘When I Look in Your Eyes’ the beater hitting the drum skin, but integrated. Marillion, ‘Six of One’ you could feel the bass note through Kate Bush, ‘Hounds of Love’ the seat and floor, however the bass control was outstanding. REFERENCE SYSTEM: With all this sledgehammer Basis Gold Debut Standard/Graham 2.0/Benz Glider L2 turntable wallop, the Leema was more subtle Klyne System 7 PX 3.5 phono stage than you might imagine, allowing Shanling CD-T300 Omega Drive CD player the delicacy of Diana Krall’s vocals Krell KRC-3 preamplifier to come through unabridged. Kate Bryston 3B-SST and 14B-SST power amplifiers Bush’s voice on ‘Running up That Hill’ Martin Logan Vantage loudspeakers had stunning immediacy and speed, Hyperion Sound Design HPS-938 loudspeakers and her astonishing upper range Leema Acoustics Xavier speakers brings us to the high frequency range, Isotek Titan and Nova mains filters often a problem with integrated amplifiers. The big Leema was delightfully smooth and detailed, with triangles and cymbals having just a hint of metallic The Tucana produces 162 Watts into is slightly worrying, but assure that shimmer without 8 Ohms and 272 Watts into 4 Ohms, internal fuses prevent output stage undue prominence or goodly amounts of power and plenty damage and a trip circuit protects exaggeration, whilst enough for most loudspeakers and loudspeakers. NK maintaining control and rooms. Distortion levels were low at all power outputs and frequencies, a little Power 162watts focus. third harmonic appearing as the amp was pushed to produce high power at CD/tuner/aux. CONCLUSION 10kHz. However, measuring just 0.05% Frequency response 5Hz-50kHz An outstanding design Separation 71dB worst case, delivering full power into from a connecNoise -90dB 4ohms, the Tucana behaves well in this tivity, versatility and 0.005% area. At low outputs, output stage noise Distortion performance perspective, dominated, but this was low enough to Sensitivity 600mV the Leema Tucana should be inaudible. integrate easily into any Frequency response was wide, DISTORTION measuring 5Hz to 50kHz at -1dB limits, system. This amplifier wide enough to do justice to SACD and has outstanding drive DVD-A sources. Sensitivity was very capability for even low at 600mV and here the Tucana the most challenging may not be the best choice with phono speaker loads, and stages having limited gain, or old avoids imparting its sources such as cassette decks. It has own personality on been modelled for CD players and such the music, allowing the like. source to speak for The Tucana measures well. Leema itself. A powerful bass say it has no protection circuits and the output must not be shorted, which performance is mated to a superbly balanced,

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Broadcast News Channa Vithana reviews the latest iteration of the Harbeth HL-Compact loudspeaker, now in 7ES-3 form...

H

arbeth are not a conventional, mainstream British loudspeaker company. Thanks in no small part to its founder Dudley Harwood’s BBC engineering background, their biggest British customer is good old auntie Beeb. Otherwise, they sell well in Japan and China. Based in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, they can trace their roots back into the nineteen sixties, and have produced a range of quintessentially British sounding products, a little conservative in presentation perhaps, but still extremely able and often far better than their more popular rivals. Now in 2007, Harbeth have just released a new version of their single-wired HL-Compact loudspeaker, called the 7ES-3, priced at £1,799. It has excellent build and is finished in a beautifully crafted light Cherry veneer as standard. There are other veneers available, including Eucalyptus, for about £1,899 to special order. Though called ‘Compact’, measuring 520x273x315mm and weighing 13.2kg apiece, the 7ES-3 by modern standards is a large two-way frontported standmount loudspeaker, and with its black cloth grill in place can be easily mistaken for a new-oldstock classic monitor from the sixties or seventies! I quite like its chunky proportions, but it would be nice to see more of the front baffle – the grill looked difficult to remove, so it was left in place (which Harbeth recommend). Indeed, more attractive silver hex-head fixings could have been used instead of the ordinary cross-head ones across the rear panel, and those at the front baffle, for the nail-free, glueless “lossy joint which suppresses resonances”. Additionally, it would have been more

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HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

attractive if they used a circular opening for the mid/bass driver. As such, some will be put off by this ‘traditional’ styling. The 7ES-3 cabinet, says Harbeth, “quite literally breathes at the very lowest frequencies, as do the finest wooden instruments.” A 25mm aluminium dome tweeter, which Harbeth have used for twenty years, is utilised because of its manufacturing consistency, and “needs no added damping (unlike fabric).” The classically BBC proportioned 200mm (8inch) Radial cone mid/bass driver is located into a glass-reinforced nylon chassis with a new rubber surround utilising “a softer smoother profile for improved damping”. The front-mounted port has been tuned for better bass, while the cabinet has better internal

wall-damping and the new crossover has “improved the on-axis integration of the drive units and enhanced the vertical integration”, so the speaker is less critical of stand height”.

SOUND QUALITY In the Harbeth User Guide it is recommended that the loudspeakers are placed about 75cm away from the

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REVIEW

"they are BBC-style monitors in the classic and best sense of the word..." bass delivery. However, when the composition got busier, with more complex drum patterns and guitar melodies vying for space with crunching rhythm parts, I noticed that the Harbeths could sound too restrained. There was a slightly ‘controlled’ quality that took some of the beautifully revealed timbral enjoyment away. Contrast this to a simpler composition like the midpaced thrash-metal of the next track, ‘Sad But True’ and there were no such difficulties. Likewise, on Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Morrow Turning Over In His Grave’, the music became a little more constrained, as the complex guitar parts sounded a little shut-in and less natural in their phrasing. Compared to my reference floor standing Waterfall Victoria loudspeakers, which cost approximately £2,000, the £1,799 Harbeths had superior instrumental timbre, which was very convincing indeed. They also appeared to go deeper in the bass than the similarly specified Victorias. However, the Waterfalls sounded slightly less congested in comparison, especially during

rear wall, 2.5m apart and with a little toe-in (about five to ten degrees) - and I concur, as this sounds the best. After a relatively short listening period, it was obvious to me that the Harbeths have marked strengths – what they do well, they do very well. The key is their delicately balanced sound, with wonderful timbral acuity and the ability to convey the emotional impact of a recording. With the music from the Vivaldi, ‘L’Amore per Elvira’ recording by La Serenissima, the violin and harpsichord had very good phrasing, definition and clarity. The music was nicely expressed, in a very clear yet timbrally convincing manner, and there was excellent body to each

instrument. On ‘What’s The World Coming MUSIC To’ from ‘Say You La Serenissima, Vivaldi, ‘L’Amore per Elvira’ (2006) Will’ by Fleetwood Mac, the Depeche Mode, ‘The Singles 86>98’ (1998) Harbeths sounded bold and expressive, proving convincing Fleetwood Mac, ‘Say You Will’ (2003) and enjoyable. The groove-led Metallica, ‘Metallica’ (1991) bass lines were excellent in their composure, feel and extension REFERENCE SYSTEM: while Mick Fleetwood’s signature Naim CDX2 CD player (£3,000 approx.) drum-track was a delight with crisp, Unison Research Unico CD player, (£1,250) clear and deep timbres. The pulsating Moon Audio i-3 integrated amplifier, (£1,595) opening bass line to Depeche Mode’s Waterfall Victoria loudspeakers (£2,000) ‘Behind The Wheel’ from ‘The Singles 86>98’ compilation was engagingly tuneful in extension, control and wayward or complex song structures, feel. The music as a whole was as on the Fleetwood Mac and also superb with a powerful yet Metallica recordings, and thus, the articulated sound that was very interplay of instrumental and vocal communicative. phrasing and timing of the music was The eerie mix of beautiful preferable with them. For this reason, opening guitar melodies and I think the Harbeths are ideal for menacing, growling bass lines to delicate, subtle acoustic music, but ‘Enter Sandman’ by Metallica less successful on highly modulated was sheer delight. And just like complex rock music – lovers of Depeche Mode previously, the heavy metal should look Harbeths showed a superbly tuneful elsewhere! www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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High Fidelity, redefined. www.thef80.com

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REVIEW

SHAW SPEAKS

Channa Vithana talks to Harbeth supremo Alan Shaw. CV: HOW DID YOU START OUT IN THE SPEAKER INDUSTRY? AS: “I have been fascinated by loudspeakers (not really any other part of the hi-fi chain, I must admit) since I was about six or seven. In my teens, I became involved with what were the early days of BBC local radio, when it had a real community involvement. That experience showed me at a stroke, how a monitor speaker was a tool, not a consumer durable. That led to me reading every scrap of information on ‘the BBC’s way of speaker design’. Despite my enthusiasm at being an amateur speaker fan, it was clear that I needed to get a real career - but after some seven years at NEC, by fluke I was in London, had some free time and went to see Dudley Harwood – someone I considered famous from my BBC readings (he had been head of the department involved in BBC speaker development) - and I walked away from his tiny lock-up and said ‘I have to continue this pioneering work’. That was twenty years ago..." WHY IS HARBETH SO POPULAR WITH THE BBC, AND IN JAPAN AND CHINA? “The Japanese and Chinese customers (our best two markets) took to us thirty years ago. We are exceedingly well known in those markets - right up there with the biggest loudspeaker brands in the world. It is no coincidence that [1] oriental homes are generally small, rather similar in size to a BBC control room, and [2] the listener is listening quite close to the speakers which greatly amplifies speaker artefacts, so they have to be of a low order or they are irritating and [3] oriental music, rather like speech and rather unlike electronic music is complex with exceedingly subtle micro-tones which most speakers just can’t resolve. As for the BBC, the reason they like us is that our speakers ‘tell it like it is’ and are based on the BBC’s idea of monitor speakers. This means that while they can’t play super loud (like public address equipment), and they don’t have earth-shattering bass, in the all-critical middle frequencies working with them is not like listening to speakers at all. It is the original ‘source’ material that is listened to, not the equipment. Most speakers would be extremely fatiguing if used as ‘monitors’, whereas at the end of an eight-hour shift the sound engineer has to be completely fresh: with Harbeth monitors, he is."

Back in October 1976, Harbeth founder Dudley Harwood co-wrote a BBC research department paper entitled, 'The Design Of The Miniature Monitoring Loudspeaker Type LS3/5a', along with M.E. Whatton, C.Eng., M.I.E.E and R.W. Mills. As well as this involvement with the renowned LS3/5a, Harwood was also responsible for popularising and patenting the use of Polypropylene drive units in loudspeakers. According to Harbeth, Harwood, then a senior engineer, directed research work by the BBC into a coated plastic called Bextrene for better drivers to outperform the inconsistent manufacturing quality of paper units at the time. The need for superior drive units, say Harbeth, was to adapt to the more demanding new stereo broadcasts. In the mid-1960s, Spencer Hughes, who later formed loudspeaker company Spendor, also worked on the BBC Bextrene project. According to Hughes’ journal excerpts (see www.spendoraudio.com) his, “part as a laboratory technician in the operation, was to do most of the actual work both on the plastic investigation, and the development of the LS5/5 (monitor loudspeaker)”. Also, according to Hughes, after this the 200mm (8inch) mid/bass driver using Bextrene (plus a Celestion HF 1300 tweeter) was used in the original incarnation of the now legendary BC-1 monitor loudspeaker. About ten years later Harwood discovered polypropylene.” This newer material says Harbeth was superior to Bextrene because it could go louder and didn’t need to be doped or coated, and was therefore lighter and “for the first time, the drive unit could respond properly to rhythm and timing.” During the late eighties, just before Harwood sold Harbeth to Alan Shaw, he looked into a driver material bought from Audax called TPX, which says Harbeth, was based on research into Bextrene and Polypropylene – but was deemed superior by Harwood. Alan Shaw subsequently carried on further research which led into the formation of the patented Harbeth Radial cone drive units. Radial (Research And Development In Advanced Loudspeakers) like its Bextrene and Polypropylene predecessors is a type of plastic formation, and says Alan, is “a blend of four key ingredients that we, and the engineers from the Science and Engineering Research Council, blended for their acoustic properties. We conceived a material that had no discernible acoustic signature. That material is the Harbeth sound (or rather, lack of it!)”.

Fine tonal accuracy and an engagingly tuneful bass make these highly accomplished monitors in the best BBC tradition, but they’re not to all tastes.

CONCLUSION No loudspeaker is a master of all trades, and the Harbeth HL-Compact 7ES-3 is no exception, but I found them exceptional in respect of their bass control, tunefulness and general timbral accuracy – they are BBC-style monitors in the classic and best sense of the word. The downside is that they are not rhythmically as free flowing as some, and don’t flatter big, complex, over produced stadium rock music. If ‘a good tone’ in the archetypal BBC sense of the word is paramount for you, then few – if any – at the price can touch these loudspeakers.

FOR - tonal accuracy - tuneful bass - build and finish

AGAINST - traditional styling - rhythmic flow

MEASURED PERFORMANCE The HL Compact 7-ES 3s have a very flat and well controlled frequency response, as would be expected from a traditional monitor type loudspeaker. There are no unpleasant peaks or dips anywhere in the frequency range and the overall trend of the response is downward with increasing frequency. This will endow the Harbeths with a warm sound and they will not be bright or sharp. Bass response is good for a relatively compact cabinet with the bass driver rolling off around 50Hz and handing over to the port which is tuned to 40Hz. This is a front panel-mounted item and thus the Compact 7ES-3s will be relatively uncritical of close placement to a wall. The impedance curve is smooth, with a measured average of 8.6 Ohms, dipping to a minimum of around 6 Ohms. The Harbeths are not a difficult load and will work on an 8 Ohm amplifier tap. Their measured sensitivity www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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HARBETH HL-COMPACT 7ES-3 £1,799 Harbeth Audio Ltd +44 (0)870 803 4788 www.harbeth.co.uk

)

HARBETH HISTORY

VERDICT

of 86.5dB means that an amplifier of around 50W is advisable for good sound levels. AS FREQUENCY RESPONSE

Green - driver output Red - port output IMPEDANCE

MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

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... the fourth dimension ... “

Unlike traditional speakers, which create an image that tends to recede between and behind the speakers, the Planets provide a soundstage that filled every inch of the listening room’s width. Images outside the speaker cabinets were the norm, providing a truly exhilarating sonic panorama. In short, the Planets offer a spatial performance nothing less than revelatory at the price, and its dispersion provides a surprisingly coherent sound. It is an excellent ambassador for the (omni-directional) genre.

Ian Harris, Hi-Fi News, April 2007

I was intrigued to hear really vivid soundstaging - the Planets painted a superb aural picture and it was possible to shut my eyes and hear my favourite band laid out before me. I found the Planets eminently enjoyable to audition and, returning back to ‘normal’ loudspeakers afterwards was a bit of a comedown. They have superb abilities in terms of imaging and lifelike presentation, cast a much bigger soundscape than their size suggests and offer a unique and enjoyable perspective on all types of music...

Duevel Planets

Adam Smith, Hi-Fi World, April 2007

£800 (pair)

: Silver, red, green, blue, charcoal grey and black £900 (pair) : Maple (real wood veneer) £1000 (pair) : Piano Black Other colour options available, please call for details.

Real hi-fi

Shanling, Hyperion, Duevel, Horning, AMR, Supravox, A2T, Metaxas, Heart, Bias King, 3D Sonics Tel: 0870 909 6777 · info@realhi-fi.com · www.realhi-fi.com To find your nearest ‘Real hi-fi’ Dealer visit www.realhi-fi.com or call us today. Dealer enquiries very welcome.

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SOUNDBITES

Oehlbach NF214

Oehlbach NF14 Oehlbach NF12

O

ehlbach have been manufacturing cables for over 30 years now and in that time have gained considerable expertise in the art of high end cable materials and design, under the tutelage of founder Manfred Oehlbach. Whatever your cable requirements, be they audio, video, computer network, firewire or USB, there is an excellent chance that Oehlbach will have an item to suit your needs, and your pocket. All of Oehlbach's products come under their star rating system, which runs from three to five stars - the three star items mark their more entry level designs, although this is relative as they still incorporate high quality components including silver plated OFC wires and 24 carat gold plated contacts. At the top of the tree, the five star items use the highest possible technologies, such as pure silver or mono-crystalline HPOCC copper, along with diecast connectors. The three items we have for review here come from the middle ground, four star, category and all three are phono to phono interconnects with reasonable price tags, considering their level of construction quality. The leads in question are the NF 214, NF 14 and NF 12, and cost £63, £84 and £96 for 1m lengths items respectively. The NF 214 uses 384 silver plated inner conductors with silver plated braid shielding, nicely terminated into good quality gold plated phono plugs. Moving up to the NF 14 interconnects brings

better quality phono plugs and a 'symmetrical design' cable that features twin inner conductors plus braiding, rather than the single run of the NF 214. Finally, the top step on the ladder, the NF 12, uses the same phono plugs as the NF 14 but uses silver-free HPOCC single crystal copper conductors. In fact, I found it quite interesting that the most expensive cables use no silver and are the thinnest of the three samples - clearly bigger is not always better! Ever ready to suffer in the cause of audio research, I calibrated my ears using a pair of bog standard interconnects of the kind supplied with equipment as a 'get-you-going' step and then substituted each cable in turn between CD player and preamplifier. For the first step, moving from the standard cables to the NF 214 proved how essential good interconnects are. Out went the slow and wallowing bass, to be replaced by a much tighter and more tuneful low end which made everything much more lively. Vocalists had better definition and instruments sounded more realistic, and less like a poor imitation of themselves. Oehlbach also promise "wonderful staging" for the NF 214 and this was indeed the case, as the whole sound field opened up considerably. Changing to the NF 14 brought even more air and realism around vocals. Singers such as Norah Jones appeared to have moved closer to the microphone and sibilants were less spitty. Slightly less enthusiastic and dynamic than the NF 214, the

NF 14 is nevertheless a very smooth character and adds a nice degree of polish and sophistication to the sound. The final change introduced the NF 12 and, for a mere £12 premium over the NF 14, moved things onto a different level. This time, bass became deeper and much pacier and allied itself to an exquisitely smooth midrange. The finest details in recordings were brought out superbly by the NF 12 and performances came across with real emotion and impact. One final aspect that I should probably mention concerns the fact that Oehlbach state that both the NF 14 and NF 12 are directional, and mark the outer cable sleeves accordingly. If this is important to you then by all means follow the directions. However, I did listen to both items connected the 'wrong way round' and...well, let's just say my healthy scepticism regarding cable directionality remains intact! In summary, the NF 14 has a rather smoother overall nature than the NF 214, which is more inclined to 'get down and boogie', albeit with a slightly coarser character, but either of their differing dispositions can be used to effectively fine-tune your system. The real star, however, is the NF 12 which is magnificently neutral and detailed and combines the pace and rhythm of the NF 214 with the sophistication and detail of the NF 14. Overall, then, all three of these cables offer excellent performance at reasonable prices. Contact: Acoustat (UK) Ltd. (+44 (0)20 8863 8979)

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UPGRADE

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HI-FI COMPONENTS MARANTZ

Marantz products range from high-end hi-fi to HD-ready DVD players and AV receivers. Its hi-fi range includes the CD5000 and CD5001OSE CD players, the SA7001 SACD player and the PM4001 amplifier, offering a taste of high-end audio at an incredibly competitive price.

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Rotel’s 06 Series will give you years of enjoyment and offers excellent value for money. This range of separates creates a sound that, the more you hear it, the better it gets.

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With class-leading build quality, and a unique blend of sophisticated Scandinavian design, Primare build elegant, reliable, easy-to-use systems that promise years of high quality performance.

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Getting the most from your hi-fi system

Sevenoaks has 34 years’ experience in the hi-fi market - and nobody knows more about getting the most from music. With the major brands in stock, Sevenoaks can help you choose individual components or design a complete system from scratch. Just tell our in-store experts what you listen to, when and where.

For your local store click www.ssav.com

The Experts in Home Entertainment

Any song. Any room. Anywhere. SONOS Wireless Music System Sonos is the first wireless, multi-room digital music system that lets you play your favourite tunes all over the house – and control them from the palm of your hand. With a wireless Sonos Controller in hand, you’ll have instant access to all your digital music, plus Internet radio, subscriptions to online audio services and even music from your favourite CD or MP3 player. With Sonos ZonePlayers in the rooms of your choice, you can play the same song in different rooms, or different songs in different rooms. To start listening, just grab the colour controller, pick a room, pick a song and simply hit play.

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Don’t Forget! Accessories make the difference The quality of sound and vision a system produces is determined as much by its accessories as its main components. At Sevenoaks, accessories are not an afterthought - our staff can demonstrate the difference the right accessories can make to your home entertainment experience.

ARCAM SOLO MUSIC SYSTEM

● Amazing sound from an integrated system ● Exceptional quality CD, FM and DAB radio ● Integrated iPod connection ● From Arcam, a great British company

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Arcam believes that superb sound quality is vital to the real enjoyment of music. The DiVA range reproduces music at a level that is remarkably true to life.

Revive your record collection PROJECT DEBUT III ● Two speed, belt drive turntable complete with cartridge ● What Hi-Fi? award-winner

CYRUS

If you’ve enjoyed listening to music before, try listening to it through a Cyrus system. With every product tuned by ear, Cyrus represents a quality of sound, which is rare at any price. NEW DAB 8.0 TUNER

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Create your dreams with the latest home entertainment technology. Whether it be home cinema, quality hi-fi or multi-room, Sevenoaks will transform your home and increase your viewing and listening pleasure.

A multi-room system puts all your home cinema and/or hi-fi equipment in one place and gives you control at the touch of a button. Put screens and speakers in as many rooms as you want and control what you listen to or watch from one central hub. With hard-disk technology, you can store your entire DVD and CD collections in one place and play different films or music tracks in different rooms at the same time.

The Sevenoaks custom install service takes in everything from initial site visits to designing and planing your system, through to project management and installation to ensure you get the most from your home entertainment system.

Sevenoaks Design and Custom Install provides a solution that meets your exact needs and budget. At Sevenoaks, we create bespoke home entertainment systems of the highest quality that complement your home and lifestyle. With 49 stores and over 30 years of experience, Sevenoaks creates systems that will transform your life.

Sevenoaks consults with you at every stage and, if required, will liaise with builders and architects.

Sevenoaks staff are experienced at installing both simple and complex multi-room systems, and ensuring they integrate with the look and feel of your home as well as being fully functional and easy to operate.

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NEWS & INFORMATION

Choose the best in the business

SEVENOAKS GUIDE

Sevenoaks Sound & Vision is the UK's largest specialist retailer of highquality home entertainment solutions. With 49 stores nationwide and a proud history of satisfying customers, Sevenoaks has a hard-earned reputation as the most comprehensive provider of home cinema, hi-fi and multi-room audio systems, offering excellence in customer service and a unique design and custom install option.

Pick-up our 2007 Hi-Fi & Home Cinema Guide at your local store. Alternatively, it can can be ordered via our Website and posted to you (UK mainland addresses only) FREE OF CHARGE.

INFOCUS IN76 DLP PROJECTOR Fill your screen with bright, vivid, crisp and detailed images with this awardwinning, 720p resolution, DLP projector.

SIM2 DOMINO D35 DLP PROJECTOR

Ahead of the field ● LEADER for quality brands. Sevenoaks 100 per cent independent status means it can bring together the finest components and systems under one roof. ● LEADER for quality staff. Sevenoaks employees are home cinema and hi-fi enthusiasts with a passion for the products and satisfying customers. ● LEADER for quality service. At Sevenoaks, customers are treated as individuals and solutions are designed for individual needs.

SIM2 is synonymous with the finest quality home cinema projectors and the new D35 model adds to that enviable reputation.

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GROUP TEST

Silver Machines Although you can buy a CD player for £20 at your local supermarket (that also plays DVDs!), spending a serious sum really yields benefits. In this month's supertest, Noel Keywood rounds up four sub-£1,000 models from Cambridge Audio, Roksan, Creek and Vincent...

L

ovely as the analogue LP is, for most people Compact Disc is the only practical choice when it comes to listening to music in the home. All four players here give results that are a step up from the norm in audio quality, and genuinely provide a better listening experience. They gave us a less mechanical and sterile presentation than typical budget CD players, with a feeling of clarity and stage depth, a sense of solidity to singers and instruments and, in some cases, elimination of the piercing effects of sibilance. A common criticism of CD is that it sounds bright, sharp, hard and sterile, but the mid-price machines tested here address these concerns, although by no means equally... Just how good can CD sound? If you are able and prepared to shell out thousands for a Tube Technology Fusion CD64 or Chord Electronics DAC64, then it gets very good indeed. The main reason these players sound so special - and different to the norm - is that they contain the unique Rob Watts WTA digital filter - and you pay for such a specialist item.

CD's limitations equally. There's little useful work you can get a valve to do in a CD player, other than amplify the analogue signal before it reaches the output sockets, yet all the same they make a big difference to the sound - most would say for the better. Valves add a feeling of depth and spaciousness, giving music a more natural, organic sound if you like. Harshness is suppressed and stage depth magically seems to appear, helping to rid CD of its unidimensionality. The associated downside however, is a loss of the intense detailing that solidstate players like the Cambridge in this group can provide. Valves can add a darkening of the sound and a generally more louche air that forsakes the clinical correctness and sterility of solid-state for something a little more human, shall we say! I could not argue that valve output players are more accurate, so much as they have a presentation that is worth hearing, simply because it makes music enjoyable. A small caveat is that not all valve equipped players are equal; they tend to come from smaller specialist manufacturers and their choice

"these players are a step up from the norm in audio quality..." Lower down the price ladder, the players here rely on more conventional parts, albeit high quality items, from a variety of semiconductor and drive manufacturers around the world. Unfortunately, no matter how much processing is crammed into CD players, such as the impressive degree of upsampling used in Cambridge's £500 Azur 740C, improvements do not necessarily address all

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of parts can be 'interesting' to say the least! I like and use an Eastern Electric Minimax, and it sounds quite different to the tube-equipped Vincent in this test. So as always, read what we say, bearing in mind we apply advanced measurements before listening, and then try and listen at a dealer if you can. CD is worth playing properly, and with £1,000 you can buy a fine design.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

19/3/07 14:53:16


GROUP TEST

CAMBRIDGE 740C £500

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I admired the way the Cambridge not dissimilar, I recall. But the player he Azur 740C is very talmined information from discs and laid has a sophistication to its delivery ented at the price. It acts it out clearly; this is an upfront player that becomes apparent as you relax not just as an upsampling across the upper midband, but it is and spend time with it. There is less player, but also a digitalless forthcoming across the lower immediate force and impact than to-analogue convertor. midband, losing warmth and some from the Vincent or Roksan, although Cambridge use Adaptive atmosphere in the process. Here is in the longer term the 740C proved Time Filtering from Anagram a player to look right into what's on weighty and detailed, if with more Technologies of Switzerland, with a CD; it places no gloss over things, foreshortened depth perspective digital signal processing carried out displaying a degree of revelation that than the other, considerably more through an Analogue Devices Black most rivals are unable to match. In its expensive, models. Celine Dion's Fin DSP to yield a highly processed very own way, then, the 740C is great digital signal running at a high 384kHz 'A New Day' was vastly detailed, as value. crisp as a winter morning and was sample rate. This then passes through Wolfson DACs connected in differen- underpinned by prodigious bass. tial mode for best noise cancellation. It's a lot of processing for a £500 player, but Cambridge -80dB dithered 2.3% The Cambridge has a classic frequency also provide two digital inputs, Separation (1kHz) 130dB response characteristic, with slowly each with an optical and an Noise (IEC A) -114dB falling upper treble from a well damped electrical (phono socket) SP/ Dynamic range (EIAJ) 111dB time domain response. This tends to DIF connector. These can be Output 2.3V give a smooth sound, with no emphasis selected from the front panel. of upper treble, unlike the peakier Whilst CD plays only at 384kHz response appearing more commonly rate, external sources can be nowadays. There was no measurable distortion converted to 48, 96 or 192kHz FREQUENCY RESPONSE at -30dB, our measurement showing at 16, 20 or 24bit resolution, noise, another analyser revealed, with or without dither applied Frequency response not discrete distortion harmonics. to reduce low level distortion. level Under these circumstances distortion As Cambridge say, most CDs (dB) measures a low 0.004%, and at -60dB are dithered in any case nowait was again low at 0.24%, helping +0.5 days to ameliorate the grotty toward a fine EIAJ dynamic range 0 sound of 16bit, so you don't value of 111dB. -0.5 need this when using the 740C Jitter measurement of the VERDICT as a stand alone DAC for a CD £ digital output returned a value of around 10pS over most of the audio transport, so much as other A vividly revealing player with rock-solid lower bass, if a frosty demeanour. Great band, with no programme-related digital sources. value. frequency (Hz) 62 25k components. The Azur 740C measures With wide channel separation, DISTORTION CAMBRIDGE AZUR 740C £500 430x315x115mm and weighs normal output and low noise this player Cambridge Audio 6.4kgs. Audio outputs are phono measured well in all areas. It should sockets, and there are optical +44(0) 845 900 1230 sound smooth and easy going. NK and electrical digital outputs www.cambridgeaudio.com too. Frequency response (-1dB) FOR 2Hz - 20.8kHz - extremely detailed SOUND QUALITY - insightful Distortion Perhaps predictably, the Azur - seismic deep bass 0dB 0.0007% 740C has an easy-going balance -6dB 0.00045% that initially comes over as 0.24% AGAINST gentle. Good upsampled players -60dB -80dB 2.8% - lacks warmth I have used in the past were

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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GROUP TEST

CREEK CLASSIC CD £850

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of the track was well represented neutral. No matter what source he latest incarnation of without becoming unpleasant. With material was fed to it, the Classic CD Creek's mid-price CD the Creek, pianos and other acoustic remained composed, detailed and player design is an evolution instruments had good realism and thoroughly enjoyable to listen to. of the tried and trusted depth to them. Soundstaging was excellent, with CD50Mk2, that impressed Ultimately, the Creek is an good detail retrieval from instruments us back in the March 2004 excellent and 'safe' option. It is a and vocalists. Bass was pleasingly edition of Hi-Fi World. Adhering nicely very unflappable player and, whilst weighty and rhythmical without ever to the 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it' becoming wallowy or boomy, and high lacking the capacious soundstaging school of design, the Classic incorof the Vincent or the bass grunt frequencies were smooth, sweet and porates a few choice modifications of the Roksan, also sidesteps their tidy. Spinning Celine Dion's 'I'm Alive' over its predecessor in order to keep downsides neatly, never becoming once again revealed excellent weight things competitive. disagreeable or harsh. to the sound and the sibilant nature The most visible change, albeit one that is still quite subtle, is a slight restyle to the casework in order to ensure that the The Classic measures flat to 21.2kHz (unit matches physically well -80dB dithered 1.8% 1dB) in its frequency response, with no Separation (1kHz) 108dB with its Classic series brethren. roll down at all at high frequencies our Noise (IEC A) -110dB Under the bonnet, however, the analysis shows. Subjectively, it will not Dynamic range (EIAJ) 111dB tweaking has reached higher lack treble. Output 2.1V levels by a few useful additions. This player was very linear right Firstly, improved circuitry and through the audio range, producing little shorter signal paths have been distortion. At -30dB it returned a figure FREQUENCY RESPONSE fitted throughout the player and of just 0.004%, our analysis shows, Frequency response the power supplies have been putting it up with the best. An even balance of spectral components exists, upgraded with improved, low level (dB) mostly noise another analyser showed. noise regulators and resistors. Resolution at low levels was good too, Twin mains transformers keep +0.5 a dithered -80dB signal returning 1.8% the supplies to critical areas 0 second harmonic only. separate for good isolation and -0.5 Jitter was unusually low right the audio signal passes through across the audio band and up a buffer before passing into the to 100kHz, measuring less than DACs for good immunity to 10pS. There were no audio related frequency (Hz) 62 25k shock and vibration. components, a sweep showed. Measuring 430x70x317mm The Classic turned in an excellent DISTORTION set of performance figures. It should and weighing 6kgs, the Classic sound balanced, smooth and very clean, CD is a compact and neat with no softening of treble. NK design and has analogue and

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

SOUND QUALITY In contrast to the other players in this test, which have a definite tonal character to them, the Creek proved remarkably

Frequency response (-1dB) 2Hz - 21.2kHz Distortion 0dB 0.0005% -6dB 0.0005% -60dB 0.26% -80dB 2.7%

CREEK CLASSIC CD £850 Creek Audio +44 (0)1442 260 146 www.creekaudio.co.uk

FOR - superbly natural - open and spacious - transparency

AGAINST - styling www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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A polished presentation, strong in every way: spacious, smooth and as natural as CD gets.

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digital outputs (both optical and coaxial).

VERDICT

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35 16/3/07 16:43:49


GROUP TEST

ROKSAN CASPIAN £800

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stage depth, bass power and dynamic it could with the other players. The he Caspian is an all solidresolution, but it has a hardness of Roksan gets things just about as right state player of conventional tone that can make music and singers here as is possible from CD, unless design and construction: sound a tad mechanical. The same you spend much more. there isn't a valve in sight! recording on other players was more Celine Dion, however, sounded Its solidity feels reassuring, convincing: what I heard didn't clash a little robotic. This quality became both when handling it and with my perceptions of what a piano obvious with Vlado Perlemuter when button pressing. Weighing in at should sound like. 9kgs this is one of the heavier models playing Chopin's Opus 48, No1, Overall, a very accomplished where his piano had a hardness of within our group and it sat where it was put. It measures 88x432x300mm. tone that was difficult to resolve with player that effortlessly justifies its the real life instrument. The Roksan is price tag. It has poise, accompanied and a comprehensive range of front by a dynamism that many will love. very correct, has goodly amounts of panel controls allow it to be used without the remote. The rear panel carries no fewer than three digital outputs, optical, Separation (1kHz) 104dB The Caspian had a neat response electrical (coaxial) and an AES/ Noise (IEC A) -112dB shape, with no peaks or dips. Reaching EBU balanced XLR signal. The Dynamic range 111dB smoothly from 2Hz up to 21.1kHz (-1dB) latter is unusual, and generally Output 2.1V this player is as good as it gets in terms considered to give best quality of frequency response smoothness and as it minimises noise pickup, extension. which can fall through into the The Caspian was very linear right FREQUENCY RESPONSE analogue domain as jitter in the through the audio range, turning in absence of re-clocking. Inside an excellent set of distortion figures. Frequency response Roksan use a Texas Instruments At -30dB it returned a figure of just level PCM1730 DAC with 24/192kHz 0.0042%, putting it up with the best. (dB) Our analysis shows an even balance internal resolution, an advanced of spectral components, with no one item with good performance, +0.5 dominating. Resolution at low levels and a rare choice. 0 was good too, a dithered -80dB signal -0.5 returning 1.8% second harmonic only. SOUND QUALITY Jitter was low across the audio This a suave and composed band, peaking randomly at around sounding player, that seemingly 30pS. There were no audio related avoids strong character traits components, a sweep showed. Output frequency (Hz) 62 25k to give a convincingly natural measured a normal 2.1V and EIAJ delivery. It has well damped dynamic range was a high 111dB. DISTORTION The Caspian turned in a good set yet resonantly deep bass with of figures all round. It should sound real power to it; drums start balanced and smooth. NK and stop cleanly and with

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

VERDICT Composed and dynamic sound with pacey bass that's ideal for rock music.

ROKSAN CASPIAN £800 Henley Designs +44 (0) 1235 511166 www.roksan.co.uk

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FOR - fast, powerful bass - cohesive and balanced - dimensional and convincing

AGAINST - tonal hardness - music dependent

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'Copperhead Road' the opening drum rolls had a grippingly real sense of size and power as they rolled dramatically across the sound stage. The Roksan has a superbly grippy delivery that is polished in the extreme. Sibilance in Celine Dion's 'I'm Alive' had an edge to it but didn't leave my ears ringing, as

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

Frequency response (-1dB) Distortion 0dB -6dB -60dB -80dB -80dB dithered

2Hz-21.1kHz 0.0003% 0.0004% 0.22% 2.3% 1.8%

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 16:37:30


GROUP TEST

VINCENT CD-S6MK £999

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sound stage of this player, and the ike all Vincent products, SOUND QUALITY way drums thundered across it as this one is a hybrid that The CD-S6MK was very 'obvious' they were panned. The Vincent puts uses valves as well as solidin its sound, or characterful I could up a monster of a performance in state devices, and you get say. It has solidly delivered, punchy terms of dynamics and it has great the valves on public display bass and, as measurement predicted, stage depth too. in an illuminated window, treble that was always bright and With CDs having less high no less! The remote control has a sometimes a little prone to sizzle. frequency energy, the top end Dim function, but doesn't toggle Playing the treble laden steel string emphasis had no effect; Vlado valve illumination as on the SV-236 guitars of Steve Earle's 'Copperhead Perlemuter's piano had fantastic amplifier; instead it's the fluorescent Road' is my test for this and sure scale and a convincing timbre. display panel that has Bright, Dim and enough his close miked vocals hissed The CD-S6MK was superb with Off options. The valve is bathed in whilst the guitars bordered on classical music, sounding smooth and a strong orange glow from a set of lacerative. All the same, no one could expansive - and convincing. LEDs, illumination being adjustable come away unimpressed by the vast from bright to off by a four position rear panel switch This player uses Burr Separation (1kHz) 113dB The Vincent has a distinctive lift in Brown PCM-1732 DACs with Noise (IEC A) -99dB treble output on both balanced and 24bit/96kHz resolution, as well Dynamic range (EIAJ) 104dB unbalanced outputs, our analysis as a Pacific Microsonics HDCD Output (unbal. / bal.) 2.4 / 4.8V shows. It’s enough to ensure the player decoder, so the smoothness has obvious treble, and possibly a and air with HDCD discs can sheen to its sound. The CD-S6MK is FREQUENCY RESPONSE be fully appreciated. As always, unlikely to sound warm. the valves are output devices Distortion levels were a little higher Frequency response than usual and the distortion pattern, operating as cathode followers, level possessing higher harmonics, suggests which provide single-ended (dB) this player uses a multi-bit convertor. Class A operation by their The valves affected distortion less than +0.5 very nature. The Vincent has a usual, adding a little second harmonic. 0 headphone output on the front The Vincent does not match the best -0.5 panel. players available. Dynamic range (EIAJ) There's no Direct output was affected by this, measuring a low that bypasses the valves, 104dB. but there is a balanced XLR In all other areas the Vincent frequency (Hz) 62 25k output and measurement of measured normally, possessing little jitter on its digital output (<30pS), output impedance suggested wide separation, low noise and healthy both this and unbalanced are DISTORTION output. NK derived from the output valves,

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

Frequency response (-1dB)

2Hz-21.3kHz

VINCENT CD-S6MK £999 Distributed by Ruark Acoustics +44 (0) 1702 601410 www.vincent-tac.de

FOR

Distortion Unbalanced / Balanced 0dB 0.18 / 0.027% -6dB 0.002 / 0.014% -60dB 0.28 / 0.25% -80dB 2.9 / 2.8% -80dB dithered 2 / 2.1%

- capacious soundstaging - extended dynamics - timbrally convincing

AGAINST - sharp upper treble - bulky! www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Fantastic scale and imaging make this player impressive, but it can sound sharp.

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explaining the use of three 12AX7 double triodes and one 12AU7 - four valves instead of the usual two. This is a better arrangement than using a convertor chip to derive a balanced output. Of our group this player was the sturdiest and largest, measuring 430x125x330mm and weighing in at 9kgs.

VERDICT

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CONCLUSION

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p to £500 or so, even well designed CD players give you that mechanical sound that audiophiles are so quick to criticise. I've measured and listened to enough of these players to know they measure well and are not doing anything too wrong in a technical sense. It's just that they rely exclusively on budget parts and this takes its toll on the sound. Every little bit, down to the last capacitor, is cost cut - that's just how it's done nowadays. Upsampling confers a benefit, but it is small if the rest of the player is cheap and cheerful. The entire package must be appropriately designed and specified if it is to deliver the sort of open and spacious sound quality players like those tested here provide. Cambridge's Azur 740C player offers it all for a bargain price of £500 by acting as a standalone DAC as well as a CD player. In its own way, in the enormous amount of detail it is able to retrieve and a peculiarly powerful form of low bass that seems to rise up from below the floorboards, it is a talented design and fantastic value. Of all four players here, though, it was also the most characterful in its sound, an upper midrange sheen emphasising sibilant recordings, for example. A player like this works well with high quality programme material, but isn't so convincing with close-miked vocals, for example. This is a player for those who want real analysis, as most others are less forward and revealing. Very close to each other in their basic nature were the Creek Classic and the Roksan Caspian. Of the two I found the Creek easier to live with, whilst the Roksan was more challenging and more forceful. Lovers of hard rock who

"here are four quality CD players, each of which has great strengths..." isn't CD as we usually think of it. like verve and pace, coupled with Okay, I heard its sharp treble at a bass delivery I'd describe as an times, bringing a fizz to sibilance for iron punch, will take to the Caspian. example, but I suspect many would It has fantastic composure, coming forgive its sins to enjoy its strengths. across as all-of-a-piece, and only So here are four quality CD slips back when classical instruments players, each of which has great with rich timbral signatures enter strengths. Hopefully amongst them, the equation. It is here that the slick there's something that suits you. sounding Creek Classic moves gently but convincingly ahead. It might not quite have the pacy dynamics The standalone CD player hardly occupies centre stage in most of the Roksan, but it is more homes any more. It is being jostled by lower quality sources like even in its approach to all the iPod and Internet radio, and higher quality sources like SACD, forms of music and, by any which isn't dead yet. In this report we also looked at what you standards, is lovely to listen to. don't get from a £999 DVD-3930 DVD player when it plays CD and The Creek offers it all really: - more importantly - what you do get. The trade-off here is sound it is easy on the eye, easy to quality against breadth of purpose. I use a Denon DVD player at use, all but technology-free as home and have come to see it as a thoroughly trustworthy work far as an owner is concerned, horse, able to play anything well and without fuss, from CD to but sounds open and spacious, SACD, DVD-A and video DVD. So what does Denon's new DVDtidy and relaxed. It offers a 3930 offer from CD? class performance whatever Measurement showed that playing CD it is a class act, deliverway you look at it, on the test ing a specially processed audio signal (AL24) from its two channel bench or in a show off against output sockets, and standard unprocessed audio from the Front the market's most adept Channel surround sockets. Listening to it showed that Denon's rivals. AL24 eliminates shrillness from CD. It was a tad flatter in its And that leaves the sound staging than the more expensive players within this month's Vincent CD-S6MK. This player group test, but it was clean, tidy and inoffensive in its delivery and, is Left Field; see it racing as such, sufficiently entertaining for a lot - most? - people, I susup the wing to score over pect. Counterbalancing this small limitation is its ability to play just the heads of all else with a about anything. Very good value then for the uncritical. fabulous presentation that I cannot sign off this report without honourably mentioning leaves you asking "where did the Russ Andrews DAC-1 USB reviewed this month. If you already that come from?" The Vincent have a player with a digital output, this is a fantastic upgrade for is breathtaking in a way that £599, possessing a sound quality you do not really attribute that equalled either to valves or CD. It the best players isn't as warm, even syrupy, of our group or, as our resident Eastern if you like its Electric Minimax player, nor as smoothing propbright and challenging as our erties, bettered Shanling CD-T80. Instead it them. It's a hot five constructs a panoramic sound glober! NK with breathtaking dynamics that defies convention: this www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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REVIEW

Stadium Shocker Few phono stages come more vast in size than the huge Aesthetix Rhea. Noel Keywood enjoys this sizeable slice of high end America...

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hey do it different over there. This is surely the biggest phono stage I have ever encountered, yet Aesthetix call the Rhea, “a smaller, less expensive version” of their Io product. This shows where the company is coming from. Aesthetix is a true American high end manufacturer, for people with houses to match the size of their hi-fi systems! It is so vast that it barely fitted atop our Henley rack. With Imperial dimensions quoted as “18” Width x 17 5/8” Depth x 4 3/8” Height” you know this product hails from the USA, where a friend tells me his walk-in bedroom wardrobe is bigger than a typical UK kitchen! The size is accompanied by a equally capacious price of £3,175. The Rhea shows just how much impression vinyl is making on the US high end scene. It is doubtless designed to play the expensive Creedence Clearwater 45rpm

an armful of Bo Diddley LPs the other night, I was told that LPs are “original music”. He’s the sort of avid collector who, alongside audiophiles, may spend thousands on a phono stage able to reveal every little nuance of an original recording. As he pointed out, his record collection is worth far more than the equipment he plays it on - at £30 a disc for audiophile pressings it doesn’t take so many to equal the price of this phono stage! All the same, is it really worth 1,200 LPs? Well, certainly in terms of size and complexity, yes. I have rarely encountered a phono stage that offers so many connections and adjustments. It has no fewer than three phono inputs for example, for those with three record decks [Handy. I'd only need six of them, then - AS]. Microprocessor control is built in, which demands all-electronic switching, so there are numerous

"this huge phono stage epitomises the US high end sound..." reissues that sit beside me for example, or perhaps the recently released Dire Straits ‘Brothers in Arms’ 45rpm LP. The rise of old classics, remastered and recut onto modern, heavy (200 gram) Quiex SVP virgin vinyl, for example, parallels the demand for high end tube phono stages such as this, which promises to extract the very best from them. Assailed by a vinylista clutching

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relays inside and every button press, on the front panel or the remote control (yes, really!) is accompanied by much clicking and the associated time delay. A large, vivid blue LED display can be seen across the sort of room Americans owning a stage like this may well have. At switch on it shows, by default, the input selected. Gain can be set individually for each input,

and there's a wide range, from x110 for the highest output Moving Magnet cartridges through to a massive x6950 for the lowest output moving coils. But that's not all - because the Rhea has balanced outputs (XLR sockets) in addition to conventional unbalanced (phono sockets) outputs, from which the unbalanced output is derived, balanced output gives double the gain figures above. Using a balanced line can then give you a vast x14815 gain; under test a low 1mV in gave no less than 14.815V out. Phew! Lacking input transformers I was expecting to measure noise (hiss), because valves are not as quiet as transistors, but this is an extremely quiet design, with an input noise value up with the best solid-state stages. Aesthetix say there are no solid-state devices in the signal chain, so they get very low noise from the Sovtek 12AX7LP input valves. Input load can also be selected by remote control, so you can judge the affect on sound quality without jumping up and down from the settee and playing around with diddy DIP switches and the like. Aesthetix have dreamt up an arrangement that is totally new to me: the display window actually rocks laterally. Press the left side to decrease gain or load value; press the right side to increase it. More astonishment in Keywood towers! The gain values are expressed

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 16:35:55


REVIEW

SOUND QUALITY Sound quality differences between the very best valve phono stages

get quite small, in spite of the large differences in circuitry, layout and components used. But to get this into context, I do mean super high quality valve stages such as this. Generally valves occupy a region that starts at around VERDICT £600 and goes on upward. Expect a Impressively complex valve phono more capacious soundstage, one that that gives fine results with moving coil stretches back to give instruments CONCLUSION cartridges. and singers room to breathe - and the The huge Aesthetix Rhea epitomises AESTHETIX RHEA £3,175 Aesthetix managed this with ease... the US high end sound. Brilliantly Distributed by Audio Reference It images very well indeed, powerful in the bass, lavishly smooth +44 (0)1252 702705 although I felt my reference up top and with a crisp, engaging www.musicalsurroundings. Eastern Electric Minimax phono midband, it will flatter both old com/aesthetix stage sounded a little wider, with vinyl pressings and new. It offers instruments more assertive at stage tremendous flexibility too in terms FOR extremes. The Rhea pushed singers of loading and input switching. Its - solid, weighty bass and instruments forwards a little, extraordinary level of automation is - open and revealing midband showing a small degree of midband another factor that will impress many. - connectivity forwardness that seemingly lit centre At this price, it is obviously not for - remote control stage performers better. By way of everyone, and - no less importantly contrast, it has creamy smooth treble - it may be too big! If you've got a AGAINST that melts away seamlessly, to gently house and pocket to match however, - physical size! burnish down any top end sizzle it is an essential audition. - price from a cartridge. Tracey Chapman sang 'Fast Car' clearly from centre stage with the sort of startling The Aesthetix Rhea is accurately Frequency response 5Hz-30kHz presence only valves can equalised to the RIAA standard, our Separation 66dB achieve, whilst the bass analysis showing a slight roll down Noise (e.i.n.) 0.6uV rumbled pleasingly in the at high and low frequencies through Distortion 0.02% the unbalanced and balanced outputs. Gain (unbal) background. Precise figures are -0.5dB at 20kHz and x110, 221, 440, 875, 1740, 3480, 6950 Spinning Alison -0.25dB at 20Hz, so deviations are small. Overload 61mV in / 25V out Goldfrapp 45s like The -1dB bandwidth we usually quote 'Ride a White Horse' was a wide 5Hz-30kHz. There is no warp showed this stage has filter, so the lower limit cannot be raised. tremendous low end FREQUENCY RESPONSE Input noise, IEC A weighted, was grunt. It compares with a low 0.6uV - as low as it gets. Input Frequency response the very best and gets overload was satisfactory at 61mV, and level balance absolutely right. output overload 25V (unbal), the former (dB) I used the unbalanced being important at low gain, the latter at high gain. Total gain range was x110 output through a +1 up to x6950, and double that through 0 Quad QC-twenty four the balanced output - all anyone would -1 preamplifier and both need for the highest output MMs to the unbalanced and balanced lowest output MCs. Input capacitance is cables through an ECS 200pF and unadjustable. preamplifier, where 5k 50 1k 20k 200 The Aesthetix measures well in I could conveniently frequency (Hz) every respect. NK switch between the

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in dB, by the way, so x110 (+41dB) is flagged up simply as 38, the 3dB discrepancy being unimportant. Press Load on the front panel or remote control and you get the input load value. This is the resistive load only, not parallel capacitance which cannot be adjusted. Values available are 47k, 10k, 5k, 2.5k, 1k, 500, 250, 125 and 75 Ohms. Most useful are 47k for MM cartridges and 125 for MCs. I sometimes use 10 Ohms in my own preamp to damp a zingy sounding low-Z MC, so this preamp doesn't quite cover every option, and of course you cannot switch in capacitive loading for MMs, an option available on most dedicated phono stages. However, the Rhea has some other tricks up its sleeve. Strangest is a Demagnetiser, a slightly alarming idea since every cartridge relies on magnetism and would fall silent if this was to eliminate it! I presume it doesn't (and couldn't) generate anything like enough power to demagnetise the permanent magnet that exists in every cartridge, so it likely reduces residual magnetism in core materials to zero. The Rhea is superbly built and extravagantly finished, featuring ornate triangular switches and a nicely machined fascia, with smoothly rounded corners and edges. The rear panel carries normal phono inputs (i.e. unbalanced). There are balanced outputs, driven by balanced internal valve circuits - the proper way of doing it - rather than a solid-state unbalanced balanced line driver.

two. Via short cables, differences between unbalanced and balanced were small, as usual balanced exhibiting a small benefit in terms of clarity; this output will give most benefit with long lines I suspect. There is no balanced input I should add, the way in which my turntable is now wired. I used the stage mainly with an Ortofon Rondo Bronze moving coil cartridge and felt the Rhea did a fine job, offering even more low frequency power and solidity than my reference whilst high frequencies were gently smoothed and less exuberant. Otherwise, the Rhea brought the wonderfully open sound staging of valves to LP. It was fractionally less clear and open than the Minimax, but was weightier in its bass and smoother too - which is better depends on your system and personal preferences.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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DENSEN V1.qxp

05-12-2006

10:09

Side 1

In a world where so much looks the same, we take pride in being different !

Lifetime warranty is a natural part of our philosophy Densen products are built for life and for long-lasting state-of-the-art performance. That’s why all Densen products come with an exclusive lifetime warranty. The warranty is a global carry-in warranty that lasts as long as you own the product. At this time in history, Densen is the only manufacturer to offer lifetime warranty on high-end Hi-Fi. However, the warranty is no longer valid if you want to find out if the products float on water. Believe us, they don’t... It is our intention to make complete products. Not just products that are sonically superior, but complete like a perfect circle. As you learn about Densen, you’ll discover that we go the extra mile in every aspect: design, user-friendliness, quality, warranty, upgradeability, production methods and of course sound quality. But you really won’t have a clue about it all until you get to hear and see what we’re talking about in real life. Then you will know what we mean when we say Air-Guitar factor (say what? check our website). There is one Air-Guitar / Air-Baton included with every Densen product. LIFE IS TOO SHORT FOR BORING HI-FI This is some of the awards our products have received from the most respected magazines in the world:

Authorised dealers: Acoustic Arts, Bedfordshire, Tel. 01923 245250 - Adventures in Hi-Fi Ltd., Chester, Tel. 01942 234202 - The Audio Room, Hedon , Tel. 01482 891375 - Adams & Jarrett, East Sussex, Tel. 01424 437165 - Divine Audio, Leicestershire, Tel. 01858 432999 - Glasgow Audio, Glasgow, Tel. 01413 324707 - Hi-Fi Studios. Doncaster, Tel. 01302 725550 - Holburn Hi-Fi. Aberdeen, Tel. 01224 585713 - New Audio Frontiers, Loughborough, Tel. 01509 264002 - Phonography, Ringwood, Tel. 01425 461230 - Practical Hi-Fi, Lancaster, Tel. 01524 39657 - Practtical Hi-Fi, Manchester, Tel. 01618 398869 - Practical Hi-Fi, Preston, Tel. 01772 883958 - Practical Hi-Fi, Warrington, Tel. 01925 632179 - R.J.F, Cornwall, Tel. 01209 710777 - Sound Seduction, Sevenoaks, Tel. 01732 456573 - VideoTech, Huddersfield, Tel. 01484 516670

Densen Audio Technologies - Phone: (+45) 75 18 12 14 - E-mail: mail@densen.dk w w w . d e n s e n . c o m


REVIEW

Do It All I

Marantz’s DV9600 is that rare beast in the audio-visual jungle, a DVD player that plays video superbly, yet handles all standard and hi res audio formats with equal skill, says Patrick Cleasby...

have to confess a certain affection for Marantz products, as the first CD player I ever saw was a CD73 back in 1984. By 1990 I became quite attached to my CD50 but, since my adventures in high-resolution digital, I have only had my hands on the odd stereo SACD Marantz player. The £1,500 DV9600 universal player has a serious chance of becoming the solution to my eternal quest to find the best CD/SACD/DVD-A compromise... The DV9600 has been on the market on both sides of the pond for over a year. Although its competitors are of a similar vintage, if you’re more interested in hardcore ‘download the latest ‘Heroes’ episode as DIVX as soon as it airs in the States’ video, then its lack of ability to play such dubious wares natively off disc may be a downside, particularly when compared with the likes of the Arcam DV137. Still, other than this, the DV9600 has all the tweaks and flexibility a videophile could wish for, and is right on the money in the HD upscaling of DVD stakes, going right up to 1080p and only lacking the Arcam’s somewhat marginal 768p capability (although a lot of our screens are this native resolution, many of them won’t negotiate outside the standard 720 and 1080i options). Yet we’re here for the audio aren’t we? For the surround audio crowd using HDMI it may be a

disappointment that the HDMI is only 1.1 level here, so no native DSD will be going to your amp even if it is capable of decoding it. We do, though, have ingeniously designed analogue surround outputs, and for any of you who have a 2004-vintage high end AV amp with iLink/ IEEE1394/ Firewire connectivity you may stand a chance of getting the Marantz to talk digitally to it. Not having any such examples to hand I can’t vouch for the DV9600’s interoperability. The Marantz negotiates its video connection over HDMI effortlessly, and is intuitive to set up and use, which is a good job as this review sample had lost its manual! As I run my Toshiba 32” LCD in 720p from Virgin V+ HD, I elected to set the Marantz to the same resolution. Unfortunately I do not yet have 1080p monitoring capability, but within the HDMI set up menu are a few little gems which set the Marantz apart from some of the competition. The one I particularly like is the 16:9 squeeze option over HDMI, as opposed to 16:9 wide, which means correctly flagged 4:3 extras on a 16:9 DVD display in their true ratio with pillar box sidebars while the main feature is still presented properly in anamorphic widescreen. This is the way any true videophile should want to watch such things! Yet when the Marantz blurb talks of ‘uncompressed video’ going up the HDMI connection what they mean is that the video processor uses

clever chroma upsampling techniques (more commonly seen in pro kit) to extrapolate full 4:4:4 component chroma information from the DVD’s compressed 4:2:0 colourspace (the same colourspace compression seen in PAL DV – SD ‘broadcast quality’ is the less colour compressed 4:2:2 found in Sony’s, now legacy, Digibeta pro format). This is a ‘pro’ diversion which should simply mean you get a very nice picture from the 14bit 216Mhz video circuitry, if you use the HDMI settings advisedly.

SOUND QUALITY Given that people will be buying this at least for some video capability (otherwise Marantz have some nice bespoke SACD players to sell you), I kicked off with a quick look at the video and found it very capable on my newest Harry Potter DVD video (I have kids, right!). Still, moving on to the main event, the DV9600 is one of those machines that shocks you with its musical ability the instant you slot that first CD into the drawer – it proved an all rounder beyond my expectations. ABC’s recent ‘Deluxe Edition’ remastered CD reissue of ‘Lexicon of Love’ showed its mettle. Whereas most DVD players, even at this price, offer a polite but perfunctory sixteen bit sound, the Marantz was taking real trouble to delve right into the disc, offering a highly musically insightful sound. The wide soundstaging was the highlight, the

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Accessing the Source,

Unleashing the Performance

HIAudio – UK Distribution For your nearest stockist go to www.hiaudio.co.uk or call direct on 0845 0525259

mains filtering ■ Jaya Two Versions: Standard / Silver The key to the Jaya’s exceptional performance is the way it tackles not only spikes, but also Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) on the mains. On a typical domestic supply there is a vast amount of RFI. At lower frequencies there is noise from power supply rectifiers, and further up the RF spectrum there is noise from digital systems and the interference injected into the mains by mobile phones. As well as employing high quality electronic components for the filter network, the units incorporate the acoustic absorption technology found in our other products. When the Jaya is used, RFI getting into the system is massively reduced. RFI is very harmful to the operation of virtually all circuitry used in audio and audiovisual systems. Amplifiers and analogue sources benefit significantly from the reduction in noise floor. In particular, digital circuitry is very prone to such interference. But let us put it another way - the use of a Jaya or Silver Jaya brings huge improvements to the performance of any system.

On the face of it, an aluminium box that simply plugs into a spare socket shouldn’t be able to do this. In practice its all too easy to hear. Suspend your disbelief and give it a try - after all, ■ Jaya no one is going to take your money unless you want them to. The trouble is, you will want them to. You really, really will! Roy Gregory hifi+

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HFW/VAQ/0507

16/3/07 17:13:19 20/3/07 10:34:47


REVIEW soundfield and a less harsh high end, right into the disc, offering a highly but I would say who wouldn’t? musically insightful sound. The wide soundstaging was the highlight, the DV9600 painting an expansive picture CONCLUSION with loads of detail going right into A highly desirable prospect on the back of the mix. At the same simple visual appeal and robust time, it remained very smooth – its physical and technical design, once insight didn’t come from undue you audition the DV9600 you are forwardness. bound to be impressed with the It was plenty musical too. The sympathetic even-handedness with recent solo single from Everything which it plays all music. But the real but the Girl’s Tracey Thorn, ‘It’s All selling point for me is that you get True’ had a great analogue synth that sound whichever of the three pulse groove to it and a lot of high audio formats you are using. Vintage range drum machine cymbals which CDs sound blissful and modern could have easily been over-cutting, compressed monstrosities are but they remained within safe, nonrendered just about listenable. For fatiguing listening bounds. That was once, equivalent DVD-As and SACDs REFERENCE SYSTEM: followed by a nice healthy slab of are uniformly excellent and virtually Toshiba 32’ LCD TV Beth Ditto and The Gossip, which indistinguishable to the ear. A real TCI Viper 6 analogue interconnects not particularly into proved the Marantz had no less of a feat, and only achieved just before Denon AVC-A1SRA AV receiver DVD-A and SACD, but Monitor Audio GR20 loudspeakers way with a raucous guitar ditty and both formats hit the slab, I fear! have a large library real cymbals. Rhythmically engaging, Of course £1,500 is a lot to pay of DVDs and CDs and a decent tonally even and dynamic in equal for a DVD player to watch films on, audio and 1080p capable playback measures, this is certainly the best particularly given that ‘The Man’ is system, then this is among the very quality CD playback I have heard at probably going to persuade you to best mass market ‘does everything the price, among the myriad universal lash out on a high def player in the before HD’ players around. Heartily players I have tested. next couple of years, or at least a recommended. Still, I must say the lack PlayStation 3. However, even if you’re of HDCD decoding is a disappointment considering how great those Cirrus Logic DACs via analogue outputs CD frequency response was flat and sound. The DV9600 really wide, as our analysis shows, reaching DVD FREQUENCY RESPONSE excels with electronic music, 21.9kHz. SACD was flat to 50kHz (making Japan’s ‘Gentlemen 1dB) and DVD-A reached 54kHz, so Take Polaroids’ and the early the DV9600 gives good results with all three audio formats. works of Stephen Duffy sound Distortion levels were also class as near to the lovely sound of leading, at -60dB measuring 0.27% with editor DP’s vinyl system as is possible via CD. Equally though, CD, and 0.06% with both SACD and DVD-A. Both the latter produced -100dB ‘Modern Times’ from the tones, with around 4% distortion on traditional elder rock statesman this player - a very good result. Jitter Bob Dylan, sounded warm and performance on the digital output was inviting. All of this was done superb, measuring a low 20pS, with no using the ‘Pure’ mode which programme related components. shuts down dimmer, video Results were excellent in all other CD FREQUENCY RESPONSE areas, on all three formats, showing the and digital output circuitry. DV9600 is very well designed. It even makes the massively This player gives a superb compressed ‘A Weekend In measured performance from CD, SACD The City’ by Bloc Party sound and DVD-A. It will likely have ‘obvious’ musical, which is no small feat... treble with CD, judging from frequency The usual hi res suspects response, but SACD should be more yielded some extremely high neutral and DVD-A fast and dynamic. VERDICT quality results as well. As most NK Highly accomplished with Compact universals I have previously Disc, SACD, DVD-Audio and video alike, this is an exceptional do-it-all disc tested came from the DVD Frequency response (-1dB) player. CD 2Hz-21.9kHz Forum side of the fence DVD-A 2Hz-54kHz originally they all tended to MARANTZ DV9600 £1,500 2Hz-50kHz DISTORTION favour DVD-A, but the ultimate SACD Marantz (UK)

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

Distortion

)

test of DVD-A vs. SACD fairness (Steely Dan’s ‘Gaucho’ – both discs mastered by the same guy and converted direct to PCM or DSD off the new analogue archive surround master) yielded the most level result I’ve ever heard. Virtually indistinguishable, I still just about favour the DVD-A for a more integrated surround

CD 0.0004% 0.27% 2.9% -

DVD 0.0003% 0.06% 0.8% 4.4%

Separation (1kHz) Noise (CD, IEC A) Dynamic range Output

112dB -122dB 111dB 2.04V

-6dB -60dB -80dB -100dB

+44 (0)1753 680868 www.marantz.com

SACD 0.0003% 0.06% 0.5% 3.6%

FOR - performance across formats - smart video tweaks - build

AGAINST - no HDCD - no DIVX www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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"The ECSpre Audiophile line level pre amplifier”

“If god is in the details, then this ecs pre/power system should provide more than a few religious experiences. Jason Kennedy Hifi Choice 119, The collection edition Unique advanced design The first ever multi source pre amp to employ the NeverConnected power supply. Zero feedback , Fully balanced, Using a unique ground switching selector.

Simple and Ergonomic Provided with a universal learning remote control to operate every other component in your current system. Large display, channel balance control, phase switch control.

Supported by long warranty and a unique support program

This extraordinary, musical product is supported by ECS with a service that offers discerning music lovers a peace of mind, pride of ownership, and a convenient way to audition and purchase it. 5 years warranty are offered (UK only), and a dedicated phone line is available for our customers to use when they require assistance or advice.

ECS power amplifiers

Harmonic Technology cables

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www.ecsamplifiers.co.uk

Contacts sales@ecsamplifiers.co.uk (+44) 0208 932 7995/0208 743 8880 ECS, Impress House, Mansell Road, London W3 7QH

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REVIEW

Black Magic Russ Andrews’ DAC-1 USB is a cracking new upsampling digital to analogue convertor with a twist – it takes USB inputs. David Price listens in...

A

lthough always sonically effective, some Russ Andrews electronics I’ve tried in the past have been less than lavishly presented. I think ‘utilitarian’ is a kind way to describe some of the little black boxes I’ve come across. So it was with not inconsiderable surprise when I pulled the new DAC 1-USB out of its packing, that I found a beautifully finished, superbly built bit of kit that frankly wouldn’t disgrace a Japanese high end product. The 212x55x290mm box comprises an immaculately finished thick black brushed aluminium front panel and neat, crisply folded pressed steel case finished in matt black. The fascia comprises an on-off switch, rotary source selector and 192-BYPASS switch, which alludes to the 24bit Delta-Sigma DAC inside, with 192kHz upsampling option. Inside there’s an AKM4395 DAC chipset, with sixth-order digital filter and ‘Asynchronous Sampling Rate Conversion’ accepting anything up to 24bit, 96kHz signals, plus a specially designed clock circuit employing a PLL (phase locked loop) said to make for extremely low jitter. The analogue output stage is full Class A, a claim substantiated by the not inconsiderable amounts of heat coming out of the unit, and a sizeable toroidal transformer is fitted. The action of all the switches is superb, the sort of thing you used to get from a top Nakamichi tape

deck. At 3.5kg the unit also feels far heavier than it has a right to be, considering its modest size. Needless to say, its pedigree speaks volumes – halfway through the review period I learned that it’s built by April Music in South Korea, home of the excellent Stello range of ‘affordable audiophile’ separates. Indeed, it transpired to be exactly the same as the Stello DA100, with the exception of a Russ Andrews-designed power supply. For me, the build of this £599 machine was its most striking feature, but for the marketers the headline grabber is supposed to be the little USB legend on the far right of the digital input selector. That’s because, as well as one coaxial and two optical digital inputs, this DAC accepts USB digital audio signals from computers (PCs and Macs). Effectively then, you can hear all that music on your computer (and if you’re like me, then it’s a lot) without it having to go anywhere near your computer’s internal DACs and analogue output stage (yuk)! The unit is very well packaged, and comes complete with a high quality Russ Andrews Powermax mains cable, plus a usefully long USB cable for computer attachment.

SOUND QUALITY Kicking off with a high quality low jitter signal from a Trichord Clock 4 modded high end Sony CD spinner, the DAC-1 USB proved a most impressive performer. Indeed, I have

to say it’s one of the most revealing DACs I’ve heard near the price, so much detail did it throw out, and with such precision... Beginning with the processed pop of the Inspiral Carpets’ ‘Move’, and the Russ Andrews DAC provided a spry sound, with oodles of midband information and a crisp, well ordered treble. The hi hat cymbals had real bite, but weren’t crunchy or hard, while the vocals were a treat – this DAC really connects with human

"thumbs aloft for this little black box - it is almost good enough to eat..." voices, and tells you all about their every last inflection. Bass wasn’t overly generous, but was taut and tight like few others I’ve heard under £1,000. Clicking the 192kHz upsampling in, and there was quite a dramatic effect. Subjectively, the treble and upper midband move ‘back’ a fraction, and with it comes a good deal of extra ‘space’ – there’s no other word for it. The upper mid smoothes out just a touch, and there’s no doubt - you don’t want to go back to the non-oversampling option. With greater finesse to the treble, I could more clearly hear that the drummer was using triggers on an electronic kit, rather than hitting acoustic drums

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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REVIEW REFERENCE SYSTEM Sony CDP-X303ES/Trichord Clock 4 CD player MF Audio Passive Magnetic Preamplifier (silver) Rotel RB-1092 power amplifier Yamaha NS1000M loudspeakers Black Rhodium interconnects/cables

feed from the CD spinner, but the result was still unexpectedly musical. Again, the upsampling is the icing on the cake, adding just a touch of silk to the treble, and some air and space to the mid and high frequencies, letting that fantastic midband really breathe.

CONCLUSION

was a deep, tuneful and taut bass, wonderful soaring strings with a delicious timbre to them and ultratight percussion. The DAC-1 USB threw out a wide and controlled soundstage, with excellent left to right precision. Those fantastic female vocals were quite mesmerising – especially with the upsampling switched in, female voices had crystalline clarity yet were never harsh or searing. Rhythmically, the Russ Andrews DAC-1 was spot on. With The Stranglers’ ‘Duchess’, that superdetailed midband made sure that every last accent of the electric guitars, keyboards and drums was caught. This is a badly recorded, largely impenetrable track that most CD players seem to trip over on, but this little black box seemed completely in control. Once again, the soundstage was wider than most, but I got the impression of an everso-slightly curtailed stage depth – just about the only blot on an otherwise immaculate copybook – and the only aspect where its immediate Benchmark DAC-1 (£650) rival truly betters it. A 24/96 DVD-Audio disc of

Mahler’s Symphony No.10 (Berliner Philharmoniker, Simon Rattle) showed up the DAC-1 USB’s superb midband

again. Driven from a budget Marantz DVD spinner, there was a superb sense of power, beautiful instrumental timbre, and – especially with the upsampling switched in – a satisfying spaciousness to the recorded acoustic the like of which I only normally encounter on vinyl. Now it was time for this little box’s party trick. I picked up my Mac PowerBook G4, sat it next to my hi-fi rack, plugged in the USB cable and clicked on my iTunes library. Most of my music is Apple Lossless or 320kbps CBR AAC, and even on the latter compressed file format, the music sounded impressive through the DAC-1 USB. Obviously, you get a slight lack of detail and dimension running AAC compared to a pure 16/44 PCM

An excellent product then. Typically quirky (just as you’d expect from Russ Andrews), yet brilliantly built (as you’d expect from April Music), the DAC-1 USB is an extremely clean and detailed sounding device, with excellent timing and tonal accuracy. The icing on the cake is the USB input, something I imagine most audiophiles don’t think they’ll ever use. Well, I found I did, and interestingly it wasn’t so much for playing back my music collection (I already have a perfectly good set of discs for that), but for listening to internet radio – where excellent results can be had. Overall then, thumbs aloft for this little black magic box – it’s almost good enough to eat.

Truly accomplished sound allied to fantastic build and the added boon of USB make this a stand-out product at the price.

RUSS ANDREWS DAC-1 USB £599 Russ Andrews +44 (0)845 345 1550 www.russandrews.com

FOR - detail - rhythmic drive - build, finish, features

AGAINST - nothing at the price

MEASURED PERFORMANCE A distinctive feature of this digital-toanalogue convertor (DAC) is gently falling upper treble output, our high resolution convolved impulse analysis reveals. This will ensure it sounds smooth, lacking CD bite, and it tends to make for a cohesive sound, as treble is subjectively pulled back into the sound field. Together with very low distortion figures I would expect this DAC to come over as smooth, clean, easy going yet cohesive in basic presentation. Interestingly, switching from Bypass to 192kHz upsampling reduced the noise floor by 6dB, although it did not affect frequency response or distortion figures. Dynamic range also improved by a few dB, reaching a high value of 111dB. The Russ Andrews DAC-1 is nicely engineered, measuring and working well on the test bench. It should sound good. NK Frequency response (-1dB) Distortion (%) 0dB -6dB -60dB www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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VERDICT

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– suddenly the reverb on the snares was obviously artificial. The majesty of ‘Morning Child’ from the wonderful new 4hero album ‘Play With the Changes’ was a joy. The superlative production values of this new disc were shown up in sharp relief. There

-80dB -80dB dithered

2.8 3.2

Separation (1kHz) Noise (IEC A, 192) Dynamic range (EIAJ) Output

112dB -107dB 111dB 2.6V

FREQUENCY RESPONSE

DISTORTION

2Hz-20.2kHz 0.04 0.018 0.22 MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

49 14/3/07 10:51:30


REVIEW

At nearly five thousand pounds, Origin Live’s brand new Enterprise tonearm has a real fight on its hands, says David Price...

Starship Trooper S ome ten years back, Origin Live came up with a brilliant £75 ‘structural modification’ which gave the Rega RB300 a considerable fillip. Suddenly this venerable fifteen year old pickup was back on the map, with a much more ‘easy’ and relaxed sound thanks to its superior counterweight arrangement. Internal rewiring options also took out some of the tonal dryness, and suddenly this arm was challenging giants like the SME Series V (if carefully set up) in several respects... Origin Live then took their idea and ran with it. A range of tonearms was launched, all basically variations on the Rega RB theme. We had the OL1 (a Rega RB250 rewired and with various structural modifications), the Silver (a far more tweaked RB250), then the Conqueror, Encounter and Illustrious. Each new variant moved the design further away from the original Rega, and the sonic voicing

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of each new arm took it even further away from the RB300, to the extent where the Conqueror, for example, is totally unrecognisable – it sounds closer to a Hadcock than a Rega, in my humble opinion! In truth, the Enterprise is as far away from a Rega RB300 as the 2007 997series Porsche 911 is from a 1938 Volkswagen Beetle. The Enterprise is the ultimate expression of the Origin Live philosophy, with myriad technical differences between it and the already superb Conqueror. By any standards, it’s a beautifully built bit

better than the SME Series V, Linn Ekos SE, Cartridge Man Conductor, Graham Phantom B44 and Tri-Planar Precision Tonearm, all of which are under half the price, its value for money is surely questionable. To make matters worse, tonearms are so subjective, as well as being very system-dependent, and open to matching/synergy issues with their host turntables and/or cartridges they’re tracking - that it’s a tricky thing to come to a definitive position on whether the arm is right for you. Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained!

"a great mix of tonal accuracy and rhythmic flow..." of kit, but its main problem is that £4,500 is a massive amount of money to spend on a tonearm, and so it lays itself open to challengers from every direction. If it is not comprehensively

What’s less open to question is the Enterprise’s superb construction (and frankly, at this price, it should be nothing less). The Enterprise features a completely new armtube

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16/3/07 16:22:39


REVIEW

Setup was straightforward, the Enterprise fitting a standard Rega mounting hole (like all Origin Live arms). Close examination of the comprehensive set-up instructions shows two points that don’t apply to other OL arms. First, backing off the top two tiny allen screws on the back face of the arm by one turn releases the transit bolts – which is a must for decent sound. And secondly, Mark Baker recommends that the height adjuster should be only very lightly clamped – if at all. This helps to decouple the arm from the turntable to which it is fitted, an idea for which Mark is a keen advocate.

SOUND QUALITY Having had a range of high performance arms in my GyroDec of late, I was fascinated by how this would sound. Using my usual van den Hul Frog MC reference, I was greeted by an exceedingly fast and open performance. Kicking off with The Associates’ ‘Party Fears Two’ from their early eighties classic ‘Sulk’, I was amazed at how the Enterprise scythed through this murky mix. It laid down a big, strong, slightly warm bass with a wide midband and deliciously subtle treble. Billy MacKenzie’s vocal theatrics were quite arresting – he had a special voice, not to everyone’s taste, and it felt eerily real through my system. The way it hovered outside and

above the instruments was something I’ve not heard before. Even with the Cartridge Man Conductor, which threw out a slightly wider soundstage, the vocals were less emotive. The Crusaders’ ‘Street Life’ is my staple high quality hi-fi test disc, and I was reminded why with the Enterprise. The opening few bars were superbly articulated, with one of the most vivid midbands I’ve heard from vinyl. Randy Crawford’s breathy vocals were again quite delicious, tremendously expressive and sumptuous too. Tonally, the Michell Orbe and GyroDec are especially gifted in carrying the ‘timbre’ and ‘tone’ of voices and instruments, and the Enterprise was particularly good at showcasing this. When the drums kicked in, I was treated to a mesmeric performance, with fulsome bass, great insight across the midband with wonderful filigree detailing on strings. There was an immensely satisfying rasp to brass

recorded acoustic, just a little narrower than the Cartridge Man Conductor left to right, but deeper front to back. Tonally, the Enterprise sounded clean right up and down the frequency band, but there was a gentle bloom in the upper bass which made this rather sterile recording sound more listenable. The GyroDec, by modern standards, is an ever-soslightly warm sounding turntable, so it is likely this is what I was hearing here.

CONCLUSION Overall, this is a superb pickup arm with a grippingly REFERENCE SYSTEM musical sound and Michell GyroDec/vdH The Frog lovely rhythmic ability. Note Products PhoNote It has wonderful MF Audio Passive Pre (silver) tonal shading (an 2xNuForce Reference 9SE SME Series V sounds Yamaha NS1000M monochrome, by comparison) and deep soundstaging with masses of detail. It’s not quite as expansive as the Cartridge Man Conductor in terms of left to right staging, but overall it’s an exceptional performer – one which offers a brilliant mix of tonality and rhythmic grip. Still, £4,500 is a heck of a lot of money, and this is my only VERDICT real criticism, as there is so much One of the most explicitly musical competition below it - not least tonearms around, it nevertheless faces Origin Live's own Conqueror, which stiff competition at the price. will be all most people should ever ORIGIN LIVE need. The Enterprise is subtly but ENTERPRISE £4,500 obviously better, but many would find Origin Live the additional outlay better spent +44 (0)2380 578877 elsewhere - of course, this point is www.originlive.com pertinent to all high end products, FOR not just this. Those in the fortunate - engaging, vivid sound position to contemplate purchasing - rhythmic flow it might be interested to know that - dynamics Origin Live do a one-month 'money

and hi-hats which sounded like they were in the room with me. The Enterprise is a real music maker too, although rhythmically it is a long way from its cheaper Origin Live stable mates. Genesis’s ‘Mad Man Moon’ showcased Phil Collins’ drumming to fantastic effect, the kit sounding back guarantee'. Personally, I doubt tremendously powerful and dynamic, AGAINST that they find the need to honour it yet having a lilting rhythm that - price very often. sounded more Naim ARO than SME V. Once again, the hi-hat work was a joy, the cymbals Our vibration analysis of the Enterprise frequency modes, suggesting it will having a crisp tone and clearly shows the presence of two sound lively. tremendous attack. large peaks, so high they leave the The Enterprise is likely to sound Moving to Kraftwerk’s top of the trace, thus exceeding 0.3g. fast and clean with a bright delivery I ‘Computerwelt’, the The first is at a high 400Hz and is the suspect, perhaps heard as some sheen. Enterprise’s rhythmic main arm tube mode. Its frequency is It will probably sound entertaining. NK ability shone once greater than the usual 200Hz or so of again – throwing out a Arm vibration behaviour normal tubes, and so is its amplitude. 0.3 hypnotic groove that This shows the Enterprise has a very stiff tube, but with little damping. At Accel. surpassed even the (g) Main arm this frequency, and with reasonably TriPlanar Precision tube modes 0.2 narrow bandwidth bass quality may tonearm. well seem taut and controlled, but it Moving to my DG is likely the Enterprise will have some pressing of Beethoven’s character and possibly some smearing 0.1 Pastoral Symphony of general detail in the midrange. A (Karajan, Berliner second, slightly smaller peak at 750Hz Philharmonic), the may well contribute to the effect. 0 Origin Live threw out a The headshell shows signs of higher frequency (Hz) 6kHz 15Hz tremendously impressive

)

incorporating bi-metallic technology “to reduce resonance and increase rigidity”, and there’s a low friction, stable dual pivot bearing design for vertical movement, with two single points in sapphire cups, widely spaced to mimic gimbal bearing stability but with much lower friction. The bearings for horizontal movement are highly specified low friction items, conventionally oriented. The tonearm features inbuilt VTA height adjustment, and a counterweight designed for low vertical inertia and high transverse inertia, which Origin Live’s Mark Baker says is advantageous for holding cartridges steady. Finally, the “highest grade wiring” is used throughout, with deep cryogenically treated internal Litz wiring and silver bullet plugs.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Race bred

The F80 portable home entertainment system is one of Meridian’s most interesting products since the company’s inception, some thirty years ago, says David Price...

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ay back in 1974, one of the most striking pieces of industrial design the hi-fi world has seen surfaced - in the esoteric shape(s) of the Lecson AC1/AP1 preamplifier/power amplifier combination. At a stroke, the two men behind it, Allen Boothroyd and Robert Stuart, marked themselves out as one of the greatest design partnerships in the British audio industry. In 1977, when the Meridian brand was launched on an unsuspecting world, the Boothroyd/Stuart partnership again showing itself as capable of conceiving one of the world’s most arresting combinations of form and function, in the shape of the 101/105 pre-power amplifier. This combo sounded superb by the standards of the day, and looked, worked and felt like absolutely nothing else on the market - its stark minimalism a dramatic contrast to the massive, button-festooned amplifiers coming out of Japan, for example. Meridian went from strength to strength, the company becoming one of the most successful British specialist names, and has never been anything less than highly respected since, with a copper-bottomed reputation for design and build. As an ex-owner of a Meridian 101B/103D pre-power, and a real fan of Boothroyd-Stuart designs, I personally feel the brand has had its eye slightly off the ball for the past few years. There’s no question it has been doing great things with DVD, but I have found some of the visual ‘freshness’ that the early designs showed has gone from Meridian’s latest range of rather conservative looking but highly competent products. What they’ve needed, in my view, has been something as radical as the Lecsons or 100 series, to breathe what car journalists used to call ‘edge design’ back into a mature, stale hi-fi market. Well, here it is. The Meridian F80 is not a serious ‘hi-fi separates’ product, and anyone who reviews it as such is missing the point. It is

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here to serve two functions. First is to put Meridian on the cultural CE map. As editor of a hi-fi magazine, I often find myself explaining the industry to casual acquaintances. Whilst such ‘civilians’ will invariably have heard of brands like Ferrari or Aston Martin, mention the words Meridian or Linn and they’ll look at you blankly. To me, this is the biggest problem our industry faces – we don’t have any big global brands that transcend ‘mere’ audio equipment, and we should have. By doing a joint venture with Ferrari, who supplied some of the

construction technology, Meridian will be in markets it could never previously have reached. It is an excellent idea from Bob Stuart, but I have to ask why he didn’t do it fifteen years earlier – he and Allen Boothroyd are precisely the people who could come up with ‘a design for life’, in my opinion. The other raison d’être for the F80 is to give people the option of buying a very high quality portable music (and movie) centre. Basically, it’s a glorified table radio with DAB/ AM/FM and silver disc (CD, CD-DA, CD-R/RW, MP3, WMA, DualDisc, DVD-V and DVD-R/RW) functionality – but this is to understate what’s inside, and what it can do. This is no pale Bose imitation, but hi-fi in miniature, with all the technology that Meridian use (albeit in on a larger scale) in their separates. The

elliptical shape is striking yet simple and elegant, and comes in five official Ferrari colour options, while limited edition luxury finishes will be unveiled later this year. This is not designed to replace a home hi-fi, but to complement it. The idea is that users of high end audio systems used to hearing serious sound will be able to enjoy the F80 in their spare rooms, studies, holiday homes or even hotel rooms. Meridian says it has built the F80 in the tradition of a proper ‘home wireless’: one that would be a focus for ears and eyes and fill a room with sound. Inside its high quality (408x230x185mm) plastic shell, the 6.5kg F80 sports a solid diecast metal base, and three loudspeakers

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 16:30:33


REVIEW mounted in separate, inert enclosures created from a special alloy-injected composite. “It was within this field of materials technology that Ferrari’s close co-operation and specialist expertise proved invaluable”, say Meridian. The electronics are impressive – there’s a DAB/FM/ AM tuner with built-in

station name, bitrate, stereo/mono mode, radio text and the station names of one bank of presets. Press the right hand arrow button and it displays the station names programmed into the next bank of presets. Switch source to disc, and it shows the track and time information, and the display above the row of buttons changes to offer other options. The idea, then, is that there’s an ‘adaptive interface’ - the lower display section, in conjunction with six unlabelled buttons in the centre of the row, operates all the functions necessary. It works very well, requiring very little acclimatisation, and the only other control on the whole machine is a rotary volume knob on the bottom right hand side of the case. The other key point is the F80’s connectivity. Around the back, there are sockets you’ll never find on any other ‘table radio’. There’s a 3.5mm minijack stereo input, optical digital input and output, a ‘dock’ input (for a forthcoming bespoke iPod dock), plus composite and SVideo outputs for the DVD player. All this means that the F80 does a better than average job of connecting up to the outside world.

lots of detail and a sense of finesse that shows its high end origins. It is dry tonally – don’t expect the rich sound of an old valve table radio – but by no means stark. Rather, the F80 makes more than a half-hearted attempt at trying to reproduce accurately and in an uncoloured way, what’s on the disc (or radio). The Meridian impresses by giving real midband insight, yet doesn’t sound thin. The rear mounted subwoofer sees to that, by offering real bass reinforcement, but doesn’t seem boomy or semi-detached either. With a decently recorded CD, you get a genuinely musically enjoyable sound, and this is even when you’ve just been listening to a serious separates system. – it is taut, controlled, punchy and clean. Placement is of course an issue, and the sorts of locations the F80 is likely to find itself may not flatter it sonically. It’s best of all in open space in the centre of a room, but even shoved in a corner sitting at an angle, it still fills a decent sized room with sound (and the system has a range of DSP settings to compensate for room placement). Even when you ‘hit the loud pedal’, the Meridian remains clean and undistorted, showing the benefit of what must be very rigid internal construction` – there are no rattles or hums here. Downsides? Well, it’s just a tad veiled in the treble (what do you expect, they are full range speakers!) and there’s the slightest hint of

not – repeat, not – designed to compete pound for pound with a £1,495 separates hi-fi. However, in two respects at least it is far better, as the F80 is a joy to use and to look at. Sonically, I found this half moonshaped Meridian to be like most hi-fi – it sounded mediocre cold, out of the box. Given a good few ‘warm up laps’ however, things really shifted up a gear, and I could hear that the company has put serious work into the audio performance of the F80. It really does sound rather good, which makes it quite unlike any other product of its type I’ve heard so far, even including the likes of the B&O BeoSound One (£850) which is its closest obvious rival. Like all modern Meridian kit, it has a very clean midband, with

sibilance sometimes, when you’ve just switched on. The video isn’t amazing – a bespoke £200 DVD player does better, but it’s still a great feature to have for bedrooms with small TVs, for a spot of casual viewing. My only real criticism is that I’d like it to have been wireless enabled, like the MagicBox Imp Wi-Fi radio – what better way to listen to the music on your laptop? Overall, this is a product that is very hard to argue with. Sure, it is expensive, but its target customers won’t really be too bothered about that. Brilliantly conceived, superbly executed and eminently ‘fit for purpose’, I hope it’s the beginning of many more interesting ‘out of the box’ thoughts from Messrs Boothroyd and Stuart.

"with a decently antenna recorded CD, you get for local radio reception, and dual a genuinely musically connections for external antennae. To give you an idea of the detailed thinking that lies behind the TRACK TESTING enjoyable sound" F80, these are individually assignable Of course, this is

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VERDICT One of the most interesting products to hit the market for years, this is a brilliantly designed and made compact music system.

MERIDIAN F80 £1,495 Meridian Audio +44 (0)1480 445678 www.engineeredtoexcel.com

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so you can use one for AM and the other for cable radio, for example. The speakers are all under digital signal processing control, with three power amplifiers delivering 80W to the two front speakers, plus an integral rear subwoofer. The loudspeakers themselves are special full-range designs, custom-made with powerful neodymium magnets and cones fashioned from magnesium and aluminium alloy. This is all well and good, but for me it’s the display and control interface that are really going to sell the F80, and it is interesting to say the least. The front of the unit has a superb fine-pitch dot matrix ‘organic LED’ display, which gives extremely comprehensive information. For example, in radio mode, it shows the

FOR - design - build - functionality

AGAINST - price

MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

53 19/3/07 14:59:54


SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER!!!! VISIT OUR WEBSITE:

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FEATURE

Evolution Rush Channa Vithana assembles a racy looking digital source-based £3,000 separates system from Creek, Design e and B&W...

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here’s more to audio nirvana than sticking a pile of ‘five star’ reviewed separates in the same room and expecting them to give great sound. This is even more the case at mid-price level, where there’s a dizzying variety of componentry to choose from, and ‘mixing and matching’ becomes a fine art. In light of this, I have been fortunate to assemble a superb and distinctly different CD-based combination for just under £3,000. The latest affordable, fully remote-controlled Creek Evo electronics now feature 12mm thick aluminium front panels, much better casework and stylish - rather than ‘agricultural’ - design in comparison to their predecessors. The Evo amplifier uses a Burr Brown PGA2311 microcontroller controlled stepped-attenuated resistor volume control, operable in eighty 1dB graduations. It is finished externally with a 40mm thick solid rotary knob that along with the precision steps of the encoder is a delight to operate. The claimed power output looks good at 85W into 8 Ohms and 160W into 4. The power supply uses a 250VA transformer with separate windings for analogue and digital sections. Features include four line inputs, one for optional MM or MC boards, separate tape selection and preamp output. The dimensions for the Evo amplifier are 430x80x340mm and 8.6kg weight.

The Evo CD player uses a Phillips VAM1201 laser assembly and a Burr Brown PCM1738 DAC with custom designed software to control the servos and functions. For the power supply, Creek says the Evo CD player uses a single high current C core mains transformer fed from the mains via a custom designed common mode filter. To stabilise and isolate the voltages to the various analogue and digital circuits, the Evo sports eight voltage regulators. Digital and analogue supplies are kept separate and the master clock uses its own supply. The Evo CD has electrical and optical digital outputs. Its dimensions are 430x70x340mm and weight is 6kg. Design e was formed in 1996 and is run by Ian Webster and Hugh Tomlinson. Trained in Automotive Design at the influential Coventry University degree course, where one of his tutors was Simon Saunders,

design. The spherical enclosure, says Design e, is made from polyurethane for a consistent 8mm thickness and superior finishing surfaces. Ian Webster says, “Hugh (Tomlinson’s) research demonstrated that the sphere eliminates a lot of the problems associated with the traditional oblong box loudspeaker housings. This also revealed that damping material wasn’t needed and the quality of sound is enhanced by the clean interior of the housing. The (rear) port has some damping material around it because it is the only long straight piece within the spherical housing. Hugh therefore decided that it would benefit from the material and testing proved him correct”. A finely turned solid oak upstand forms textural contrast, though a matched all-black polyurethane GT3 stand is optional. A 28mm cloth dome tweeter and neodymium

"an attractively different yet tuneful alternative to the mass produced norm..." designer of the radical Aerial Atom, Ian Webster went on to work for Mitsubishi and Ford in car design. Webster’s spherically designed £745 GT3 loudspeakers are actually more conservative compared to his avant-garde floorstanding GT1

magnet are used within a solid oak separate enclosure, above. The mid/ bass driver is a 6.5 inch sandwich cone, while the crossover uses aircored inductors and foil-wrapped capacitors. The review samples were finished in a very attractive metallic

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Podium prefer to leave it to others to talk on their behalf. Hi-Fi World wrote ... ‘ ........... demonstrated a new range of “flat horn” loudspeakers called Podium-1, whose manufacturers say it does not use ribbons, subwoofers or electrostatics. The Podium-1s look vanishingly thin in profile. Approximate retail price is in the £3.000 to £4,000 range and their sound was outstanding – they had a deep and wide presentation to worry Quads at twice the price...’ An owner wrote: ‘The Podiums really do rewrite the rule book of loudspeakers! An ultra-low colouration, full frequency range panel with massive bass extension, which images over most of the listening room and is insensitive to position. Oh - and looks stunning.’ Stereophile wrote: “ ......... with a money-back-if-not-satisfied guarantee; and it delivers a sound with a very generous and convincing sense of scale.” & “ its ability to generate impressive dynamics was both intriguing and very persuasive indeed.” http://www.podiumsound.co.uk Telephone 0845 2297922 ������ ����� ���� ���������� ��� ���� ���������������������� � �� ������ ���� ���

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19/3/07 14:27:39


FEATURE

There are one thousand and one different ways of putting together a £3,000 separates system, but this one certainly stands out as a particularly strong combination, and quirky too! The Creek Evo CD player and integrated amplifier give an excellent, affordable basis, and are easily good enough to be partnered with the more expensive Design e GT3 loudspeakers and B&W PV1 MUSIC Palladian Ensemble, ‘Bach Trio Sonatas’ (1995) Ry Cooder & V.M. Bhatt, ‘A Meeting By The River’ (1993) Metallica, ‘S&M’ (1999) George Michael, ‘Twenty Five’ (2006) subwoofer combination. Whereas the Creeks are businesslike, and are ‘all go and no show’, the loudspeakers form a dramatic centre point to the system. The flawlessly built B&W PV1 sub being an excellent match for the beautifully crafted GT3 speakers – which themselves are much more than just a pretty face (I have used them, without a PV1, in a high-end £9,000 Densen B-400XS/B-200/B-350 CD/pre-power system where their inherently revealing and rhythmical qualities worked superbly). Together, this £3,000 system offers an attracCREEK EVO CD PLAYER £495 tively different yet tuneful alternative CREEK EVO INTEGRATED £495 to the mass-produced norm. Creek Audio +44 (0)1442 260146 www.creekaudio.co.uk

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DESIGN E GT3 £745 Design e +44 (0)1243 377899 www.designe.co.uk

B&W PV1 £950 B&W Ltd. +44 (0)1903 221800 www.bwspeakers.com

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With the system finally right, it was set up carefully, run in and warmed through, and things began to really sing. Proof of this was the fact that the ‘Bach Trio Sonatas’ by Palladian Ensemble had a superbly balanced overall presentation. The music was revealed in a very natural manner, and all the instruments had convincing timbre. The GT3 and PV1 loudspeaker combination showcased their very revealing qualities in opening out the layers presented by the Evo electronics within ‘The Bach Trio Sonatas’. The PV1 then provided discernible body to the lower-mid frequencies, especially with the cello. With ‘A Meeting By The River’ featuring Ry Cooder and V. M. Bhatt, the music was beautifully rendered - the interplay between Cooder on ‘Bottleneck Guitar’ and Bhatt on ‘Mohan Vina’ was stunning, and the interlinked guitar phrasing of these two players was finely revealed. With the powerful and dynamic tabla on ‘Ganges Delta Blues’, the music was deep, bold and expressive in the lower frequencies. Here the precisely phrased intricacies of the two lead instruments were entirely unaffected by the deep bass thrusts of the tabla. Additionally, due to the excellent tempo and rhythmical ability of this system, the delicate fingertip percussion from the tabla was revealed with definition and precision, sounding cohesive rather than dislocated. Moving to hard rock in the shape of ‘S&M’ by Metallica, the system remained clear, expansive and powerful with excellent resolution to the horns and violins

CONCLUSION

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SOUND QUALITY

of the hundred-piece San Francisco Symphony. As ‘The Ecstasy Of Gold’ faded seamlessly into ‘The Call Of Ktulu,’ and the opening guitar parts developed into the thrash-metal section, the transition was superb. Its epic structure was revealed brilliantly, thanks to the system’s excellent instrumental separation and lack of compression. The dance-pop of ‘Outside’ from George Michael’s ‘Twenty Five’ compilation was clear and musical with real scale and bass power. The effortless low frequency grooves were impressively revealed via the GT3 and PV1 partnership, while higher-frequencies from the Evos had finesse and impact. Instrumental separation was excellent, revealing the many layers of funk guitar sounds, multi-tracked vocals and keyboards.

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‘Mocha’, and the other standard finishes are White and Magenta Pearl. If you don’t have stands, a GT3 set is available for £250. The GT3s are dimensioned at 510x300x300mm and weigh approximately 7kg. Claimed measurements are: 8ohm impedance, 50-20kHz frequency response and 87dB sensitivity. With vivid detailing and a lively midband and treble, the system proved a real ear opener – and a very promising one too. However, in my room I found that bass reinforcement was helpful, and this led me to add a £950 B&W PV1 subwoofer. This really made the system gel, showing the superb tempo and rhythms of the Creek Evos off to best effect. The Creek components can never be described as harsh or bright, but when matched to the very revealing GT3 loudspeakers, they really benefited from the sub. The B&W has to be one of the few sub woofers you don’t want to hide. It features a 500W Class D active amplifier inside the flawlessly crafted aluminium enclosure, with the aluminium acting as a heatsink. According to B&W the spherical shape was inspired from, “deep-sea diving bells (PV stands for Pressure Vessel), where their characteristic curved form resists pressure differences on each side of its walls to a much greater degree than flat panels”. The sideways firing dual drive units (diametrically opposed and in phase) were preferred because they, “pressured the cabinet more evenly over a greater frequency range as well as providing higher output levels. This arrangement also has the added advantage of creating a structure that is inherently balanced and does not require additional spikes to create a solid foundation to the floor”. The two 200mm diameter

drivers are made from a concave aluminium structure with a mica cone and an expanded polystyrene core. There is more technical information at, www.bwspeakers. com, including a downloadable white paper. Volume, low-pass filter, bass roll-off alignment, phase and on/off/auto sensing are all adjustable via a neat set of controls at the rear of the cabinet while there is a discreet green/red operation light at the top. The PV1 dimensions are 335.5x289x347mm and 20.5kg weight.

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57 15/3/07 11:36:02


REVIEW

Pre, Eminent David Price auditions a most distinguished sounding high end preamplifier from European Circuit Solutions, the ECS Pre...

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he best preamplifier is no preamplifier, something that hardly makes you predisposed to splashing all your cash on one – you can sometimes live without a preamp, but not a power amp, source or speakers! As far as this particular part of your hi-fi is concerned, it’s very much a case of ‘less is more’. But the simple fact is that anyone who lives with two or more music sources is going to have to submit to buying a switching unit and volume control (i.e. a preamplifier) and as anything is going to degrade sound to an extent, the better it is the less sound degradation you get. In the case of the ECSpre you see here, you’ll need to spend £5,500 – and for that you should expect very little deterioration indeed... Despite the considerable bulk and weight of this product, the key to its design is the short signal path philosophy. Said to comprise only one Single-Ended bipolar amplifying stage in a “novel configuration”, operating without loop negative feedback and with a “super high quality” air gapped

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output transformer, this is not a conventional solid-state preamp. ECS says, “such a circuit would be unthinkable without a massive design effort in respect to power supplies, since the gain topology relies totally on the design of the supply system to fully exploit the potential quality of the amplifier circuit.” Interestingly, the power supply is licensed from ‘NeverConnected’ and “custom tuned by ECS for optimum performance in this application”. NeverConnected employs unique FET commutation circuitry to create a ‘virtual battery’ supply. Further stages of isolating regulation, operating with critical choices for passive components, especially the decoupling capacitors, are featured. The output transformer also enables both balanced and single ended outputs, and via a high quality, remotely controlled relay, user control of absolute phase. Due to the unique nature of the circuit, users can use a chosen output regardless of the type of input they use for various other sources. The ECSpre is a very large,

heavyweight affair, with distinct ‘art deco’ styling which I am afraid wasn’t really to my taste, simply because it imposed itself on my room rather more than I was comfortable with. Still, each unto their own, and ECS are to be congratulated for at least daring to be different. The two tone satin black and brushed metal fascia is dominated by 20mm green LED displays, showing left and right volume levels respectively – again these were far too big in my opinion, although ECS say they are deliberately so, in order to be readable from a distance. Well, I suppose if you can afford £5,500 for a preamplifier then you can afford a vast room to go with it! It’s a well built machine alright, but it would not compare well in its volume control action, for example, with similarly priced Japanese high end, I am sorry to say. The busy rear panel sports six RCA phono inputs and one balanced XLR in, plus two balanced outs and one RCA phono output. The preamplifier has a one hundred step volume control, using a ladder attenuator under micropro-

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REVIEW

cessor control. This is operable by a supplied learning remote, as is balance, input selection, muting and absolute phase. Again, at the price, I would have liked a more swish remote control.

the ECSpre was even better in these regards. Yes’s ‘Owner of a Lonely Heart’ was the first record on the turntable, and I couldn’t help but be impressed by what the MF Audio was doing. Through my current reference

"most high end systems simply won’t be good enough to show this preamp’s superlative transparency..."

system, it threw out a tremendously big, bold and musical sound, with superb dynamics and detailing. Substituting the ECS, and by the end of the first bar I could hear it was something to be reckoned with. When the song kicked in there was a whole extra layer of detailing. Most profound was the reverb on Jon Anderson’s voice; it was there to be heard with the MF, but the ECS showed just how much of it there was, and I could hear his words echoing all around, seemingly with one second delays. It was quite an ear-opener, as the ECS was unpicking extra layers of detail the MF was

SOUND QUALITY Regular readers will know that I have been using the MF Audio Silver Passive Pre in my system for many months now, and it is one which I hold in extremely high regard. At less than half the price of the ECSpre, I feared that in value for money terms at least, this was going to be something of a rout... The ECSpre is without doubt an immensely capable device. Back to back with the MF Audio Silver, it was the first preamplifier I’ve ever heard that was able to tell me what was going wrong with the MF. That said, I have to say that the MF still held its own very well – and extensive A-B tests only left me with increased regard for both products! Given that the MF Audio Silver is one of the most transparent and revealing preamplifiers around, it was something of a surprise to find that www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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the singularly most addicting piece of gear I have ever heard”

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REVIEW Interestingly, on dynamic crescendos simply glossing over. REFERENCE SYSTEM in classical music, the ECS was I have to say I was quite stunned, Michell GyroDec/Michell TecnoArm a/vdH The Frog obviously in more control, letting as normally, comparisons with the Note Products PhoNote phonostage more detail through even when the MF and other preamps produce the MF Audio Passive Magnetic Preamplifier (silver) entire orchestra was pressed into opposite result. I know that the ECS NuForce Reference 9SE monoblock power amplifiers action, but still the MF Audio went is twice the price, and so should World Audio Design K5881 (modded) power amplifier louder and seemed less compressed. be doing all this, but to date the Rotel RB-1092 power amplifier MF has been so capable that such Yamaha NS1000M loudspeakers commonsense rules don’t apply. CONCLUSION Quad ESL 989 loudspeakers In other respects, the ECS had By any standards, this is a sublime Black Rhodium interconnects/cables the legs on the MF, with a substansounding preamplifier, and one this sum), I can see why it is selling tially more expansive soundstage. The that will delight its purchasers. It for this, and I can also appreciate why MF seems to pull the whole recorded is uncannily, remarkably clean and people are buying it. I am awarding it acoustic towards the centre of the precise across the midband and four globes, because I think its bass speakers, whereas the ECS pushed it treble, with an ability to scythe isn’t quite as good as it should be wide to the left and right extremities through music that I’ve never heard against the diminutive MF Audio, but I of the room. Likewise, the stage before. Its sense of physical scale came very close to giving it five – so depth fell back substantially better, and proportion is also excellent, and stunning is it across the mid in terms and within this there was more light quite special in the great preamplifier of detailing and depth perspective. and shade. The sense of physical scheme of things. As a caveat, I actually think most space the ECS achieved was superb. However, nothing is ever simple people’s systems won’t be good Tonally, it was also seriously in high end hi-fi, and I have to say enough to show this superlative impressive. 4hero’s ‘Morning Child’ that it not quite so accomplished in transparency up. My Quad 989 on CD was a joy, with a better lit every department. Rhythmically it electrostatics missed all the extra midband. The MF Audio Silver was a is very adept, especially across the reverb around the vocals on the tad ‘dull’ across the upper mid and midband, but its bass is a fraction Yes track, and it was only when I treble in comparison, and the ECS slower and less well articulated than moved to Yamaha NS1000Ms that it managed to provide a better sense of the MF Audio. It has a more evenflooded out. If you’re running £14,000 space and air without ever sounding handed and less emotional character Apogees, you may well find that only harsh. There was also a real sense of which some will love, and others the ECSpre will do, but back down listening to the instruments’ natural will not – and this is particularly in the real world, the MF Audio will timbre; glassy piano recordings noticeable on dynamics, which aren’t do it all for half the price or less. sounded glassy, warm ones warm. quite as convincingly carried as the Overall then, in some respects, the Again, there was a very slightly wider MF. However, the sheer clarity and best preamplifier I have heard, and a variety to the ECS’s tonal palette. composure on dynamic peaks is total joy. At this level though, whether However, the ECS didn’t have obviously superior, and many will be you should buy it depends entirely it all its own way. The bass on the happy to trade one for the other. on you, your finances, your tastes and MF was more ‘of a piece’; ever so I won’t say the ECSpre is slightly stronger, it was also more cracking value for money at this price the rest of your system. Go find that dealer and decide for yourself! fluid and just seemed to flow more (I don’t think any piece of hi-fi is for convincingly. The ECS was workmanlike and dutiful at the low end, giving a tight and taut bass sound but not really showing any signs of relish. On my vinyl pressing of UB40’s ‘King’, the MF seemed more emotionally VERDICT engaged with the song. Startling soundstaging, clarity and The ECS, despite supplying a composure make it one of the best breathtakingly wide soundstage preamps in the world, but less expresThe main point of note about the ECS Frequency response 6Hz-100kHz and startling insight into the sively musical than some – and finish is that its simple circuit topology offers Separation 99dB lacking at the price. minutiae of the recording, little gain: just x1.2 from the normal Noise (e.i.n.) -90dB simply didn’t seem to be having ECS PRE £5,500 unbalanced phono socket CD input to Distortion 0.003% as much fun. Falling back on ECS amplifiers the phono socket output. The balanced Gain (unbal./bal.) x1.2 / x2.3 the dreaded car analogies, we output gives double this and it’s the Overload 6.5V out +44(0) 208 743 8880 seemed to have a case of a most on offer. Via the balanced input www.ecsamplifiers.co.uk to balanced output gain measured DISTORTION massive Yank muscle car trying FOR just x1.5. This is fine for matching CD, to follow a smaller European - sublime detailing SACD and DVD players to most (but not sportster on twisty roads... all) power amps, which need just 1V in, - breathtaking soundstaging Most obvious was the MF but things get difficult if you use, say, - supreme cohesion Audio’s dynamic alacrity. The a quality phono stage with limited gain. - tonal acuity ECS proved in no way deficient, Otherwise, frequency response was it’s just that on musical peaks, wide and distortion low. Input noise AGAINST the MF seemed to be able was high in absolute terms, but still - absolute dynamic ability to signpost the power and low enough to be inaudible. So the ECS - bass articulation exertion the musicians were measures well, but it has little gain. - imposing styling NK putting in, whereas the ECS - finish took a more relaxed approach.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Progress Report Vinyl replay has come a long way since the 1970s, with new developments seemingly every month. Ortofon's brand new 2M Red and Blue moving magnets are the company's latest cartridge offerings, promising far superior sound to the old 520 range. So how do they compare to a thirty year old classic budget MM, such as Nagaoka's MP11? Noel Keywood couldn't resist finding out...

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t is not everyday that Ortofon announce a new range of budget moving magnet cartridges. In fact, the last time this happened was well over a decade ago, and whilst the brand has been very strong with moving coils, their MMs never really made the same impact. In fact, you need to go as far back as the late nineteen seventies, when the likes of the FF15E and VMS20E were automatic choices for those seeking high quality affordable moving magnets, to find Ortofon leading this particular market. Britain is a tough retail environment for cartridge manufacturers, as local boys Goldring have a small range of easy to use and inexpensive moving magnet cartridges that sound superb - and it is this brand that has caused Ortofon trouble of late. Back in the eighties however, the must-have budget moving was the Nagaoka MP11. This was a really decent little device, but seemed to disappear from view in the nineties. So when we spotted this old name on the Musonic website, we were surprised to say the least. At £30 it is about as cheap as they come - so inexpensive that you might wonder whether it will damage your records - but many moons ago I found Nagaoka cartridges were clever designs and was impressed.

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The surprise realisation that they were still on sale here in the UK meant that a reappraisal was hard to resist, and what better product to put these brand new 'state of the art' Ortofons in context? Was the current MP11 a true unreconstructed oldie I wondered (Denon DL103 style), or had Nagaoka tweaked it here and there to keep up form? Only tests would tell. Nagaoka (and Denon) may well be content to offer today products they were making last century, but others have moved on. The Ortofons are bang up to date in their sound. Their price is a little more serious too, at £60 for the 2M Red and £120 for the 2M Blue. So we're not quite comparing like with like in this little review, so much as taking a close look at what you can get without spending a fortune and asking whether the march of progress actually brings any benefits. As cartridges have now become acceptable second-hand buys on eBay, our letters pages show, this review also identifies what to expect from an oldie. Cartridges are characterful things with their own strengths and drawbacks, as any user of a Decca London Blue can attest. At this budget level I tend to ask myself whether a cartridge masks or reveals

the loveliness of LP played properly - and whether it causes damage or not! And whilst I choose to use an Ortofon Kontrapunkt b moving coil with an Eastern Electric Minimax valve phono stage, I have a lot of time and regard for moving magnet cartridges, being something of a Goldring fan. They may not have the see-through clarity of MCs, nor the delicacy of reproduction, but good ones can be a lot of fun to listen to, yet cost peanuts, as this review shows...

ORTOFON 2M RED AND BLUE Both Ortofon 2M cartridges have neat synthetic bodies, with parallel sides that facilitate accurate alignment in the headshell. The area behind the stylus is sculpted away. They are compact designs that will physically fit any headshell easily, and the weight is right too, at 6.5gms being a value any arm can balance out. The stylus assembly has a removable cover, that removes easily when you know how; it takes a little study. As in any moving magnet design, the stylus is removable to enable easy replacement. Ortofon suggest you remove the stylus assembly before fitting the cartridge, but the cover is usually sufficient if you have an arm with a removable headshell and steady hands. Another useful

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REVIEW

SOUND QUALITY Listening to this little group, there was no doubt which were the new 'cutting edge' cartridges, and which was the nineteen seventies classic. The difference in presentation was marked, and throws what Ortofon are trying to do with the new 2M series into sharp relief. The 2M Blue is a cartridge that reveals what’s on a disc with a ruthlessly forensic approach that is a world away from the classic Nagaoka, or most other cartridges if it comes to that. This £120 moving magnet gave me Tracey Chapman in vivid detail, close in front of me

singing 'Talking ‘Bout a Revolution.' There VERDICT was seemingly 2M RED little I could not Ultra modern design that brings new hear of this levels of detail to the price, but lacks richness that some crave. performance. Bass was tightly FOR controlled - ease of fitment and there was - tracking plenty of timbral - detail character to be heard within AGAINST instruments, instead - lacking in richness of the generous but not VERDICT especially informative bass 2M BLUE of the Nagaoka. As usual I felt Exceptional insight and smoothness the cartridge worked well in the allied to fine tracking makes this a great Rega RB250 arm we use for budget buy for those seeking a modern sound. composed and tightly ordered sound designs, its rigid tube ensuring the FOR I've heard from any moving magnet 2M Blue gave good stereo across the - ease of fitment cartridge. lower midband, as well as firm bass. - tracking So Ortofon's new 2M Blue With Phil Collins ‘Hello I Must be - superb insight is very much a modern day, high Going’ album there was a brightness resolution cartridge, especially to backing horns that ensured they AGAINST suitable for modern recordings. It cut through the mix with a vigour - lacks warmth stands in stark contrast to a golden that you will not hear elsewhere at oldie like the Nagaoka MP11, which this price, if with some lightness of ORTOFON 2M RED £60 would gloss over the poor balance of body about them. Not surprisingly ORTOFON 2M BLUE £120 the Waterboys album when the Blue cymbals had a ringing presence too. Distributed by Henley Designs tells it like it is. The MP11 is not a Here I get to an interesting caveat +44 (0)1235 511166 revealing cartridge - quite the reverse with this cartridge: it possesses little www.henleydesigns.co.uk ability to gloss over mediocre recordings. With a modern cut like The Scissor Tracking ability (300Hz) A notable feature of the new Ortofon Sisters 'I Don't Feel Like lateral 80µm 2M Moving Magnet cartridges is a Dancin', from an album vertical 45µm frequency response that tilts slowly that spins at 45rpm no lateral (1kHz) 20/23cms/sec. upward as frequency rises. I have less, I got the freshest never seen such a trend before in any delivery I've ever heard, Distortion (45µm) Red/Blue cartridge. It suggests they will sound short of a moving coil. lateral 1.4/0.8% forward and detailed, certainly lacking This track had a clarity 5.4/5% the traditional warmth of MMs. The £60 vertical Output (5cms/sec rms) 7mV budget Red has a little less upper treble in its vocals and a speed than the Blue, so the latter will be a tad to its bass that defies more incisive and revealing. price rivals, but whilst Midband tracking was much the FREQUENCY RESPONSE the 2M Blue's balance same with both, the top torture track suits such material, it's 2M RED being negotiated, but only just, with less flattering with run a little mistracking on one channel. of the mill oldies that In the midband, the Blue has a more are less than perfect. obvious advantage, due to the lower tip For example, I spun The mass of its stylus assembly, where a Waterboys 'Preparing nude diamond is used. Vertical tracking angle was high with both, which to Fly', from their 1993 raised vertical modulation distortion to album 'Dream Harder' 5%. The Blue was a little better here - not a paragon of good measuring exactly 30 degrees against Red - Outer grooves sound quality, granted 33 of the Red. Output was high from White - Inner grooves - and it sounded light both models, measuring 7mV at 5cms/ in its bass, although sec rms. FREQUENCY RESPONSE extremely well resolved Expect a forward, highly detailed in its vocals. Moving 2M BLUE sound from these cartridges, possibly to 45rpm singles with some brightness. They measure with accentuated well, following modern trends toward a bright balance that delivers detail and bass, such as the insight. NK Goldfrapp 'Ooh

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feature is that the 2M bodies have tapped holes for fixing screws, eliminating the need for fiddling with small spanners and nuts, and making fitment easier. The budget Red has an elliptical stylus mounted on a rondel to distance the stylus cantilever from the record surface so that fluff and rubbish don’t collect easily, to cause mistracking. The more expensive Blue is for those who can afford an LP cleaner and are likely to use it as well! The stylus is 'nude', meaning it is bonded naked to the cantilever tube. The makes the cartridge more sensitive to dust on discs, but it isn’t a problem if they are given a quick wipe before use. The benefit is lower tip mass and better tracking, although the Blue isn’t enormously better than the Red in this respect. The most significant feature of these new cartridges was revealed by measurement: frequency response is such that they will possess none of the warmth in their sound of old designs. As is common, the less expensive model, the Red, has been engineered for a less bright and more forgiving sound than the more expensive Blue, but by any standard do not expect either to sound warm. You can expect the Blue to have better resolved treble too, from a more sophisticated stylus profile.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

La La', another modern pressing with good recording and cutting quality, and the Blue delivered the most

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REVIEW LPs if you are cash-strapped, as it will never mistrack. I ought to point out though, that if you play old LPs with a new cartridge like this you may well hear the damage imprinted into the groove walls by the mistracking of previous cartridges.

SOUND QUALITY

NAGAOKA MP11 One look at the MP11’s bodywork is enough to convince any potential buyer that this little cartridge is from the functional design school and not a candidate for any Museum of Modern Art. Never mind though, as those boxy parallel sides are just what is wanted for accurate alignment in an arm’s headshell. Skew in the headshell raises distortion considerably, from around 1% up to 2% or more, so the MP11’s boxiness is no bad thing. Weighing in at 6.8gms it is also a perfect match for the balancing system of every arm, as all can cope with 6-10gms. At the price the Nagaoka’s MP11 comes in simple packaging by Shure standards, but this is of little consequence in itself, as it’s the cartridge that matters and here Nagaoka, I found, have maintained standards. Tests showed that at the recommended tracking force of 2gms - very close to Goldring and Ortofon’s use of 1.8gms, note - the MP11 sailed through all tracking tests with an ease that few can match at any price. Consequently, the MP11 is a fine choice for preserving valuable

As we've shown, the Nagaoka MP11 is no match for either of the Ortofon 2M moving magnets, but it still sounds as lovely as ever. It is truly romantic sounding device, giving a sepia-tinted, soft outlined picture rather than an in-your-face presentation, 2007-stylee. The class of its act is very apparent in some areas. It comes across as superbly relaxed and in control, a real effortless delivery CONCLUSION that demands a visit to the port I really liked the sound of this cabinet and perhaps ignition of a big, cartridge. It was blissfully smooth, VERDICT £ fat cigar (I don’t touch either, but broad staged and dynamically Budget classic with fantastic tracking and cuddly, warm sound. A starter somehow it all seems appropriate) powerful. You don't get high levels cartridge that cannot be beaten. as you relax to listen to your record of insight or detail, but all the same for £30 there's plenty of enjoyment collection. NAGAOKA MP11 £30 to be had. In summary then, the There’s no edginess or insecurity Musonic (UK) Ltd. Nagoaka MP11 proved a dramatic to be heard here, largely as a result +44 (0)208 950 5151 counterpoint to the new Ortofon of its fabulous tracking ability and www.musonic.co.uk 2Ms - residing at opposite ends of that rolled off treble, at least, through FOR the scale. One is warm, fluffy and an Eastern Electric Minimax valve - confident, relaxed sound romantic, the others are forensically phono stage with no additional - superb tracking revealing and intensely communicapacitive loading applied. In an SME - low price M2-10 arm there was oodles of bass cative. One is already a classic, while and its quality wasn’t too bad. I might the other two deserve to be so in AGAINST say slightly fulsome and rounded, thirty years time. - lacks insight but not as gloopy as I have heard. I suspect the Japanese like large bass though, as the MP11 The MP11 has amazing tracking ability reminds me a little of for a budget cartridge: it cleared all test Tracking force 2gms the Denon here. Stereo tracks with ease, even torture tracks Weight 6.8gms few cartridges can manage, with a images were firm and Vertical tracking angle >30degrees secure and undistorted performance stably positioned on Frequency response 20Hz - 20kHz at 2gms downforce in an SME M2-10! a stage that was wide. Channel separation 32dB It will sound confident and relaxed However, the warmth of Tracking ability (300Hz) even on loud vocal passages. This will the sound was apparent lateral 90µm be helped by a warmth in its sound vertical 45µm and there was no great imposed by the falling treble due to lateral (1kHz) 25cms/sec. focus to images, just generator losses, as our frequency Distortion (45µm) believable solidity. Nor response graph (red trace) shows. lateral 0.85% was there any great Here, the MP11 betrays its age; modern vertical 1.3% detail in the treble to be MMs like Goldrings don’t suffer this Output (5cms/sec rms) 5.4mV anymore. However, with 400pF loading, heard. the frequency response measured ruler Some might say the MP11 lacks real pace, but flat (green trace), so the MP11 can be tweaked to become unusually accurate FREQUENCY RESPONSE what you lose on the in its basic tonal balance. swings you simply get A vertical tracking angle of exactly back on the roundabouts 22degrees resulted in unusually low with this design. It distortion on vertical modulation (left is creamy smooth and right images), making this a low sounding, admittedly a distortion cartridge overall. Output was bit opaque by modern high at 5.4mV and channel separation standards, totally relaxing also high at 33dB. The MP11 measures exceptionally and supremely confident. Red - Outer grooves It also clean and dynamic well. It is a superb cartridge at the White - Inner grooves price and will give a fine sound if in a most unchallenging Green - Outer grooves + 400pF properly loaded. NK way. Much like Shure’s

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in fact and shows its age in this company. The new Ortofons really do show how vinyl has moved on, in recording quality as well as replay ability. The inexpensive Red was a very interesting proposition at its low price. It lacks the top end bite, but also top end detail of the Blue's stylus, yet it still comes over as clear and open in its sound, with a fine tone on good material. Surprisingly, it also has more powerful low bass, making it muscular and weighty on well recorded discs. In a nutshell then, the new Ortofon 2M Blue and Red moving magnet cartridges offer a thoroughly modern sound that suits today's albums. Both are highly revealing and an engaging listen that is nothing other than very impressive at the price.

similarly long-in-the-tooth M97xE the smooth sophistication of the sound is a treat, if not for the critical of ear. This is one to go with the carpet slippers. As such it is £30 well spent insofar as you will relax and enjoy what you hear, although it is a long way off what is possible from a £120 Goldring quite frankly, and in a different world to the analytical Ortofons. Run through a solid-state Trichord Diablo phono stage with 400pF loading applied internally across the input sockets the MP11 predictably sounded brighter, but still opaque and less smooth. Some may prefer it but the MP11 doesn't become a Koetsu. Those with a soldering iron and a few 400pF capacitors may like to try this all the same.

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Black Run Loaded up with high tech materials, the German Isophon Cassiano loudspeakers feature some very innovative technology. Adam Smith listens in.

I

sophon is a name that will be familiar to some, as makers of automotive loudspeaker drive units. However, this part of the company is under the French electronics giant, Thomson, who owns the original trademarks and designs but no longer manufactures under this name. The range of highend loudspeakers that include the Cassiano are the brainchild of Dr. Roland Gauder of Acoustic Consulting, an independent company that designs a variety of high-end electronics, turntables and loudspeakers. Dr. Gauder commenced his career in Berlin with Isophon in 1989, and was granted permission to market under the Isophon brand name when the company was split up in 1997. All models in the current Isophon range are manufactured in Acoustic Consulting's facility and custom finishes made to customer's requirements can be accommodated without any problems. Indeed the company's website boasts of over 200 finishes available on the Cortina, Corvara and Cassiano models, so there should be something in the portfolio to please everyone! The Cassianos, and their larger brothers, the Arabbas, mark a new departure in design, however, as they make use of ceramic-coned bass and midrange drivers sourced from Theil in Germany. The Arabba comes with a diamond dome tweeter as standard, whilst the Cassiano can be specified with either a diamond or ceramic type - we are testing the diamond version here, but the ceramic version will save you around £4,000. Incidentally, the Arabba was awarded the coveted "Best Sound in Show" award for the January 2007 CES exhibition, so its younger brother has a lot to live up to. Named after the San Cassiano ski resort in the southern Tyrol, the Cassiano is an attractively styled loudspeaker with a sleek and well profiled cabinet that does go some way to disguising its size. With dimensions of approximately 110 x 21 x 41cm (H x W x D) and each 'speaker weighing in at 30kg, they are not diminutive shrinking violets by any means. This is aided by the sandwich construction of the cabinet which features a layer of damping sand in between, along with extensive internal bracing. The gloss black finish of our review samples commands a £400 premium but is utterly fabulous and Isophon provide no less than a can of Steinway polish to keep them shiny. One single set of WBT terminals are fitted to the Cassianos and they also have jumper links to set lower bass equalisation to flat, +1.5dB or -1.5dB in order to optimise performance in various positions in the room. All of these items are fitted to the bottom surface

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of the loudspeakers, which further adds to their clean lines. Driver complement consists of two seven inch (175mm) ceramic bass drivers, one seven inch ceramic midrange and the 0.75in (19mm) tweeter. These are connected together using a crossover that is unique in offering filter slopes of no less than 50dB per octave - fourth order slopes of 24dB per octave are considered steep in the audio world and so these are positively precipitous! Isophon say that the use of a low

string having superbly defined leading edges and a beautifully judged and natural decay. In fact, all instruments sounded astonishingly real. The rare and expensive materials used in the midrange and tweeter also prove their worth with every track played. Vocalists have sumptuous detail and atmosphere to their performances, with each intake of breath between lines almost uncanny. The Cassianos have a rare ability to take those

"for realism, spatial abilities and soundstaging, these are amongst the best non-electrostatic loudspeakers I have encountered" order crossover leads to overlap of driver output over a wide frequency band, giving rise to poor separation. On the other hand, steep crossover slopes have in the past been accused of robbing music of its dynamics and emotion, however, Isophon assure us this is not the case with the Cassianos. In order to confirm this, the Cassianos were duly inserted into our test system of Quad QC24 and II-Forty amplifiers, a Cambridge Azur 840C CD player and an Eastern Electric Minimax phono stage. Vinyl sources included our Pioneer PLC590/SME M2-10 and the Slatedeck Garrard 401/SME 312.

SOUND QUALITY 'Big' is not only the name of a 1988 Tom Hanks film, but also the word that kept popping into my head during my time auditioning the Cassianos. Whilst it can also be used to describe their height (and price tag...) it is most aptly applied to the soundstage that they generate - make no mistake about it, for realism, spatial abilities and soundstaging, these are amongst the best nonelectrostatic loudspeakers I have encountered. No matter what music I played, I could shut my eyes and be transported straight to the concert hall, studio or even dance tent where it was recorded. The Isophons' bass is immensely deep and powerful, yet exhibits pace, fluidity and a lightness of touch when required that belies their dimensions. Stringed bass instruments, whether acoustic or electric had real depth and emotion, with each plucked

VERDICT Magnificent loudspeakers that possess qualities of imaging, scale and dynamics that few others can match.

Isophon Cassianos then you are effects that often lurk somewhere ISOPHON CASSIANO £12,900 unlikely to be disappointed. They in the background of music and (as tested) have a formidable combination of bring them right up to augment the Sounds4Enjoyment dynamics, control and emotion that main events of a track. Until you +44 (0) 23 9271 7628 makes any music style an eye-opening hear your music collection through experience. loudspeakers like this, I suspect you www.isophon.de They incorporate some very will not be aware of what you are FOR innovative technologies and exotic missing. - Immense scale and soundmaterials, and these sum to give a The Isophons also have immense stage superlative result. From a purely dynamic abilities. They do not miss - Effortless dynamics personal point of view, I find myself anything even at low volumes, but - Build quality needing to rearrange my own 'all during listening I found myself inching time favourite loudspeakers' top ten, the volume control higher and AGAINST as I now have a new entry to fit in higher to enjoy their sheer power - Not the easiest of loads to there... and control - there was never any drive sense of compression or strain. Whilst the Quad II-Forty amplifiers drove them beautifully, least 60-70W that operates into loads Frequency response of the Cassianos is I did occasionally gain as low as 2 Ohms will be required to commendably smooth and even across the impression that the get the best from the Cassianos. AS their entire bandwidth, with no major Cassianos almost had peaks, dips or anomalies to speak a sense of 'is that all of. Treble starts to roll down gently you've got?' about them, FREQUENCY RESPONSE from around 15kHz, meaning that the and more power would Cassianos will not be harsh. not go amiss. Whilst Bass output is very good. With they do not specifically the crossover jumpers set to 0dB, the need a powerhouse to main drivers operate down to 60Hz, augmented by the downward-firing drive them, they really port, which operates at around 40Hz. blossom as the watt These aspects should confer upon the count rises. Cassianos a good, weighty, yet even character Green - driver output CONCLUSION Sensitivity is good at 87dB but Red - port output Whichever way you measured impedance shows that the look at it, nearly Cassianos will be something of a tricky IMPEDANCE £13,000 is a lot of load for many amplifiers. Electrically money to spend on a well damped, they have an average pair of loudspeakers and measured value of 4.7 Ohms, which tallies well with the manufacturer's 4 it is not unreasonable Ohm rating. However, the Cassianos dip to expect superlative down to a minimum of around 2 Ohms performance for at low frequencies - just where most this sort of outlay. power is generally required. Fortunately if your Consequently an amplifier of at purchase happens to be

)

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REVIEW

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

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REVIEW

Jailhouse Rock

All the way from Memphis come the Eggleston Works Isabel loudspeakers. Adam Smith dons his blue suede shoes and takes a listen.

W

hen thinking of great names from Tennessee, Elvis Presley and Graceland would immediately spring to mind, possibly closely followed by Jack Daniels. I suspect, however, that loudspeaker manufacturers would not be high on the list for many of us here in the UK, but this could well be ripe for change. Since 1992, Eggleston Works have been manufacturing loudspeakers, and are rightly proud that their factory in downtown Memphis is very close to "the birthplace of Blues and Rock 'n' Roll". Each loudspeaker is built almost entirely by hand, making use of top quality materials, assembled with great care and attention to detail. As an example, each cabinet is constructed using two MDF panels, each of which is five-eighths of an inch thick and glued together with viscoelastic damping material. All loudspeakers are then handfinished in an eight hour process that uses over a dozen different specialised polishing and finishing tools. As if this was not enough, the finishing touch is a granite slab carefully aligned and affixed to each side panel. This confers superb rigidity to the cabinet and is aimed to virtually eliminating cabinet colouration. With a range currently consisting of eight loudspeakers and stretching up to the impressive 'Ivy', weighing in at no less than 360kg and sporting a rather astonishing twenty three drive units (only eight of which are visible!), Eggleston Works can offer a comprehensive selection of models to suit virtually all pockets and rooms. However, our pockets are quite shallow here at Hi-Fi World, so we elected to listen to the babies of the range, the Isabels. With a price tag of £2,299 these are compact

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standmounting loudspeakers that include matching bases in their price. A two way design, the Isabels make use of Eggleston Works' universal six inch (150mm) bass/ midrange driver that features a polypropylene cone, double magnet motor unit and a three inch (75mm) voice coil for good power handling and reduced distortion Most unusually, it is run full-range with no crossover, which requires a very careful design in order that the cone does not become aurally offensive when it enters its breakup region (which, of course, a crossover filters out). This is mated to a one inch (25mm) soft dome Dynaudio Esotar tweeter, filtered via a simple hard-wired crossover. A single set of input terminals are provided and, thanks in no small part to those granite side panels, the Isabels weigh a considerable 25kg. Connected up to our test system that includes Quad QC24 and II-Forty amplifiers, a Cambridge Azur 840C CD player and an Eastern Electric Minimax phono stage fed by vinyl sources including our Pioneer PLC-590/SME M2-10 and

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 11:16:16


REVIEW free from any unpleasant 'zing' is to ensure that it is supported well but had good realism and body to on a sturdy and acoustically inert them. Once again the clean nature stand. Unfortunately things did not of the midband came to the fore get off to a promising start with the and worked well with the higher Isabels as their bass was boxy frequencies to ensure that all details with a noticeably 'honky' were retrieved and presented well. nature. Kevin Akam from Steve Earle's 'Copperhead Signature Audio advised Road' recording can become quite that mass loading the harsh and muddled through some bases was a good idea, loudspeakers but I was pleased to which did indeed improve hear that the Isabels did not fall into things. However, for this trap, remaining composed and review purposes I set the unflustered throughout the CD. On 'speakers up on a pair of a couple of occasions it would have conventional 60cm Sound been nice if they had let rip a little Organisation stands and more but, on the whole, their innate this elicited the best sense of polish and precision is results from them. enjoyable. As suspected from the measurements taken [See MEASURED CONCLUSION PERFORMANCE] the The Eggleston Works Isabels have a bass from the Isabel very poised nature and they excel on loudspeakers was not acoustic and atmospheric music. They the deepest around, also seemed to suit vinyl very well, even given their cabinet thanks to their expansive soundstage. VERDICT size. Fortunately what The only area in which they was there was tight, seem to hold back somewhat is when Stylish and well designed loudspeakers with an impressive soundstage. The punchy and tuneful, and the pace of the music steps up a gear Isabels perform consistently with a wide they never sounded or two, as they are not the 'rockiest' variety of music. lightweight. This speakers around, despite those EGGLESTON WORKS integrated well into granite sides! That said, they never ISABEL £2,299 the higher frequencies became jumbled or congested, as I Distributed by Signature Audio and it was here that have heard some loudspeakers do, +44(0) 208 480 3333 the granite side panels they just never seemed to dig totally www.egglestonworks.com paid dividends as the into the heart of the rhythm. FOR midrange was very clean Ultimately, however, the Isabels - Build quality and finish and detailed with no are a well considered design that - Excellent soundstaging boxy colouration. have a very enjoyable sound. Their - Well balanced performance The soundstage set accomplished and sophisticated up by the Isabels was performance speaks volumes for AGAINST surprisingly capacious the technology used in their cabinet - A little polite at times and they offered a construction and driver technology, - Perform better on stands sense of scale that one especially given the crossover-less other than those supplied generally only experiences nature of the main drive unit. with larger loudspeakers. Listening to The Eggleston Works Isabel well with around 40-50W. Emmylou loudspeakers have a slightly uneven AS Harris's nature to their output but not in areas 'Jerusalem that cause concern. The lift in midrange FREQUENCY RESPONSE Tomorrow', output from 600Hz to 1kHz will add her vocals had presence and details to vocals, but the a rich fluidity flat response just above this should minimise any harshness in this area. to them and Treble output rises steadily above she was sat 10kHz which will add detail and sparkle perfectly to the sound. centre stage, Bass output starts to roll off at with the 150Hz and the port is tuned to around accompanying Green - driver output 100Hz, meaning that earth-shattering double bass Red - port output bass will not be on the agenda. That thrumming said, the port is rear-mounted and so IMPEDANCE gently away will enable fine tuning via judicious positioning. behind her. Measured sensitivity was fine for Treble was very a small loudspeaker at 85dB and the sweet and clean, yet impedance curve shows a smooth well detailed, the rise and well damped response. Average in output towards impedance is 9.1 Ohms, dipping to a 20kHz clearly helping minimum of 7 Ohms. The Isabels will here. Percussive effects not be difficult to drive and should work such as cymbals were

)

MEASURED PERFORMANCE

the Slatedeck Garrard 401/SME 312, I was ready to rock.

SOUND QUALITY One of the vital aspects of obtaining good sound from a small loudspeaker

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8/3/07 14:00:04


OPINION

"subwoofers can work very well when carefully operated"

T

adam smith

he annual Bristol Hi-Fi Show took place on the weekend of the 23rd to 25th February and, as can be seen from our show report on page 90, there was some very nice equipment there, making some impressive sounds. I have been attending this show since the late 1980s when I first graciously allowed my father to chauffeur me there for the day and I have only missed one or two since then. It was interesting to be working the show from the 'other side of the counter' as it were, for the first time and it was nice to meet so many keen Hi-Fi World readers in person. From my new perspective, it appears that attendees cover a wide spectrum. For every few people who wander round with wide eyes and a childish enthusiasm for the shiny things on display, there is a healthy cynic casting a Roger Moore-style raised eyebrow over things. I am also informed by one or two manufacturers that there are a few punters whose sole purpose for visiting seems to be to tell them where they are going wrong in their design/marketing/ sound quality, but I like to think that none of our fine readers fall into this bracket! From my own perspective, I have always enjoyed the show and listening to the equipment on demonstration. There are inevitably both good and bad demonstrations to hear, but I cannot help noticing what appears to be a depressing trend developing; namely the curse of bad subwoofer bass. Since the first tentative steps taken by multi-channel surround sound setups in the early days of Dolby Surround, the subwoofer has been an integral part of a multi channel system. In the early days, quite a few were little more than big drivers in floppy boxes that rumbled your sofa suitably during explosions, but there

has been an increasing drive towards more competent units in recent years. The growth of the home cinema section of the industry has seen many people throw out their old music centres, midi systems and the like, and replace them by one or two boxes that will handle multi-channel DVDs as well as good old fashioned stereo CDs, DAB and FM radio. As a consequence, the set of surround sound 'speakers now has to be of sufficient quality to cope with two channel music and the subwoofer has moved up greatly in importance from its main role as sofa-shaker. So, it is now possible to wander round a show such as Bristol Sound and Vision and listen to glorious stereo sound from these all-singing and alldancing surround systems, correct? Well...it would appear not. This is now the second year running that I have been thoroughly depressed by the wallowy, soggy, limp and occasionally downright boomy bass coming from a great deal of the rooms. I have spent time both designing and listening to subwoofers and I know there are some good ones out there, but I am not surprised that a great number of the hi-fi fraternity frown upon them judging by many at Bristol this year. Leaving aside the designs themselves, a great deal of the problem is in the integration of the sub to the main loudspeakers and its positioning. I remember an episode of Channel 5's "Gadget Show" a year or so back that was testing surround sound systems of various price levels.The thing that depressed me the most was the presenter saying that the position of the rear 'speakers is vital in such a system and insinuating that the subwoofer could be dumped virtually wherever you like. I personally feel he put these two precisely the wrong way round and it is no wonder that the portion of the general public who are less hi-fi aware think that real bass involves boom, thump and not much else.

The rear loudspeakers in such a setup carry comparatively little information, yet the subwoofer carries the signal that underpins ALL of the other channels, be there another four, five or even six. Things become even more critical in stereo where the subwoofer not only has to provide suitable low frequency accompaniment to the stereo 'speakers but needs to effectively 'disappear' whilst doing so. If the bass is wrong, then there is a reasonable chance that a fair chunk of the frequency range will be wrong. Now at this point many people will rightly point out that a hotel bedroom is hardly an ideal location for a hi-fi or surround sound system setup and I would agree up to a point. However if this were the absolute truth then there surely every single system at such a show would sound bad, which is simply not the case. It seems to me that some dealers (and even the odd manufacturer...) could do with a lesson in subwoofer setup and integration as they should be - like children - seen and not heard! If you can sit in a demonstration, shut your eyes and tell which direction the bass is coming from, then the subwoofer is not doing its job properly, and I can recall only two rooms at the 2006 Bristol show where I heard spot-on integration - a rather saddening statistic. Contrary to what some die-hard audiophiles would have you believe, subwoofers can work very well when carefully operated and are more than just glorified explosion makers. In many ways they can be like vinyl, in that the more time and care is taken with their setup, the more they will reward. It is a pity that comparatively few users have the inclination to explore their abilities and settle for copious quantities of boom and thud. Mind you, quite a few appear to enjoy this, so perhaps I should stop interfering...

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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OPINION

"we could see a genuine revolution in wireless loudspeakers..."

dominic todd

I

f ever there was a divisive issue with hi-fi separates, it would be cables. Some believe they make a huge difference, others none whatsoever. Most of us take the middle ground and realise that wires help fine tune a system and can make a discernible difference, but not to the extent that their value should exceed the cost of the original hardware – as, unsurprisingly, advocated by some cable manufacturers... Yet there’s another issue here, and that’s that some people don’t like the idea of wires at all. When I worked at the ‘coal face’ in hi-fi retail, the number of system sales I saw fall through because of disapproval from the significant other was... significant. Disapproval came, as many of you will know, not from the sound of a system but its size, aesthetics, colour and, yes, the tangle of wires involved. To maintain cohabitation then, a compromise often has to be struck. So it was with interest that I viewed the latest selection of wireless products at the recent Bristol hi-fi show. Wireless speakers aren’t a new phenomenon, but I noticed a more serious presence this year than ever before. Before Wi-Fi, wireless speakers used infrared or radio frequencies and were, let’s face it, pretty awful sounding. The advent of Wi-Fi has made a big difference, and a few years ago we began to see home cinema system designs launched. Rather than awful, the sound quality was now just about tolerable. Whilst these loudspeakers were a long way from what would be deemed acceptable by an audiophile, by comparison with their peers, they weren’t all that bad. Now we have the audiophile wireless loudspeaker - or at least that’s what the manufacturers claim. Whilst at Bristol I came across two

floorstanders that offered wireless connections. The eagerly awaited Canton CD3500s sign in at £2,000 a pair. This is hardly budget territory, and puts them straight up against the likes of the hugely impressive (wired) Yamaha Soavos. So how did they sound? Well, not too bad actually. Bass was strong and there were decent levels of transparency. The only problem with these German boxes is that they use aluminium treble, midrange and bass units with, erm, an aluminium cabinet and base plinth. As you can imagine the sound quality is rather metallic at the best of times, and certainly on the bright side of neutral. In conclusion, the CD3500s sound like a decent pair of £500 floorstanders, but are not a true rival for the best wired rivals at this price. Offering a completely different sonic perspective were the intriguing Free loudspeakers. Like the Cantons, these compact floorstanders offer built-in digital amplification, thereby negating the need for further amplification. Finished in satin white or black, it’s not hard to see the Apple market as a major potential customer. Yet, unlike the vast majority of the Apple coat-tailers, these speakers showed considerable audiophile potential. Designed to work with the Apple Airport Express or Sonos ZP80, the Free ‘speakers are actually built by the highly respected PMC. With a single, cast magnesium chassis bass cone and soft dome tweeter, the sound quality was a million miles away from the Cantons. Whilst not quite as explicit, it was smooth, harmonious and exceptionally well integrated. The bass couldn’t match the Soavo, but considering the smaller size, this is no great surprise. Considering the limitations of wireless transmission, they actually sounded quite good.

Granted, a typical wired speaker at £2,000 would still sound better, but the Frees certainly more than hinted at the technology’s potential. Consider the cost saving from not having to buy an amplifier, loudspeaker and interconnect cables, and I could see how these will appeal to a small, but significant, section of the hi-fi market. Now we come to the major downside, Of course, although both these designs purport to be wireless, they are in fact anything but. Both use active amplification and therefore require mains cables to each box. The Frees have the power socket underneath so that if one was to rewire from scratch one could place a mains socket beneath each box, thereby giving the effect of a totally detangled speaker. Yet, this could be a costly solution, and one that many wouldn’t be prepared to stretch to. In short, it’s not the sound quality limitations - which are improving all the time - which limits the appeal of wireless loudspeakers, but the mains cables. Late last year the boffins at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced that they were working on a wireless power transmission system. At the moment the system is still at the theoretical stage and many believe they are a long way from actually implementing the technology. Were this to ever get off the ground, we could see a genuine revolution in wireless loudspeakers, much as we did with Digital cordless phones a few years ago. Could this be the end of the road for the traditional amplifier and loudspeaker cable? Well, I think we’re a long way off that yet, but the advent of the decent sounding, entirely wire-free loudspeaker is now less of a figure of science fiction than ever before. Watch this space...

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Lucy just couldn’t understand Tom’s sudden lack of interest in an early night

Superb Hi-Fi ...... Just a little more desirable than the norm

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5/2/07 3:49:59 pm


OPINION

"why limit ourselves by the original pressing, which is not always great to begin with?"

paul rigby

F

or fans of audiophile vinyl records, there exists a rift. It may be not dramatic and has yet to result in violence, but it’s still very much there. On one side of the fence are those music fans who believe that an old recording, if reissued in an audiophile wrapping, should retain the original sound, essence and atmosphere. That means the original processing and effects – EQ settings, compression and the like - that were laid upon the production masters to form the post-production or mix master that became the final sound the public heard at the time via their transistor radios and Dansette record players. What these fans want is, in effect, a new original. Almost as if they were stepping back in time and buying the original record when it was released in 1963, or whenever. One such advocate of this philosophy is Bob Irwin, MD for the audiophile record label Sundazed, based in the USA. He loves his original mono versions of the Byrds, reissued in 2005, “Each record offers a unique listening experience in mono. I feel as though we perfectly captured the feel, warmth and texture of the original mono Columbia 1A pressings of these records. Also, the artwork closely mirrors the original album covers - that, too, is a part of the equation that we take very seriously.” That’s fine, if you like that sort of thing. The problem is, we live in the twenty first century and we can do wonderful things with music now that they could not do back in the 1960s. Audiophile record label, Speakers Corner’ MD, Kai Seemann, based in Germany, sits on the opposite side of the fence. In fact, when he is about to

remaster an old original, unlike many other labels, he refuses to introduce an original copy of the record into the studio to act as a reference. A move I am wholly in favour of - and this is why... “I try to avoid the A-B comparison with an original album because the studio engineers may want to copy what the original mastering engineer had done in the past – consciously or subconsciously. I want my mastering engineers to make the best out of the original master with their currently available equipment. I don’t want to make a copy of the original. Maybe the original was good – maybe not. Sometimes it was equalised very heavily to accommodate the turntables of the time but that’s not what I want. I want the engineers to listen to the tapes and make the very best of it for today’s turntables.” To labour the point, it was as if Wes Montgomery and Jimmie Smith, whose ‘Dynamic Duo’ vinyl LP I review in the audiophile vinyl column in this issue, had recorded their album this year and took their master to the top US-based mastering engineers, Acoustech, who are now using only their judgement and latest equipment, nothing else, to master the album. “This is a record which is not dramatically rare – you can buy it for $20-$30 on eBay,” added Seemann. “What sense would it make to produce a new reissue that sounds exactly the same as the original? We can bring something new to it, why shouldn’t we do that? If you want the original then it is not that difficult to find an original in good condition. If you want to listen to the original sound then that’s fine, do it.” The Speakers Corner philosophy

is that, in the 1960s, if the engineers could have mastered records with the technology that we have now, both the original and reissue would sound the same. The artists would have backed them up 100% too. Of course, it is not always possible to do that because original masters are not always available or are damaged or worn in some way but, if we can do better, why not do better? Why limit ourselves by the original pressing which is not always great to begin with? Take the current generation of cutting lathes, for example. The models cutting engineers use today were first built during the 1980s, so they’re not exactly current technology. However, the better lathes, Neumanns for example, are mechanically very rigid, much more rigid than anything available in the 1960s. This means you can introduce much higher sound levels and more dynamics, “As it was,” said Seemann, “in the sixties, the standard of recording was much higher than the standard of reproducing so the energy and information was already in the tape but they were not able to reproduce records properly. In a lot of cases they made very large compromises to get this energy on the record without the turntable, which would track the record sooner or later, distorting or jumping. The record deck, at the time, was the big bottle neck.” American-based audiophile label Classic Records has a favourite slogan: ‘remember the sound’. “What we want,” concluded Seemann, “is more like ‘remember the feeling’ because that is what is in the tape. If we can extract more of that feeling that is in tape, why shouldn’t we do that?”

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Walrus

Exciting New Products From Around The World. Available Now At Walrus. ‘Dieses ist nicht ein Dalek aus Deutschland?!’ Of course not! This is the MBL 111RC loudspeaker. Here at the shop, we have the even more amazing looking fullrange model, the MBL 111E RadialstrahlerHybrid System 1 loudspeakers available for audition. Also available for demo too is MBL’s top of the range CD Player, the MBL 1531. ‘Wirklich wundervoll, yah...!’

MBL 111 RC

Basis Audio 2500 Signature

Hørning Agathon Ultimate

Brinkmann La Grange Turntable Emille is a new brand from Korea. As it turns out the Emille KI-240 is one of the best sounding valve-powered integrated amplifiers available in the UK today. We are sure you’ll agree with us... The real Simon Yorke with his S7 Turntable and Tonearm system.

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Phone : +44(0)20 7724 7224 Fax : +44(0)20 7724 4347 Shop : 11 New Quebec Street London W1H 7RW Web : w w w. w a l r u s . c o . u k Email : contact@walrus.co.uk We’ve just taken delivery of the latest Basis Audio 2500 Signature Turntable, as if there are not enough turntables at Walrus already! No doubt some of you might think it looks and sounds just like another brand of fashionable turntable in acrylic these days! Well, you’ll be wrong. For an example, what look like 4 ordinary aluminium legs turn out to be very sophisticated, user adjustable, oil-damped suspension towers...

Remember when you were taught never to judge a person or an object by its look? The Hørning Agathon Ultimate is a classic example. The technology involved with these loudspeakers is so complex that we decided its best for you to read about them on the web. No doubt you’ll also come across the excellent reviews too. Wait till you see the back of the loudspeaker; looks nothing like the back of your fridge...

The Music First Audio Passive Magnetic Preamplifier has been winning awards and accolades for the last year or so. Walrus was one of the first dealers in the UK to demonstrate its virtues.

The new Shanling CD Player, CDT-500, is visually so striking that we thought it best for you to come and see it in the flesh. Meanwhile we can show you what the national flag of China looks like!

Walrus’ New Mascot

Musically satisfying... modern yet romantic is what comes to mind when describing the sound of this new valve driven line stage preamplifier, the Melody Pure Black 101D. Emille KI-240

6/12/06 09:32:59


OPINION

"the UK rushed into launching digital terrestrial TV"

steven green

T

he public service broadcasters and some of the TV equipment manufacturers and retailers have launched a campaign called ‘HDforAll’, with the aim of “lobbying Ofcom, Government and other stakeholders to ensure that enough spectrum is reserved to enable the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Five to broadcast in high definition [on Freeview].” The spectrum in question consists of fourteen UHF channels that will be freed-up once analogue TV is switched off in 2012/2013, and the dispute is over the fact that Ofcom wants to auction this spectrum to the highest bidder, and the broadcasters fear that the mobile phone networks will outbid them for it. The crux of the disagreement is that Ofcom says that the ‘big 5’ TV channels could transmit in HD on Freeview, but the broadcasters say that this could only happen if there is “a significant reduction in [the] quantity and quality” of existing standard-definition TV channels. HDTV channels are expected to use bit rate levels in the region of 8 – 10 Mbps once developers have gained more experience with the new MPEG-4 H.264 video codec that is used for HDTV, so to transmit the ‘big 5’ TV channels in HD would require 40 – 50 Mbps of capacity. Once analogue TV has been switched off the transmitter powers for the Freeview multiplexes will be increased, which will lead to the overall Freeview capacity to increase from the current 120 Mbps to 144 Mbps. Also, ITV now owns the multiplex on which pay-TV service Top-Up TV transmits, so it will be able to reclaim all of that capacity when Top-Up TV’s contract ends

in 2010; the BBC has quite a lot of spare capacity on its multiplexes; and there are some channels that, in my opinion, are simply wasting space, such as E4+1, which is just E4 delayed by an hour. So there will be sufficient capacity to allow HD versions of the ‘big 5’ TV channels to launch once analogue TV has been switched off, which suggests that the broadcasters have an ulterior motive for wanting this spectrum – apart from the obvious reason that if the government gives it to them it’s cheaper than having to bid for it in an auction. First of all, the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Five inherently favour Freeview, because their channels account for the vast majority of all Freeview viewing, whereas on Sky and cable their share of viewing is much lower due to the large number of channels available. So, personally I think they want this additional spectrum because it will allow them to transmit some of their other channels in HD as well as the ‘big 5’, and they hope this will discourage users from switching to Sky or cable to get their fix of HDTV. The BBC also has an additional and important reason for favouring Freeview. This can best be explained by considering Greg Dyke’s candid admission that the rationale behind the launch of Freeview was to flood the UK market with set-top boxes that don’t have card slots, because the absence of card slots rules out subscription payments, which is an alternative means of funding the BBC; so this would ensure that the BBC could hang on to secured funding via the Licence Fee for another decade or more. I’m very much in favour of HDTV, but I think it would be

wrong to donate this spectrum to the broadcasters for a number of reasons. Firstly, the “sweet spot” for mobile applications consists of the frequency range from 300 MHz to 3 GHz. So terrestrial TV is consuming around 400 MHz – or 15% – of this prime spectrum even though it could be transmitted at far higher frequencies. Secondly, the UK rushed into launching digital terrestrial TV and used the ‘2K’ DVB-T mode (DVB-T is the standard used for Freeview) when they could have waited just a few months to use the ‘8K’ mode, which would have allowed the spectrum to be used far more efficiently than at present. So is it right that the broadcasters should be bailed out because they’ve made bad technology decisions in the past? Thirdly, the BBC R&D department recently published results of tests using a technology called ‘MIMO’ along with DVB-T – which could form the basis of a new DVB-T2 standard – and the results indicate that the capacity on Freeview could be doubled, albeit that users would need to install a new aerial. This last point seals it as far as I’m concerned, because a doubling of the capacity would allow around 30 – 35 TV channels to broadcast in HD on Freeview, so the freedup spectrum could be used for applications such as mobile TV and mobile broadband Internet instead. If the backers of the HDforAll campaign want this extra spectrum to launch more than 30 – 35 HD channels so that Freeview can better compete with the other digital TV platforms they should collectively bid for it in the auction. If they lose, they didn’t value it highly enough.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Some decisions are just so simple

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5/1/07 11:17:59 am


OPINION

"I love the past, but I don’t feel it is better..."

noel keywood

I

t was the April 1993 edition of Hi-FI World that featured a Garrard history, along with the revival of my Garrard 401 turntable. It was serviced by Dr. Martin Bastin and fitted to one of his sturdy plinths, along with a new SME312 12in tonearm. That issue sold out. To this day I use the same turntable and arm; it sits in the lounge next to me. I have a Leak Troughline, tuner now in need of a service I have to admit, so not in everyday use. You might think then, as I know many do, that I am a real classic hi-fi enthusiast, but I am not! Quite the reverse, in truth. A lot of engineering from the past is best preserved, as a reminder of how things were, to give us some appreciation of how far we have progressed and how much better products are today. And that includes old hi-fi. I love our industrial past, as many engineers do, and you'll catch me staring in awe at, for example, the S.S. Great Britain (see www.ssgreatbritain.org) that we visited recently whilst exhibiting at the Bristol Sound and Vision Show. I thought this would be a rusty hulk, with a bit of black paint applied to the exterior and a few unconvincing wax dummies inside wearing traditional clothes. It turned out to be much more than that, giving a fascinating glimpse, for example, of how people survived travelling to Australia in steerage - that's the poor bit - as well as a walk around the hull beneath the waterline, with Brunel's massive propellers overhead. Hi-fi doesn't date back to 1843 like this ship, but amplification and the valve do; Oliver Lodge is one name that springs to mind, born 1845, and early radio equipment such

as his was pretty crude, as basic in the way it was put together as the Great Britain. The market for high quality audio began to develop in the 1960s and it's from this time that old classics I have used - and soldered - have come. Most notable was a Quad 22/II amplifier. This dear old thing does have a lovely sonic flavour: measure it as I did after restoration and you soon find out why. The small output transformers really aren't up to much by modern standards. Peter Walker openly admitted they limited low frequency output (i.e. would not produce much bass) to protect the Quad ESL57 loudspeaker. At least, that's what he said... I sometimes wondered whether he simply found justification for the stringent cost cutting often used by Quad, behind the expensive fascias. If this was the case, then it was only the spirit of the time, because the nasty tin plated input sockets and multi-pin power connectors used on this amplifier were found everywhere else too. I well know how lovely the 22/II sounds and I should really have a pair in the loft, but I don't. Mine departed to an eager owner long ago. Wind on to the 1970s and you still find most electronic equipment peppered with this stuff. Tinny input sockets and those horrid shaky loudspeaker screw terminals that some factory in Japan was making for the whole world it seemed, were the acceptable standard of the time. This was also the age of that thing from the dungeon of high fidelity, the DIN loudspeaker socket. This was a step too far backward even for the period, I recall. Why Germany, proud of its engineering standards today, should come up with this little horror (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

DIN_connector) I don't know, but it somehow captures the Zeitgeist. Dusting off an old JVC CD4 decoder not so long ago I was reminded of how bad it was generally in the seventies with product from Japan. The detail engineering wasn't there. All the action was at device (transistor) level, the connections could go hang. And here we encounter another limitation: even Quad eventually admitted that poor electrolytic capacitors seriously compromised their early amplifiers, such as the 405. Electronic components were often little better than the shaky connectors used. You are on the look out for an old cartridge? Why? Inside lie two prodigious coils of fine wire, 'fine' meaning thin, not good. It wasn't selected for its 3ns purity twenty years ago, but was wound on copiously to compensate for the weak magnets of the time. Now, with Neodymium magnets and better magnetic circuits today's cartridges don't need coils inside to rival those the Great Eastern once carried, when laying the foundations of modern communication. That's why today's MM cartridges don't suffer 'generator losses' and have a nice, clear midband. The stark contrast here is perfectly illustrated by this month's comparison of a Nagaoka MP11, a classic from the past, with two new cartridges from today. The past wasn't unequivocally better. It may have merit, but decent products of today are better in engineering terms. There are a few golden oldies around that do a great job even today, like the Garrard turntables, but otherwise I feel today's products are better engineered and less expensive than most oldies. I love the past, but I am no romantic and don't feel it is better.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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AUDIOPHILE VINYL

JIMMY SMITH & WES MONTGOMERY Jimmy & Wes: The Dynamic Duo Speakers Corner/Verve This album was the result of a large session. In fact, so large, two albums were created from it. The second was called ‘Further Adventures Of Jimmy And Wes’. Kai Seemann, MD for Speakers Corner, explained that, “we initially tried to make a double album featuring both records but a lot of tracks were damaged on the original tape.” Now comes the spooky bit. To create the two albums, the original record label Verve didn’t just cut the session in half, assigning the first half to one album and the second half to another album. What happened was that the label actually filtered through each track and, for example said, ‘the first track is for album X, the next two are for album Y, the next one is for album X, the next one is for album Y’ and so on. However, strangely, “all the tracks for the first LP, which we have now, have survived and almost none of

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the second album has survived. So our initial double album plan had to be stopped. I have no satisfactory reason why this has occurred because I have used other tapes from the same supplier, recorded at the same time and probably stored next to each other”. Jazz-based conspiracy theorists could have a field day with this one, although I’m reliably informed that the Verve studios never contained a grassy knoll. ‘The Dynamic Duo’, excellently mastered at Acoustech in the USA, is a superb album and a must for any jazz fan, the pair compliment each other superbly. Smith, who revolutionised the Hammond organ in jazz, smooths out Montgomery’s biting guitar runs but there’s lots of time and space for crowning solos that take the breath away. Genius.

STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN Texas Flood Pure Pleasure/Epic This is not the first Stevie Ray album from Pure Pleasure. ‘Couldn’t Stand The Weather’ sold so well and was

so well received that a ‘sequel’ was always on the cards. This release utilises the original master tapes, direct from Sony’s archives in the USA. However, masters are not allowed to leave the country so, said Pure Pleasure MD Tony Hickmott, “Sony actually created a flat copy for me onto a fresh reel of analogue tape. The original, which was laid down in 1983, was in good condition so the copy was quickly made for me”. Originally, Vaughan would have recorded the album to a multitrack tape. This tape would hold the bare musical information, without any studio enhancements. From that, the engineer would change the balance of the instruments, add any effects and then commit that to another tape known as a post-production or mix tape. This mix tape is the copy that Hickmott was given to work with, “I then passed that tape onto my mastering engineer, Ray Staff at Alchemy, based in the UK. His job is to either equal the quality of the original or surpass it.” Vaughan’s best album, this release started the eighties blues

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

20/3/07 12:50:53


AUDIOPHILE VINYL

revival. The final release is up to Pure Pleasure’s high standards. In fact, it has that classic seventies rock album feel: warm, tight bass with vocals allowed to distort on occasion, ‘tingy’ cymbals and the odd screeching guitar. Intriguingly, this edition is a double album - disc 1 is the original album whilst disc 2 is an analogue version of the bonus tracks released with an earlier CD release. This is the very first time the bonus tracks have ever appeared on vinyl.

MIGHTY BABY A Jug Of Love Sunbeam Records/ Blue Horizon The keyboard player for the original band, Ian Whiteman, who now lives in Spain, revealed that he owned a master tape for this particular album. Sunbeam MD Steven Carr was delighted. “He didn’t have the original master. I think the multitrack was mixed down to a 2-tracker and he probably had the safety copy or something - which was more common at the time. The condition wasn’t bad, I was quite surprised. It played straight through. I’ve done stuff, using tapes from Abbey Road, where the edits have popped like nobody’s business. This one was fine, though.” The master tape was given to Nick Webb, an experienced mastering engineer and ex-Abbey Road employee. In fact, both Carr and Webb may be familiar to Naim customers because the pair handle all of that company’s vinyl too. Michael Evans, Mighty Baby’s bass player, sat in attendance during the mastering – although he offered no assistance.

Carr is not a fan of supportive band members. “The last thing you want is a band member being of practical help, because they tend not to be. Most musicians have got cloth ears and the rest are half mad. Band members also want whatever they’ve done to sound the loudest.” Toting progressive and psychedelic licks and with definite West Coast vibes: a thread of beautiful harmony here, a Jerry Garcia-like guitar solo there, the English derivation is, however, stamped onto the work. This is the band’s final album, sounding almost like ‘Meddle’-era Pink Floyd. It rambles on a bit but this is still an excellent disc, presenting enough colours and tones to keep you interested. The vinyl is contained within a sturdy gatefold which features an interview printed on the inner sides with photographs and other record illustrations.

JOHN ENTWISTLE Smash Your Head Against The Wall Earmark/Track Records One of the most important and distinctive bass players the world has ever known, before him bass players were part of the stage wallpaper. Entwistle was the calm amongst the storm that was the rest of The Who yet his bass work was musically complex and physically demanding. As The Who’s guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend said, “you quickly got the feeling that, yes, he’s playing the bass but he’s not really playing the bass. This is something else. He realised that he had the power to change the f**king

instrument!” Entwistle had shown his song writing credentials during his time in The Who with the likes of ‘Boris the Spider’, ‘Whiskey Man’ and ‘My Wife’. This, his first solo album released in 1971 was his best. Not surprisingly, the album had a strong Who sound and influence. It also allowed Entwistle to spread his wings. For example, in ‘Pick Me Up’ he plays the whole horn section – many fans were unaware that Entwistle had been trained to play the French Horn at a young age along with the piano! In many ways, it was a dark album but with superb melodic lines. This Earmark release has been mastered onto 180gm vinyl and set within a gatefold cover. It features the original album only so doesn’t include any extra tracks, such as the Repertoire 1996 CD issue which adds ‘Cinnamon Girl’. The Earmark release is big and bold with drums and bass to the fore and the vocals hovering over the instruments. It’s not so much heavy rock as big rock. The cut is pretty quiet too which is welcome. All in all, this is a recommended release, especially as original vinyl copies are not too thick on the ground.

CONTACTS: Diverse Vinyl +44(0)1633 256261 www.diversevinyl.com Stamford Audio +44(0)1223 894999 www.stamfordaudio.com

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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REVIEW

Presto! With nearly 5,500 stations, fine sound and freedom from DAB woes, the MagicBox Imp is an automatic choice for radio fans, says Steven Green...

it – both the My Stuff and a vertical scroll feature appeared following such an upgrade. This feature will allow Reciva to deliver support for more audio formats in future as well as to improve the operability of receivers. In operation, the Imp performed reasonably well when connecting to most radio streams, but there were occasions when I felt it took too long in comparison to the time it took my PC to connect to the same stream. The other side of the Imp is its media player, which allows you to stream audio wirelessly from your PC. Music started playing on the media player quickly once requested, but one drawback was that it inexplicably paused for a couple of seconds mid-track occasionally. Another slight grumble I had was that as the radio only supports the MP3, WMA, Real Audio, MPEG-2 AAC and WAV audio formats, this means that 95% of the audio on my PC wasn’t supported! So I would hope that Reciva adds support for other commonly used formats shortly, such as FLAC, MPEG-4 AAC/AAC+ (file extensions .mp4 and .m4a), Ogg Vorbis and MP2.

SOUND QUALITY When playing high bit rate MP3 files from my PC the sound quality was unusually excellent for a device with such a small speaker, delivering a pleasingly crisp and punchy sound. The radio performed best in the bass and midrange, but a slightly shrill treble let things down occasionally. As you would expect, the audio quality of Internet radio stations was highly dependent on the bit rate used, with the higher bit rate streams providing higher audio quality, and vice versa. The one negative issue as far as

WHAT IS IT? A Wi-Fi Internet radio that works like a normal mains powered radio, but which gives access to over 5,300 Internet radio stations from around the world, including over 500 from the UK. The Imp also allows you to play audio streamed wirelessly from your PC. To use an Imp you need to have a broadband Internet connection, and a Wi-Fi router (if you need to buy one, the wireless router that seems to be almost universally recommended is the Netgear DG834G).

sound quality goes was that 128kbps WMA streams that use a technology called Intellistream were only being received at 32kbps, so the audio quality was reduced accordingly, but Reciva assured me that this issue will be solved in the near future. Overall, I love this radio and the concept of Wi-Fi Internet radios in general, because it was a breath of fresh air not to be limited to the choice of stations available on FM and DAB, and the ability to stream audio from my PC to a portable radio was just the icing on the cake. Furthermore, as the firmware of Internet radios can be so easily upgraded, I’m inclined to be a little more forgiving of any current problems it has with the expectation that they will be solved in the near future...

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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£

VERDICT

A great concept and surprisingly good sound for its size, but not quite there yet.

MAGICBOX IMP £129 MagicBox +44 (0)1959 565525 www.magicboxproducts.co.uk

)

J

ust like the Acoustic Energy Wi-Fi Radio with which it shares seemingly identical dimensions, the £129 MagicBox Imp is very compact, measuring just 4.5in square on its base. It's very attractive too, with an iPod-esque white plastic and aluminium colour scheme and that eye-catching tapered front-panel housing a blue display and scroll wheel. Setting up was quicker and simpler than I had expected, consisting only of switching the radio on, scanning for Wi-Fi networks and entering the security key for my wireless network (both WEP and WPA are supported), with the whole process only taking a couple of minutes before I was free to start listening to radio stations. The Internet radio stations available are sorted alphanumerically by genre or by location, but with around 5,300 stations available, searching for individual stations was a chore, as the lists are so long. However, a new feature called My Stuff has been added that largely obviates the need to do a lot of scrolling through these station lists. My Stuff allows users to add their favourite stations and the URLs of streams that aren’t already listed to the My Stuff section of their account at Reciva’s Internet radio portal (www.reciva.com – Reciva is the company that produces the modules for all of the currently available Wi-Fi Internet radios), and these stations then appear as if by magic the next time you visit the My Stuff section of your radio. A very impressive feature was that the radio’s firmware could be upgraded by the single press of a button, with the radio then looking on the Reciva website, and if there was a newer version of firmware available it downloaded and installed

FOR - future-proof - range of stations - sound quality

AGAINST - connection time - audio format support

MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

85 13/3/07 09:52:16


P e r f o r m a nce

series

L2 Series Loudspeakers 99 Series Electronics

“this system is something of a musical genius” – What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision January 2007

A new breed Quad L2 series Loudspeakers The Quad 99 series electronics and L2 series loudspeakers are a match made in heaven. Detail, accuracy and refinement all combine to present one of the most musical and insightful systems available – and with our new 99CDP-2, will integrate seamlessly into your digital world allowing up to 6* digital sources to benefit from our state-of-the-art DACs * CDP-2 includes 3 x Optical and 2 x Co-axial digital inputs.

L2 advert AV 07.indd 1

the closest approach to the original sound. Quad Electroacoustics Ltd, IAG House, Sovereign Court, Ermine Business Park, Huntingdon, Cambs, PE29 6XU Tel :- 01480 447700, Fax :- 01480 431767

www.quad-hifi.co.uk

8/3/07 11:05:05


SOUNDBITES

TIMESTER T200 MK £379 Unashamedly an eccentric specialist hi-fi product in the mould of the Flying Mole amplifier and Zu Druid loudspeaker, this is a small triode tube amplifier offering around 3W per side from two 6N3P02s (5670) and two EL8402s. Ostensibly, the importer calls it a ‘multimedia’ amp, by which they mean it is designed to work with (shock horror!) iPods and PCs. It has a single stereo line input via RCA phonos (for your digital portable or full size CD player), plus a USB input for a PC or Mac. It has one set of loudspeaker outputs, and a 6.3mm front panel headphone jack. The USB input is an interesting feature (the Russ Andrews DAC1 USB reviewed on p47 also has one, so it must be catching on), the idea being that you can plug your computer in, set the T-200 as a audio output device in your operating system’s ‘Preferences’ menu, whereupon the Timester will play all your computer audio files. The basic version reviewed here costs £379, and there’s said

to be a version with UK-made output transformers costing £429 available any day now. One year’s manufacturer warranty is offered. This diminutive (238x138x148 mm, 5.5kg) little thing is surprisingly well finished, especially considering its Chinese origin. The Perspex front panel is clean, the switches move nicely and the rear panel is robust. There’s a chrome plated cage for the valves, and the output transformer cover is a quality item. Timester quote 600mW from the headphone amp. Inside, there is Burr-Brown PCM2702 Delta Sigma DAC for the USB connection. Given that’s there is an internal DAC, it would have been nice to access this by more conventional means, such as a TOSLink input too. A standard IEC mains input is fitted around the back, and there’s a decent set of loudspeaker binding posts. Switch on and it’s a veritable sight for sore eyes – each tube is uplit by a blue LED, which gives a pleasing effect. There’s little in the way of hum or hiss, and

after about fifteen minutes the Timester is making sweet music. This is precisely what it is – soft, warm and mellifluous. Disciples of the Naim Nait 5 college of music making won’t like it. The Timester is an unashamedly old school valve amplifier, and you can never forget it. You’ll need speakers with over 90dB sensitivity (such as Revolver R16s) for any sort of decent level. Kicking off with Supertramp’s ‘Child of Vision’, and I was surprised how pleasant this little amp was to listen to. It is a sugary sounding device, coloured in the traditional tube sense of the word (everything is given a sepia tint), and the effect was very pleasant. Most impressive was the way it hung vocals out in space, the loudspeakers seemingly disappearing into my listening room. Treble was as silky as you’d expect, the midband proved a tad opaque but very spacious, and bass soft and warm but with little in terms of drive. Again, by solid-state standards (Onkyo’s A-933 being my favourite at this price), there was very little power or drive, but the Timester’s sound was such that this didn’t seem to matter. It is beguilingly musical in its way, with a nicely lucid midband that makes transistor rivals seem frigid. Power is very limited of course, so don’t buy this for anything more than small rooms – dens and bedrooms are where this amp was designed to reside. I was able to get decent listening levels before the output transformers saturated, but switching to the USB input resulted in a marked drop in volume level. It made quite a nice noise via its internal DAC when driven from my Mac PowerBook G4, with lots of detail, clarity and a most propulsive rhythmic sound, but it was hampered by lack of gain. The headphone section sounds very good indeed, but it’s certainly not from the Musical Fidelity X-CANS school of headphone amplifiers (i.e. clean and precise), preferring to add its characteristic euphony to the clinical sound of my Sennheiser HD650s. Overall then, an unlikely thumbs up for this loveable little thing – for those wanting sweet sound in small rooms, it represents cracking value for money. Contact Lamplitube on +44 (0)1322 334033 or email info@minitubeamps.com.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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OLDE WORLDE

Metallica

Dominic Todd pens a paean of praise to his favourite classic loudspeaker, Celestion’s SL600...

F

irst shown at the 1981 Harrogate Hi-Fi Show, and launched the following year, it is fair to say that Celestion’s SL6 revolutionised the loudspeaker

market. What made this speaker special was the scale of sound available from such a compact cabinet. Rather like the Wharfedale Diamond had done just months before, the SL6 proved that a large cabinet wasn’t required to create a decent sound. At the time, the SL6 was one of the most thoroughly researched speakers ever produced and used the then new-fangled laser velocity analysis to measure driver and cabinet performance. Such research proved invaluable. At a time when most speaker cabinets flexed like a Rolf Harris wobble board, the SL6 used a highly rigid, internally braced cabinet. Even more intriguing was the electroformed copper tweeter. This was unique at the time and played its part in spreading metal dome tweeters across the hi-fi industry. As it turned

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out, using copper did nothing to help the horrendous inefficiency, but it was free from much of the ‘grain’ of later aluminium designs. Matched to this was a 165mm Kobex coned woofer with integrated and inverted phase cap. This seems unexceptional now, but was quite something at a time when most manufacturers still used paper and glue. Matched to a substantial magnet and PVC surround, the woofer gave exceptional bass weight. At least it gave exceptional bass weight when matched to a powerful amplifier for, at 82dB the SL6 was one of the most inefficient speakers ever made. Celestion soon realised this and it wasn’t long before more work with laser velocity analysis produced the SL6S. This swapped the copper tweeter for an aluminium one, the chipboard cabinet for MDF, and gave the woofer a new two piece surround. The combined effect not only improved efficiency to a heady 84dB, but also granted the SL6 a brighter balance, with less congestion in the bass. In late 1988 came the final

version, the SL6Si. This time around, the main changes were to the crossover, which became biwirable and fitted with rather nice Michelltype gold-plated terminals. With the advent of the Si range, Celestion also launched the rather awkward SL12Si. Effectively this was an SL6Si with an extra bass unit and it sounded muddled - to put it politely. It’s not the best representative of the SL family and probably the only one worth avoiding.

THE NEXT STEP Launched just two years after the SL6, the SL600 took speaker technology to new heights. At a time when most loudspeakers, including the then current SL6, used chipboard, the SL600 was fashioned from hightech aluminium Aerolam. As the name suggests, this was a material developed for the aeronautical world and used an aluminium honeycomb sandwiched between aluminium sheets. Material costs were huge, and accounted for the SL600’s hefty price tag of £700 – a lot of money in the early ‘80s.

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13/3/07 10:50:32


OLDE WORLDE It was worth it. The exceptionally light cabinet was also particularly rigid and free from colouration. To provide suitable damping, the cabinet was filled with layers of varied densities of foam. The original Kobex woofer and copper tweeter made it across from the SL6 but, in this case, they were hand selected. The hardwired crossover was matched to a specific tweeter, thus ensuring correct alignment with the 21kHz compensation network. Like the SL6, the first SL600s used simple 4mm speaker sockets – making banana plugs essential. Unlike the SL6, the SL600 came without a grill. This was because the cabinet would lose rigidity if drilled further for grill mounting points. Yet, with its smart Nextel paintwork and diecast metal faceplates, few customers would want to cover the SL600. Let’s not forget, this was seriously hi-tech stuff in 1984! Celestion obviously received complaints about its lack of grill, as the next version, the SL600Si featured one (cleverly attached to the existing faceplate bolts). Skipping the ‘S’ improvements altogether, it was only in 1988 when the SL600 got its first upgrade. Like the SL6, the new Si included a revised crossover with biwiring and some cosmetic tidying including a new, harder wearing, paint. Interestingly, the SL600 never got the aluminium tweeter or the dual density woofer surround (they were destined for the even posher SL700) but perhaps this was no bad thing as it meant that, for better or worse, the SL600 never lost its original character.

SOUND QUALITY Celestion SL600s divided audiophile opinion like few other loudspeakers ever made. Detractors criticised the ‘sat upon’ sound, slow bass and tragic efficiency, whereas supporters loved their eerie transparency. Taking the nay-sayers first, there is no doubt that the SL600s are woefully inefficient - 82dB rules them out for use with many amplifiers. In addition to this, they also tend to be system and room fussy. They require plenty of space from a rear wall and, believe it or not, decent room temperature – that PVC woofer surround moves very little when it gets cold! Against modern speakers, bass can also justifiably labelled as ‘off the pace” or ‘turgid’. Yet, just before you write them off, take a closer listen... When properly set up and matched with sympathetic ancillaries, the SL600s produce a wonderfully holographic soundstage that can rival a Quad electrostatic for transparency.

Furthermore, there’s a seamless flow from bass to treble that, even today, is impressive in its even-handedness. That copper tweeter may have been inefficient, but it suffered none of the gritty and spiky characteristics that many later aluminium domes suffered from. Instead, it provided good detail and, crucially, a level of upper mid that enabled it to blend with the woofer. Precise, subtle, seamless and transparent: the SL600 was, and perhaps more remarkably still is, all of these. Differences between the standard and Si model are slight. The treble has perhaps a touch more detail, but there’s not a lot in it. If you’re in the fortunate position to bi-amp however, then the biwiring terminals of the Si make it a musthave option. Incidentally, either pair benefit from a pair of heavy 20-24” high stands. Whatever you do, though, don’t use top spikes, as these pierce the delicate cabinets! As with most speakers, tweaking brings out some benefits in sound. Probably the greatest difference can be made by simply changing the internal ‘speaker cable. The standard cable is not the best, and a decent modern cable really opens the sound up. If you do take this course, do watch the tweeter, though. The solder connection to it is fiddly and a mistake could damage the unit. Personally I’d leave the crossover and internal damping foam well alone. However, if you don’t mind the odd looks, then removing the bass faceplate is an easy way of improving the imaging. Whilst you’re there, don’t forget to tighten up the woofer’s bolts. Like any speaker, these work

SECOND THOUGHTS As eighties as red braces, Golf GTis and Filofaxes, the SL600s haled from the days when loudspeakers were as characterful as a tipsy Boy George on the Parkinson Show. In 2007, where so many boxes are well-honed variations on a theme set many years ago, the original SL6s were a breath of fresh air. Small two-way 'speakers with unusual styling, ‘space-age’ computer aided design work to their drive units and the first copper dome tweeter ever, they were certainly different. The 82dB efficiency was outrageous even by the lowly standards of the previous decade, meaning that only the likes of a Krell could truly light them up. The SL600 added the ‘high tech’ metal cabinet, and made the SL6 package sound like no other boxed loudspeaker around - by comparison, the likes of the Acoustic Energy AE1 was boxy and wooden. Me, I hated the SL600s and still do – they’re far too ‘Radio 3’ for my tastes, but several classical music lovers I know hold them in even higher estimation than the Quad ESL57s and 63s they sold to buy their SL600s. Different strokes for different folks, but I’ll concede this was a speaker that genuinely moved the game along and radically transformed the eighties speaker scene. DP speakers are extremely long lasting. That PVC and Kobex woofer may be inefficient, but boy does it last well. The copper tweeter is similarly robust. It’s good to know that the SL600s can still be serviced - Celestion themselves no longer support the model but there are specialists such as DK Loudspeaker Services (+44 (0)1708 447344) that can help. Apart from the drive units, the main consideration when buying a pair of SL600s is the cabinet. Whilst Aerolam is very rigid, it’s also rather soft. Dented cabinets aren’t unusual, and are not something that can be patched up with wood glue and plastic wood! Small dents won’t affect the sound but anything larger effectively relegates the speakers to the role of parts donor. Cosmetically,

"a seriously engineered design that radically transformed the eighties speaker scene..." loose after a while, and affect the speed and impact of sound.

BUYING SECOND-HAND Although far from universally loved, the SL600s still have a cult following. Unlike the SL6, prices for the SL600 are higher than you might expect for a twenty year old design. Whereas as little as £30 to £150 should find a pair of working SL6s, you need more like £200 to get hold of a pair of the ‘600s – and this would be for a tatty pair. For a mint and boxed set of SL600Sis, with grills and possibly even stands you could be looking at anything up to £500. Although not cheap, these

the early SL600s mark very easily. My own pair are covered in scratches where careless guests have placed car keys on the top. The Si version used a much tougher paint, but it can still be marked. The good news is that, if cosmetic appearance concerns you, they're easy to respray. To sum up, if you enjoy a transparent sound and have a fairly powerful amplifier, then the SL600s could suit you well. Find a pair in good condition and they’ll not only sound surprisingly able for their age, but also provide years more service. You can also be rightly proud in the fact that they truly “don’t make ‘em like this anymore”!

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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SHOW REPORT

Show Time

David Price and Adam Smith round up their faves from the Bristol Sound & Vision Show.... PIONEER Pioneer were exhibiting a welcome return to two channel audio with their new PD-D6-J SACD/CD player along with the A-A6-J and A-A9-J amplifiers. Combining sleek styling with a wealth of audiophile features, all items were making some very promising noises through Pioneer’s own TAD-branded loudspeakers.

QUAD Quad were exhibiting their superb ESL-2905 loudspeakers using prototypes of their brand new II-Eighty monoblock power amplifiers. Taking the already superb II-Forty amplifiers as a starting point, the new items increase the valve count and thus the power output to 80 watts, more than enough for the most demanding loudspeaker. Interestingly, playing a visitor’s requested Robert Miles track, this setup more than disproved the old notion that ‘electrostatics don’t do bass’... SPENDOR Spendor were showing samples of their new flagship loudspeakers, the ST-1s, which they estimate will sell for around £5,000. The ST-1s feature brand new drive units, housed in a stylish gloss black cabinet which has a contrasting panel down the front. This contrasting front panel will be available in a wide variety of finishes, including wood, leather and metal of differing types.

HENLEY DESIGNS Henley Designs had a party atmosphere in their room all weekend thanks to their lava lamps and a certain individual mysteriously known only as ‘Billy the Fridge’! Supplying suitable sounds were two Pro-ject and Roksan based systems, one of which was running the brand new Ortofon 2M Blue moving magnet cartridge. Initial responses were very positive from the Hi-Fi World team...

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13/3/07 10:01:56


how....

SHOW REPORT NEAT Neat Acoustics were demonstrating their new Momentum 3i and 4i loudspeakers, the former being a standmounter that retails for £1,745 and the latter a floorstander retailing at £2,695. Both make use of isobaric bass loading and the 4i is particularly interesting as it uses two 6.5 inch bass units in this configuration, and hidden from view. Watch this space for a review...

ARCAM One of the most interesting new Arcam products for years was the FMJ MS250 Music Server. £3,000 is a lot to pay, but it’s a very sophisticated beast and with superb sound too!

REGA Rega's resident vinyl boffin Terry Bateman’s fingerprints are all over the new Rega MC Stage - a full on audiophile phono stage with highly adjustable loading and sensitivity. Rega also had their new Apheta MC cartridge on show too...

LINN About time too is what we say - a brilliant evolution of the Sondek! Some weren’t quite so sure, but there’s no doubting the latest LP12 SE is tighter, cleaner, faster and more modern sounding. Again, wait here for the definitive review...

LEEMA Following our rave review of the baby Xen a few months back, it was interesting to hear a cheaper evolution of them. Diminutive, but with a fantastically clean and musical sound, they could be one of the best mini monitors on sale when they hit the shops next month...

ONKYO Onkyo started life as a speaker manufacturer, and the D-TK10 - produced in association with high end guitar specialist Takamine, shows they haven’t lost their touch. Amazing sound from tiny cabs, but they do cost $2,000... www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Faiza

Famous for the

legendary D200 power amplifier, GamuT now offers a superb complete music system.

Copy for May issue.

Great GamuT system

Best wishes Jeremy

GamuT is one of the very few companies that can offer a FULLY "SORTED" SYSTEM with equally high quality components in every category – in our opinion. Well, maybe not just ours: "As the audiophile press has affirmed for several years now, Gamut is on to something very, very good." (JV Serinus, Stereophile) GamuT's latest arrival, the CD3 CD player, completes a SUPERBLY MUSICAL SYSTEM, everything in its place and sounding "right". "It has superb resolve of fine detail …a perfectly judged balance and …an irresistible ability to draw you into the music." Hi-Fi Choice GamuT have merged their excellent D3 preamp with the legendary D200 power amp (an earlier Editor's Choice), making the Di150, an impressively CAPABLE AND TRANSPARENT integrated amp. Hi-Fi Choice's view on the GamuT Di150: "This is clearly a gorgeous amplifier"– another Editor's Choice. GamuT make three speakers – the stand-mount L3 and two floorstanders – all cut from the same cloth and using superb drive units such as the Revelator tweeter. Comments on a GamuT system: "The CD3, Di150, and L-7 just flatout worked for me. Music was alive and filled with the little pleasures that make you smile, nod, tap your foot, or even boogie." (Stereophile) Visit www.gamutaudio.com/reviews/ Customers say we make some of the BEST SOUNDS they have ever heard, so you know we can do the same in your home. Our advice will take account of your best components and guide you where change is needed, in stages you can afford. You AVOID EXPENSIVE MISTAKES, enjoy music along the way and save money in the long run.

JUST LISTEN AND YOU’LL KNOW

01225 874728 or lo-call

0845 230 7570

CD: ACCUSTIC ARTS, BEL CANTO, dCS (ELGAR, DELIUS, PURCELL, VERDI, VERONA, P8I), GAMUT, RESOLUTION AUDIO, STELLO, WADIA. VINYL: AESTHETICS, AVID, CLEARAUDIO, DNM, GRAHAM, THE GROOVE, LEHMANN, MICHELL, ORIGIN LIVE, SUMIKO BLUE POINT SPECIAL, TRANSFIGURATION. AMPLIFIERS: BEL CANTO, CAT, DK DESIGN, DNM, GAMUT, HALCRO, HOVLAND, SONNETEER, STELLO. LOUDSPEAKERS: AUDIO PHYSIC, DALI, ETHOS, GAMUT, NEAT, TOTEM. CABLES: CHORD CO., DNM, NORDOST, SILTECH, VERTEX AQ MAINS Vertex AQ. SUPPORTS: ARCICI, STANDS UNIQUE, VERTEX AQ

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www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

13/3/07 13:12:22 13/3/07 12:58:05


DIY FEATURE

Designing Speakers Part 6 Crossover Design

Crossovers are the ‘bête noir’ of loudspeakers, but do they really cause more problems than they’re worth? Peter Comeau explains...

O

f all the aspects of loudspeakers, Crossover Design is possibly the most contentious. Do you stick with the First Order brigade who claim that anything else mucks up the phase response, or do you join the Fourth Order protagonists who argue that drive units need to be tightly bandwidth limited to avoid acoustic distortion? If you don’t know what I’m talking about then don’t worry, I’m about to explain all!

FIRST ORDER First of all why do we need to crossover at all? To see why, you really need to have a listen to one of the full range drive units that are the ‘fave rave’ of the DIY speaker fraternity. Listen to a Fostex or a Lowther in comparison to a two-way speaker and you’ll be immediately aware of the lack of bass power and treble extension, as well as honky, clappy, tubey, papery colorations in some areas of the midband. Now before I get a raft of letters and e-mails from DIY speaker

builders I will own up to a liking for full range drivers and their coherence through the midband. But for most listeners their colorations and bandwidth limitations rule them out. So why can’t we make a full range drive unit that really works well? The problems lie in the physics of turning electrical impulses from your amplifier into acoustic energy in the room. If you have read the previous articles on enclosure design you will have realised that, to do a good job, bass units need to be relatively large. This makes

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DIY FEATURE ‘Breakup’ modes are caused when the drive unit stops behaving like a piston. Part of the diaphragm starts to move independently and this can be audibly noticeable. You can see the ‘breakup’ modes as ripples in the frequency response that match with those in the impedance graph.

Look at the graph and you’ll see a kink in the impedance plot which matches the beginning of dips and peaks in the frequency response at 600Hz.

By comparison a very stiff, cast magnesium cone stays pistonic over a wide frequency range and pushes the ‘breakup’ modes higher in frequency. However the rigidity of the cone eventually results in a strong resonance at 5kHz. This resonance can be successfully ‘dialled out’ by clever crossover techniques.

diaphragms heavy and the large dimensions narrow the area of sound dispersion as frequencies get higher. If you look at full range drive units you will see that they have lightweight diaphragms (which restrict bass power and extension) and emit high frequencies in a narrow beam (so they have to be pointed towards the listener). Another problem is that drive units do not maintain their pistonic performance over a wide frequency range. For a cone this means that, although the whole drive unit is moving at low frequencies, at midrange frequencies the centre portion of the cone starts moving independently of the outside of the cone, and at high frequencies only the very centre of the cone is moving. The behaviour as the cone ‘breaks up’ is part and parcel of its acoustic character. Too many ‘breakup’ modes and you hear lots of colorations. There again if there is just one, severe, ‘breakup’ mode it can be clearly heard as a resonance.

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To avoid hearing the colorations and distortions due to this less than ideal drive unit behaviour we should feed musical energy to drive units over the useable part of their frequency bandwidth. So, for example, if we have an 18cm bass/midrange unit with a relatively coloration free bandwidth up to 2kHz then we can cross over to a 25mm dome treble unit that can do a much better job of driving treble energy into the room from 2kHz upwards.

FIRST ORDER So far so good. This is the basis of the classic ‘two-way’ loudspeaker. The problem then becomes just how do we cross over from one drive unit to the other? The simplest method is to use an inductor in series with the bass unit and a capacitor in series with the treble unit. The inductor increases in impedance as the frequencies rise, resulting in less treble energy ‘getting through’ to the bass/midrange unit.

The capacitor increases in impedance as the frequency drops, so less midrange energy is fed to the treble unit whilst all the high frequencies are ‘let through’. We call this a ‘first order’ crossover. It is the simplest, and the easiest to manage, type of electrical crossover and has many adherents. Its two primary attractions are that it is easy to experiment with and there is no phase shift between the drivers throughout the crossover region. For these reasons many DIY speaker builders stop there. They can tinker with the values until they get good performance just by listening to the results. All you need are two ‘perfect’ drive units and a handful of inductors and capacitors. So why aren’t all speakers made this way? Well the problem is that there are very few ‘perfect’ drive units that meet all the first order requirements. Look at the graphs and you’ll see that the drive units have to behave impeccably for at least three octaves beyond the crossover frequency. In other words unless they are free from colorations, resonances and distortions and have a smooth frequency response over the majority of the audio band you will not be able to design a clean, transparent sounding loudspeaker. As for the attractions of ‘linear phase’ this demands that the drive units maintain their frequency and phase response for three octaves beyond the crossover frequency. Think about it. If you cross over at 2kHz your bass/midrange unit has to have a bandwidth up to 16kHz. Even worse your treble unit has to be useable down to 250Hz! Now drive units with this sort of behaviour are few and far between. The upshot is that using first order crossovers with normal drive units results in performance restrictions. You may be aware of colorations from the bass midrange unit through the upper midrange and treble region and you will certainly notice distortion from the treble unit at lower frequencies. Furthermore if you can measure the frequency response you will find huge deviations from what the theory tells you. This is because the theory is based on the drive unit having a linear impedance beyond the crossover frequency. If you look at a typical bass unit impedance you will see that, due to the inductance of the voice coil, the impedance rises rapidly through the midrange. This means that, in combination with your series crossover inductor, the impedance increases dramatically as the frequency goes up. In fact it often

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DIY FEATURE real-world drive units don’t behave like this and very often the combined phase response of the electrical output of the crossover and the acoustic performance of the drive unit result in phase discrepancies which wreck the smooth crossover we are aiming for.

THIRD ORDER First order slopes are very gentle at just 6dB/Octave attenuation below the crossover frequency. So the use of first order crossovers requires exemplary drive units with good behaviour over a very wide frequency range.

Phase response from first order filters is electrically in perfect synchronisation (HF red, LF green). But the phase response of real drive units will not be such a good match.

goes up so fast that, in combination with the falling response of the drive unit, the resulting ‘acoustic’ crossover approximates to a third order slope! Worse is to come with the treble unit. Common sense dictates that, in order to have a wide bandwidth, we should choose a treble unit with a very low fundamental resonance (F0). But sling a series capacitor in series with these types of treble units and you will find that the midrange output drops dramatically through the crossover region. It’s all because the electrical crossover slopes are too shallow. To compensate for the droop in at mid to high frequencies from the treble unit you lift its sensitivity and then it sounds too ‘bright’ in the treble range. For these reasons it is easier to work with real drive units using higher order crossovers.

across the treble unit to ‘shunt’ away some of the midrange energy. The overall result is a 12dB/Octave electrical slope. So far, so good, but the theory of second order crossovers shows that the phase shifts by 180° through the crossover region. This means that we have to reverse the connections to the treble unit. Now this would be all well and good if we could maintain the phase response of the bass unit and treble unit either side of the crossover. But

Typically the use of second order electrical crossovers combined with the falling response and phase and impedance characteristics of real drive units results in a third order acoustic performance. So it is best that we concentrate our energies by looking at the benefits a third order crossover gives us. Let’s start with slopes. A third order slope is 18dB/Octave so, at last, we are starting to be able to ‘hide’ the out of band colorations and distortions of our drive units. Now we only have to make sure that our drive units behave themselves for little over an octave either side of the crossover frequency! Phase response is, in theory, shifted by 90° through the crossover region but this, as we’ll see when we start measuring ‘real’ loudspeakers, isn’t the problem that it first appears to be. Theoretically we need to add a third element to each crossover leg – another series inductor leading to the bass unit and a second capacitor in series with the treble unit. You can see that there is a ‘block/shunt/block’ action going on here which increases the rate at which electrical energy is filtered to the drive units. However, as we have said, there isn’t always the need to add this third element. For example the impedance of many bass units rises so fast above the crossover frequency that they achieve a 6dB/Octave acoustic slope naturally. Add this to the 12dB/

SECOND ORDER The next step up from first order is, of course, second order. Here we add a second ‘leg’ to each inductor and capacitor. The series inductor to the bass unit now has a capacitor across the bass unit. This capacitor ‘shunts’ some of the treble energy away from the drive unit (remember – a capacitor’s impedance falls as the frequency gets higher). Similarly there is an inductor

Diagrams of electrical 1st order, 2nd order, 3rd order and 4th order crossover networks. These are theoretical electrical crossovers. Practical circuits designed to work with real drive units may differ from these, but the basic arrangement of the components will remain the same.

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DIY FEATURE Octave of a second order electrical crossover and, bingo, there is your third order acoustic crossover. So you will often see what initially looks like a mismatch of second order and third order crossovers in commercial speakers, but bear in mind that you are only looking at electrical slopes. It is the final, acoustic slopes that we are more interested in.

ACTIVE CROSSOVERS From third order we can go on adding elements to take us to fourth order electrical crossovers, but now things start to become rather unmanageable. Imagine, if you will, juggling the values of all those elements to try and achieve the desired acoustic crossover. As you change the value of just one component it can affect the performance so much that you need to adjust the values of all the other components to ‘balance’ the result. It is difficult enough doing this with third order crossovers. Adding the complexity of a fourth element in each leg is asking for trouble. In addition, as the filter slope increases, the ‘ringing’ of the filter becomes worse. Unless carefully managed this affects the transient response and adds ‘hardness’ and ‘sharpness’ to the sound through the crossover region which can become fatiguing. Every time we add elements to the crossover the reflected impedance to the amplifier runs the risk of looking worse. The swing of capacitance to inductance through the crossover region can upset even the most well behaved amplifiers. So it is in our interest to try and keep the overall system impedance looking fairly benign, otherwise the speakers will sound very different in character depending on the amplifier they are partnered with. For these reasons the role of higher order crossovers is often kept in the electronic domain. There is a persuasive argument for coupling a power amplifier to each drive unit and putting the crossover in the preamplifier section. To start with the amplifier can control the drive unit more accurately if it doesn’t have the impedance of the crossover in the way. Then we can build a high slope into an electronic crossover, with fewer problems than attempting it with passive components, and achieve the desired acoustic response by ‘mapping’ the drive unit characteristics to the required filter slopes in an ‘active’ crossover design. If speaker designers had their way then I suspect that most speakers would be ‘active’ designs.

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But the complexity, and expense, of adding an amplifier for each drive unit and moving the crossover design into the preamplifier are often beyond the amateur designer’s capabilities. Commercially it is something of a non-starter as it moves the ‘mix and match’ approach that is typical of the separates hi-fi market into a ‘system’ approach from each manufacturer. That is why you are likely to find successful active speakers only from the ‘system’ brands such as Bang & Olufsen and Meridian.

CALCULATIONS OK, so where are the calculations, you know, the ones to select the right values for our crossover elements? Sorry to disappoint you, but they don’t exist! Yes, I know that you can look up spreadsheets and calculators that give you theoretical values for a given crossover frequency. But look at what they ask you. What is the impedance of the drive units? Indeed, just what is the impedance of the drive units? A bass unit may be 8 Ohms at 250Hz but it is likely to have an impedance of 22 Ohms at 1kHz. It is a variable, not a fixed, impedance and your crossover calculator cannot possibly take a guess at the component values for an impedance that varies with frequency. So just how do you get started? The old way, and for many the best way, was to take the prototype

Then back into the chamber again to find out what damage you had done to the desired frequency response and so on. This process of iteration between measurement and listening is very time consuming, but it is a path you have to follow if you want to design accurate, clean, transparent speakers. To do it by listening alone is very, very frustrating as you really don’t know where you are in terms of ironing out problems.

SHORTCUTS Occasionally we see loudspeakers come in for review that have, fairly obviously, been designed by ear without recourse to, or perhaps ignoring, the requirements for a smooth frequency response. Generally they have one or two ‘problem’ areas which show up on audition, perhaps a ‘gap’ in the upper midrange which leads to a ‘dulled’ presentation of detail or a ‘peak’ in the treble region that makes them overbright. Let me tell you it is much easier to iron out all the frequency response anomalies and then ‘fine tune’ the acoustic performance than to just ‘play it by ear’. Now this may be a disappointment to you budding speaker designers, but don’t become downhearted and give up yet. Next month we’ll look at ways that you can use a computer to run your own

Combine a drive unit with a first order natural roll-off (green) to a 2nd order crossover (blue) to achieve a 3rd order acoustic crossover (red).

speaker into a measurement chamber with a bucketful of crossover components and start plugging in values until the response looked reasonable. Then you took the prototype speaker and crossover into the listening room and fiddled about with it until it sounded half reasonable.

measurements, and you don’t even need a measurement chamber! We will also look at how you can ‘shortcut’ your crossover design to cut the months of iteration between measurement and listening. Next month: Measurement techniques

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WD Phono 3 W

DIY FEATURE

Part 5

Moving Coil Cartridge step-up – Head amp or Transformer? Peter Comeau explores...

hen it comes down to a choice of cartridge to play your treasured vinyl, most enthusiasts have no doubt that the moving coil remains king. To my ears the attributes of a moving coil cartridge are greater finesse and detail retrieval of information from the groove and superior presentation of the musical performance. Now that’s not to say that there aren’t some great MM cartridges out there, and I would be happy to use many of them, but I generally get a bigger buzz from music relayed via a Moving Coil. However, the downside is that 99% of the great and good MC cartridges are low output. If you don’t know what that means, I am talking about signal levels that are scaled in microvolts. Now we have a difficult enough job amplifying the millivolt levels that are generated by Moving Magnet cartridges whilst avoiding noise and distortion. But bringing MC cartridge output up to the signal levels that a preamplifier can handle is a tough job indeed.

HEAD AMP OR TRANSFORMER? When Moving Coil cartridges were first introduced in the ‘50s the classic method of matching them to Phono preamplifiers was to use a transformer. Many of these transformers were based on microphone transformer design and were physically small. In fact Ortofon, in their classic SPU-GT cartridge, introduced a version with transformers built into the cartridge body. You can imagine that many of these transformers were not optimised for the wide bandwidth, highly dynamic signals that were coming out of the cartridges. As a result the MC step-up transformer found itself with a bad name. The ‘70s saw a raft of MC cartridge head amplifiers appearing. Typical head amp designs of this period used multiple, parallel transistors as the initial gain stage in order to reduce impedance and noise, and coupled this to high levels

of loop feedback to keep distortion low. Some designers opted for the use of high power transistors, where the larger junction area reduces the base-emitter impedance, to try and effect a better match to the low impedance of the Moving Coil cartridge. Latterly the availability of very low noise op-amp integrated circuits has made the whole design process simpler, though not necessarily better! In any case, having experimented over more than two decades with all types of head amp circuit designs, and having WDPhono3 prototype with MCT step-up transformers fitted. tried most of the commercial 1:20 ratio, whereas if we connect designs on the market, I have come them in series we obtain lower gain to one conclusion. There is nothing from a 1:10 ratio. Which you choose like a good transformer. depends on your cartridge output. OK, so a transformer is prone to We can then adjust the matching picking up hum from nearby power impedance by selecting a secondary supplies. But other than that it is load. totally noise free and, by choosing For a transformer the impedance the construction carefully, distortion of the primary is equal to the can be kept low too. As usual with impedance of the secondary x n2 , transformers the bandwidth is dependant on the mechanical design, where n is the turns ratio. Typically a but if cost is not restrictive then this Moving Coil cartridge works well into can be managed effectively. a 50 Ohm or 100 Ohm load. If we do the calculations based on 100 Ohms then we will require a secondary load LOAD MATCHING of 10K Ohms for the 1:10 ratio of The major advantage accruing to the primaries in series. For the higher a transformer as a step-up device gain 1:20 ratio the secondary load is that it matches the impedances becomes 40K Ohms. If you prefer a correctly. It also helps that the series 50 Ohm load for your cartridge then self inductance of the generator coil just halve the load resistances. is matched to the inductance of the All we have to do, now, is transformer. A Moving Coil cartridge to switch these values into our is a very low impedance device, WDPhono3 input circuit when we typically 5 - 25 Ohms as a generator, link up the step-up transformers. so we really struggle when trying to But we decided to go one better design a transistor (or valve) circuit than that. For WDPhono3 we have to match the cartridge impedance for integrated input switching relays so efficient signal transfer. that we can switch between two Specify your transformer inputs on the rear. These can easily correctly, however, and you achieve be designated MM and MC, with the the ideal match between the phono transformers fitted to the MC input. amp and the load specified for the The required load resistors are then cartridge. As we are building the MC connected to the secondaries of transformer into the WDPhono3 we the transformers and automatically can easily provide the necessary load switched in when the MC input is matching. chosen via the front panel switch. For our MC transformer we You can use WDPhono3 to switch decided on using two primary between two turntables if you want coils with a 1:20 turns ratio to to – how cool is that? the secondary. By connecting the primaries in parallel we keep the Next month: On Test www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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KIT & COMPONENTS

KIT & COMPONENTS SUPPLIERS IPL ACOUSTICS,

BILLINGTON EXPORT LTD

Chelsea Villa, Torrs Park, Ilfracombe, North Devon, EX34 8AY Tel/Fax: 01271 867439 Please visit website for full catalogue of products: www.iplacoustics.co.uk IPL supply a range of 9 high quality transmission line speaker kits and a full range of Hi Fi and AV speaker kits including 2 powerful active subwoofers. Drive units are available from Hi Vi research, Seas, Morel, Fountech (Ribbon tweeters) and IPL custom built drivers.IPL also supply;-quality crossover components, cabinet accessories, including Silver plated PTFE insulated cables, and the very highly rated Alner-Hamblin Digital amplifier.

1E Gillmans Trading Estate Billingshurst, West Sussex RH14 9EZ Visitors by appointment only Fax: 01403 783519 E-mail: sales@bel-tubes.co.uk Web: www.bel-tubes.co.uk Guaranteed new/old stock valves for audio & industrial use Vintage types including Mullard, GEC, Telefunken & RCA. Large stocks of Chinese & Tesla. Major stockists of the Billington Gold brand. Free catalogue on request. Attractive prices on large orders. Minimum order £100.00

NOTEWORTHY AUDIO LIMITED,

IMPACT AUDIO

36 Buckingham Street, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, HP20 2LH Tel: 01296 422224 email: info@noteworthyaudio.co.uk web: www.noteworthyaudio.co.uk Suppliers of a selected range of audiophile valve kits and components. Including the Stoetkit range of valve amplifiers, Audio Note one times oversampling Dac Kit 1.1 and Lowther drive units. Plus a range of components and accessories from Eichmann, Furutech, Wonder Solder, Caig and many more. For a list of the extensive range of manufactured products and the special offers we stock please see our website or call for details. We are open from 9.30 to 5.30 Tuesday to Saturday, with demonstration stock of our kits available - please call in advance to book an audition.

Unit 102, The Courtyard Radway Green Business Centre Radway Green, Crewe, Cheshire, CW2 5PR. Tel : 01270 883243 Fax : 01270 882241 email : info@impactaudio.co.uk Website : www.impactaudio.co.uk Main UK distributors of VISATON loudspeaker kits, drive units and accessories. We offer over 35 professionally designed kits from one of Europes’ leading manufacturers. Drive units include the MHT 12 ribbon tweeter, TI 100 titanium cone midrange and the new TIW range of high power woofers. Contact us for a free catalogue or wisit our website for full details.

Unit 14 Pier Road, Pembroke Dock, Pembrokeshire, SA72 6TR Tel: 01646 685601 Fax: 01646 685602 Web: www.audiocominternational.com E-mail: info@audiocominternational.com Upgrade services available for all CD, SACD & DVD players. With our latest products we are able to advance CD playback way beyond what ‘stock’ players are capable of resolving. Our extensive knowledge base and upgrade techniques make us world leaders in digital upgrades. Various upgrade solutions are available to suit your budget and desired performance.

COMPONENT SUPPLIERS AUDIO SYNTHESIS PO Box 50 Nottingham, NG9 1DX. Tel. 01159 224138 Fax. 01159 229701. Email salesinfo@audiosynthesis.co.uk. Website www.audiosynthesis.co.uk VISHAY BULK FOIL RESISTORS - unquestionably the world's finest resistor for audio applications. Thousands of VSRJ 0.3W 300V 5ppm 1% values in stock at the lowest possible prices eg. values up to 20K at £3.50+vat. HIGH PURITY SILVERWIRE - Teflon insulated >99.99% purity, 0.6mm and 1.0mm diameter. Ideal for internal wiring, interconnects or speaker cables.

AUDIOCOM INT. LTD Unit 14 Pier Road, Pembroke Dock, Pembrokeshire, SA72 6TR Tel: 01646 685601 Fax: 01646 685602 Web: www.audiocominternational.com E-mail: info@audiocominternational.com Extensive range of audio passives and active components including DACT, Black Gate, Sanyo, Elna & Vishay. We are the manufacturer and sole distributor for Superclock 3 master clock & Invisus discrete regulators. Visit our online store for pricing and information. Secure online ordering available.

LOUDSPEAKER KIT SUPPLIERS ARENA ELECTRONICS LTD 59 Main Street, Great Gidding Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire PE28 5NU Tel: 01832 293320 Fax: 01832 293372 e-mail: sales@seas.co.uk Website: www.seas.co.uk Arena Electronics was appointed official UK distributor for SEAS high performance drive units in January 2006. We offer the full range of SEAS drive units, designed and built in Norway, together with speaker kits and advice for DIY speaker builders. These include the World Designs WD25A project, complete parts for which can be purchased on our website including the cabinet kit.

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WILMSLOW AUDIO 50 Main Street, Broughton Astley, Leicester, LE9 6RD Tel: 01455 286603 Fax: 01455 286605 Email: sales@wilmslowaudio.com Website: www.wilmslowaudio.com Contact us for a copy of our FREE Full Colour Catalogue or visit our Website with secure online ordering. The UK’s largest supplier of loudspeaker kits, drive units and components. We also have a range of subwoofer kits and amplifier modules available. Official UK distributor for ATC, Morel, Peerless, Scan-speak, Seas, Vifa and Volt. Beware of imitations, we only stock drive units made by the genuine manufacturers. We offer a full repair and upgrade service on most makes of loudspeakers.

VALVE AND OUPUT TRANSFORMER SUPPLIERS CHELMER VALVE COMPANY LTD The Stables, Baddow Park Great Baddow, Chelmsford, Essex, CM2 7SY Tel: 01245 241300 Fax. 01245 241309. Email: sales@chelmervalve.com Web Site: www.chelmervalve.com Premium range of audio valves, tested/selected for low noise, hum, microphony; power valves burnt-in. Huge stock of valves/tubes of all type, audio valves (inc. NOS types), industrial etc. Also large stocks of semiconductor. Many obsolete types.

MODIFICATION SERVICES AUDIOCOM INT. LTD

REPAIRS & RESTORATION AUDIO LABORATORIES (LEEDS) 3 Kildare Terrace Industrial Estate Leeds LS12 1DB UK Tel/Fax +44 (0)113 2440378 The UK's Leading Service & Restoration Specialists. Repairs/Restorations to Modern/Classic/Vintage valve hi-fi, musical and cinema amplifiers, control units etc. We will even build that kit for you or design something special. Please visit our Website at:- www.audiolabs. co.uk for complete details of our comprehensive services. Alternatively, contact us at:-

ARKLESS ELECTRONICS. Tel. 01670 829891 E-mail: arkless.electronics@btinternet.com Specialist in repairs, restoration and modifications to all amplifiers, valve or solid state, ancient and modern. Design service for companies and hobbyists. Amps, preamps, phonostages, active crossovers, psu's etc custom built to order. Kits built/debugged. Please enquire for any other services. Ex design engineer for well known hi-fi companies.

POWER SUPPLIES PAUL HYNES DESIGN Keld Cottage, Askham, Penrith, Cumbria, CA10 2PG. Tel: 01931 712822 Email: paulhynes@freezone.co.uk Website: paulhynesdesign.com SLIM DEVICES SQUEEZEBOX ULTIMATE POWER SUPPLY UPGRADE. Hear how good Squeezebox can sound. Upgrade the switching supply with a wide bandwidth, ultra low impedance, low noise, linear shunt regulated supply. Lightning fast transient response deals with high clock speed load current transients reducing supply induced jitter to very low levels.

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MAIL

mail

Visit our website at www.hi-fiworld.co.uk or send your e-mails to letters@hi-fiworld.co.uk. Letter of the month wins a pair of Precious Metals interconnects and one year's FREE subscription to Hi-Fi World.

Letter of the Month

MIXED UP Firstly I must say, Hi-Fi World has been coming up with some great articles that are of real use to me at the moment, in particular around the subject of directdrive turntables. I have been pondering the matter myself for a while following the theft of two Vestax PDX-2000 turntables, a Vestax PMC-25 mixer (which was my pride and joy - I have kind of replaced it with a PMC-250 which is something of a consolation), a Nait 3 and a Marantz CD63 which at the time served my needs spinning tunes together and generally having a ball. I should mention that since then I have made myself a pair of Studio Monitors from Wilmslow Audio with upgraded tweeters, caps and wiring which I am happy enough to live with for the time being. However, I have been suffering greatly with the sound from an old Dual 505 and a Denon combo thing that some friends passed on to help me out; it works, but it is definitely not music as I know it. Now having accumulated a reasonable sum of money, I am trying to reconcile houseparty DJ’ing with budding audiophile tendencies kept mainly in check previously by spending far too much on music. My girlfriend is getting sick of the sight of magazines with photos of ‘wires and things’. The article on the Vestax deck recently was interesting but swung me away from the brand to look at the alternatives. A custom made Brinkmann Oasis with added pitch control would be lovely but sadly I am a nurse and not a footballer. Ideas began to coalesce after reading about the Origin Live mod to allow a replacement arm onto SL1200s and the more I have thought about it, the more determined I have become to follow this path, adding OL Silver 2s, SDS platters, some decent oil and perhaps Isonote footers to provide some basic isolation until I can afford to address proper support furniture at a later date. You seem very keen on the Goldring 1042 cartridge at the

Nicked! Two Vestax PDX-2000 turntables. How do you replace them? moment. I had been thinking about the Reson Mica from previous experience. How would you describe subjective differences between the two and do you think it would be enough to make a comparison (and the extra outlay) worthwhile? (I am not into backspins and aggressive cutting; they’ll be treated with respect!). I am looking forward to seeing what you’ve done with the power cable, isolation pads and plinth - lots of detail and pics please! In terms of CD player, I am very pleased with the sound of the EERA DL1 player from France and think that I will have one, though of course thinking about spending so much on a format that seems to be in decline does make me wince (just a bit...). Also, do you know of any shops in the London area that sell the Vincents? I have sent an e-mail to Ruark but not received a reply so far. I have been struggling to come to a conclusion about amplification and I’m looking at a budget of £1.5k or thereabouts. I have thought about going back to Naim and have listened to a Musical Fidelity A5 which sounded pretty okay, but wasn’t entirely convinced by build or looks. I have to say that I have been rather tantalised by Adam’s ‘glowing’ review of the Vincent

monoblocks, they certainly seem to cover my preference for controlled, deep bass, power and sweeter upper-bands, as I could really do without the sonic gritting I get every time with the current combo. No real comments about build quality or reliability though? I had been thinking about an integrated amp at first but then figure I could afford something like the Vincents if I use the Vestax as a pre/control. I kind of know that this is the weakest link amongst the other gear and am wondering, firstly, whether I am being completely mad and, secondly, what can be done to maximise its performance? The most obvious place (to me) to start is at its power supply, a wall-wart job with a very weedy detachable cord, so I’m wondering if you know of any engineers who might be able to replace this with a more robust arrangement and perhaps also have enough knowledge to take a look around inside to see if there are components that could be upgraded to beef things up? Close proximity to London would be a great benefit. I had also (in a daydream) wondered if any benefit could be had from converting the mixer to run off 12V batteries? Is that a straightforward

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MAIL thing or what issues hinder it? Any advice respectfully received, hope you can help in some way, Gareth Richards Upgrading the Technics as you suggest is a fine idea and would definitely improve your audio quality. However, if your houseparty DJ-ing is carried out at places other than your home, it might be worth considering a couple of standard Technics or Vestax decks for this purpose and then have a dedicated hi-fi deck at home. This is the route I have taken, and there is a lot to be said for not

seem an ideal candidate for some upgraded internal wiring, ALPS pots and posh capacitors. Equally, a power supply upgrade would only bring improvements but I am not entirely convinced that battery power is strictly necessary. I have visions of you lugging a car battery around to parties with you, which would not exactly make life easy! AS Gareth - I have had problems with the Technics SL1200 project plinth fabrication, so the feature has been delayed. Regardless of the plinth situation, I will soon be running the

Technics SL1210 - one alternative to the Vestax for home and DJ use. having to worry unduly about a pint being spilt over my SL1210 or PDXA1, whereas if either were my main deck, I would be more concerned! I have not personally heard the Reson Mica cartridge, but the Goldring 1042 is a superb unit for a similar price - an audition would be mandatory here. The Vincent SA-T1 and SP-T100 amplifiers are a superb combo that impressed me considerably and are well worth seeking out. It might be a good idea to give Ruark a ring on 01702 601410 if they’re not answering their e-mails too promptly. The Vestax mixer is a well made unit that should perform respectably well in a hi-fi system, but the dedicated Vincent preamp will be much better. Obviously it is difficult for us to comment on equipment’s longterm longevity as it generally passes through our hands fairly quickly, but the Vincents are very solidly made and weighty - if their internal construction is anywhere near as good as their externals, then you should have no worries. Interestingly, the idea of modifying a mixer for better sound performance is something that has crossed my mind before, with internal components and controls prime targets for upgrading. If my addled brain serves me correctly, the Vestax PMC-250 has rotary controls rather than sliders and so this would

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SL1200 with heavily tweaked Rega arm, Isoplatmat and the latest Isonote feet, and will be reporting in due course. DP

CRACKING THE DECODE March Hi-Fi World’s article on GT Audio’s Leak Troughline updating to stereo using a “modern Decoder” was of interest. I think you’ll find that One Thing Audio’s Decoder blows Graham Tricker’s away, and including realignment at about half the cost! Am I right to think that if the decoder is fitted inside the Troughline, the sound quality and separation would suffer due to heat stress? Would it not be much better to use the One Thing decoder in its own external case? You could then use the same decoder with more than one tuner. Perhaps you could bring this matter

to the attention of your many readers who still rate FM Radio as one of the finest of sources. Mike Rodway. Hmm! Your letter sounds like a disguised Press Release of the unsubtle kind Mike. All the same, a One Thing decoder did arrive at Hi-Fi World towers recently and is awaiting our reverent attentions. We will likely have a review of it in the next issue. NK

CARTRIDGE CONUNDRUM I’m in a quandary! Some time ago my now retired bank manager, a generous hi-fi fan, gave me an Entre moving coil cartridge (Graham, If you see this, please feel free to contact me and we can resume our chats about hi-fi). Although I’ve been unable to find out much about it, I’m led to believe that in its day, it was a reasonably expensive and good piece of kit. Once fitted it was obviously superior to the Rega MM cartridge it replaced and I’ve been very happy with its performance, but I will need to replace it in the not too distant future and the question is, with what? Have I been horribly spoiled and need to spend £500 plus (which I can’t afford) to match its performance, or have times moved on and a less expensive replacement may be in order? I listen to a lot of accessible jazz such as Dave Grusin, Jaco Pastorius, George Duke and other quite musically complex material including Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan, Tears for fears and Little Feat. To be honest I can’t really justify spending more than around £100 and I realise (unless I can pick up another used one) my choice will be limited. My present number one system comprises; Rega Planar 3, RB300 with Michell TecnoWeight conversion, Audiolab 8000A amp (and its MC input) into MS 208s via VDH ‘the Clearwater’ cable. Digital is provided by Arcam Alpha Plus and Arcam Delta Black Box. Also another question, is there a direct link to the love of motorcycles and hi-fi? I’ve seen several references to bikes

Leak Troughline goes stereo with the One Thing external decoder. But is it better than GT Audio's?

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MAIL in your magazine and mail my friends who like hi-fi but also own bikes (I ride a ZZR 1100). Terry Symonds Used cartridges are something of a minefield, Terry, as you can never be sure exactly how many hours the stylus has under it, or what sort of conditions the records that is has played were in. For your £100 budget, the immediate candidates that spring to mind are the new Ortofon Tango and Denon DL103 if you really want another MC, or if you don’t mind going ‘back’ to the MM stable, we

Chris Frankland, ex-editor/publisher of Hi-Fi Review, who went on to launch International Motorcyling Review (if I remember rightly), to our very own publisher Noel Keywood who, a few years back, could be seen shredding the Westminster tarmac on his Triumph Thunderbird Sport! Much as I love cars (and still have the Triumph, Rover, Jaguar and Lotus bits in my shed to prove it!), I think bikes are truly special, as is hi-fi. The 'better half' of Graham Tricker (of GT Audio fame) may disagree though, as he recently had a nasty 'off', parting company from his motorised steed at high speed. I bet he's had worse shocks from valve amps though... DP

FORUM OR AGAINST ‘EM?

For £100 or so try a Tango,, a good budget moving coil cartridge. have all been extremely impressed by the Goldring 1012GX. Although I have not heard an Entre MC, I agree with you in that it was supposed to be a rather good item in its day and, consequently, I suspect you would have to move up the price scale to around £300 and splash out on the likes of an Ortofon Rondo Red or an Audio Technica AT-OC9MLII to improve on it. The helpful chappies at Needles and Spins (www.needles-and-spins.co.uk; +44(0)115 877 0781), Musonic (www. musonic.co.uk; +44(0)208 950 5151) or Mantra Audio (www.mantra-audio. co.uk; +44 (0)1757 288652) stock these, plus more besides. AS Motorcycles aren’t an unknown means of transport in the hi-fi world. I regret my biking days are over, at least for the time being, as scootering around London makes more sense. Boo hoo! But every time I see the lovely Triumph 675 I’m sorely tempted. NK Having owned over thirty motorcycles myself in my younger days, from Honda mopeds to big BMWs, I'd say that yes, there's a curious cosmic connection. There are loads of spooky coincidences, from

Although a subscriber, this is my first letter to you, so I hope this doesn’t ramble on too much. My reason for writing is Dominic Todd’s column and David’s comments in Letters, both in the Jan 2007 issue. Dominic’s thoughts on the extreme views on forums echoed my own, as I had recently signed up to a forum very close to you and had started posting replies to some threads. I suppose I thought these forums would be made up of erudite enthusiasts (more House of Lords than House of Commons) where I would learn insights and tips to enhance my system and discover the meaning of life. I really was rather excited! However, what I discovered was a bunch of overgrown schoolchildren shouting about how great their systems were! I have to own up. I have a Lingo’d LP12 which I had upgraded with a Hadcock 242 and Music Maker cartridge. Well, as this wasn’t a Garrard 301/401 it was rubbish. I defended my deck as I am attached to it and don’t feel the urge to spend more money on a different but not necessarily better sound. When I stated that I didn’t want to rush out and replace it with an idler drive, tuts all round. After admitting that I had heard the arm and cartridge on a Michell Gyro with Orbe updates and didn’t hear any difference to mine that was it! Impaired hearing and the taste of a Big Brother contestant! A bit depressing really. On to the Cartridge Man Musicmaker. David said it didn’t do it for him. I was jumping up and down in agreement. It’s very fine but in my system just seemed boring and the vocals appeared recessed. My system is a Croft Epoch pre, VTL ST85 power (EL34s) and Monitor Audio Studio 20s so you would expect a bit of boogie. I restored my old Denon DL304 (do you hate these as much as the DL103s?) and bought an MC step up from Noteworthy Audio to use with the Croft MM stage. Brilliant! Until I played

around with the cantilever and killed it. This letter was going to be what cartridge should I buy next? I put the Music Maker back on but it sounds different. The bass is stronger, instruments more natural, especially acoustic, and vocals fine. I don’t know if I have set it up better but it is a marked improvement. I miss the brightly lit midband of the Denon but not the increased surface noise. It now boogies! I still wonder about a new cartridge but only because like wine tasting I want to see if there is anything better. As a final piece, having read comments by Noel, I rewired my listening room which was a necessity not an experiment, with 4mm twin and earth from RS Components (6mm won’t fit in to MK sockets). As I had a lot of cable left over and was bored one afternoon, I swapped my van den Hul CS122 speaker cable for the twin and earth. I haven’t changed back. I use vdH interconnects which I’ve kept after substituting different makes so this is down to what works in my system as opposed to better etc. Makes you think, doesn’t it? Really finally! Are you going to be testing the new SE mods for the Linn LP12? They seem very pricey. Thanks for a fun and stimulating mag. Steven Slawthe Ah the good old forums - I must confess to spending more time than is probably good for me perusing a few of these and I have always felt that most should be viewed chiefly as a source of entertainment that occasionally turns up some very useful snippets, rather than being a plethora of accurate information! Remember that if you like your equipment, then what business is it of anyone else to cast aspersions on what you have? Certainly the LP12 is a fine deck and whether it is better or worse than the Garrard 301/401 is a matter of personal opinion. Whilst, as a 301 owner, my allegiance is clear, it is worth remembering that the LP12 is second only to the Technics SL1200 in terms of production longevity, so it is certainly no duffer. I have experienced a similar cartridge situation to yours a couple of years back when I stumbled across a secondhand AT33 moving coil. On first trying it, I found it to be harsh, spitty and fairly unpleasant and it went straight back into its box. Moving forward a year or so brought along a house move and my equipment set up in a new room - all sounding fine with the exception of the turntable which sounded dull and lifeless. After checking setup for the umpteenth time I suddenly

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Linn LP12 - a great turntable that improved even further recently with a whole series of upgrades. remembered that little box. Needless to say the AT33 injected just the right amount of verve into the setup and found itself being used for a good year or so until an AT-OC9 came along and made everything rather more sophisticated. By all means try out a few other cartridges, but beware of change for change’s sake, especially if you find you have taken a liking to the Music Maker. AS Hi Steve. We like the LP12 and have nothing against belt drives either, which generally sound clean and spacious. The Garrard 401 I use is simply very convenient, is a firm platform that can accept any arm and has a pacy and grippy sound with great - almost breathless - timing, plus deep bass. I suspect, however, that a good Direct Drive could manage as well, or perhaps better. Also, the 401 isn’t perfect; it has a slightly grey midband, and here the LP12 is superior. I feel pickup arms remain grossly misunderstood design-wise and that there is a long way to go here. The only starting point would be some sort of computer based structural analysis to see whether current structures and materials are sensible. I suspect they are not - and our measurements tend to bear this out. A good arm will provide better results overall, so as better arm designs come through, as I am sure they will, this will be the largest determinant of sound quality.. We don’t hate the Denon DL103 moving coil cartridge either! It’s good enough at the (low) price and has a strong following. Measurement showed it is a great tracker too. All the same, I feel there are better experiences to be had at the

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price, preferring Goldring MMs, for example. Put a 1012GX, 1022GX or 1042 in a Rega RB300 and you have a great combo. at an affordable price, that has real verve. NK I'm for 'em! There's nothing wrong with anyone having 'the oxygen of publicity', as Mrs T once famously put it - it's just that you have to use your brain and suspend disbelief when you read some people's posts.

DL103

forum posts are quite aggressive for example, blithely dismissing your use of an LP12 and implying you must be stupid for owning one. Well I've heard a good number of great turntables, and for some types of music I've still never heard anything better. In other instances, I wouldn't touch it with a bargepole, but my point is that if I was a full-on jazz fan, for example, I'd be running one now and not a GyroDec and/or Pioneer PL-L1000. The longer I do this job, the harder I find it to laugh derisively at other peoples' systems - generally enthusiasts have evolved their set-ups into something that does it for them. Forum-goers, I would argue, often have a more simplistic and less three dimensional view of life... As for your cartridge, I am afraid the MusicMaker didn't float my boat. I must confess that (like Noel) I'm a fan of the subtlety and insight a serious moving coil can bring. Moving magnets such as the MusicMaker are just too veiled in the treble and opaque in the midband for my tastes, although it is excellent in other respects, as its name suggests! I personally would go for an Ortofon Rondo Bronze (£500) which will give you the clarity and bite of the Denon 304 with a good deal more finesse. It is slightly less warm though, but your Linn LP12 should add a little

DL103R

Denon DL103 and DL103R - fine moving coil value at £99 and £199 respectively. First, who is likely to be posting on forums? Casual observers, middle-ofthe-road folk, people with very wide experience of hi-fi? Or opinionated, tendentious zealots? Well, you never know. I would politely suggest that most denizens of hi-fi forums have an extreme interest or passion for the subject, and this may 'colour' their views. The operative word is 'may' as this could also make them exceptionally well informed. For example, some of our readers' letters show stunning insight and experience, others something of a misunderstanding of the topic - and you just never know. The other point is that many

welcome colour! The LP12SE mods will be done in full, very soon. Rest assured we'll be handling the subject with love and affection for the Sondek, and not just looking for a chance to deride it! At the Bristol show, my first impressions were wholly positive, although there were some there who rather missed the 'romance' of the old deck. We'll see! DP

SPEAKING BRIEFLY Just a very quick question: did your magazine ever do a test of the B&W 803D loudspeakers and, if so, what were your experiences of them? Raymond Van Rompaey

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B&W 803D - now with diamond tweeter. Raymond, we have not covered this particular model. That said, I did spend a while with a pair of prediamond tweeter 803s and liked them - they had the typical B&W qualities of accuracy, good detail and bass depth and I would imagine that the diamond tweeter will only improve on this. It is difficult to comment on whether you will like them, however, without knowing your musical preferences and the rest of your system. AS We've only done the B&W 801D so far, and I chose to review this above the 803D for the former's massive 15" bass driver (the 803D uses three 7" cones in parallel). I've heard the 803D sound very impressive, with a clean, measured, detailed monitor sound, but personally, the 801D did something that the '3 didn't - which is to move air with effortless grunt. It is truly charismatic in the best sense of the word, and the best B&W speaker I've yet heard. DP

INDEXING I am currently re-reading my collection of hi-fi magazines, with the claimed goal of making an index of the articles I have found useful/of interest in order to be able to quickly find them again. In fact, I am suspicious that this is just a pretext as I enjoy reading the magazines again! However, re-reading articles from different magazines over a long period (15 years) has made me aware of some general ‘tendencies’: - a piece of equipment doesn’t need to measure well in order to deliver the goods - the revival of vinyl and valves - the ‘boom’ of what was in the past considered as secondary accessories (if ever) such as cables, mains filters,

connectors, add-on power supplies etc. - the ‘loudspeakers set-up’ concept - followed by the ‘turntable set-up’ concept, followed by the ‘arm/ cartridge set-up’ concept, etc. - as opposed to the above the ‘listening room acoustics’ concept has made a more timid appearance - the concept of ‘synergy’ when assembling two or more components - the use of French words or expressions in English audio-related literature is also relatively recent. It has started first in the US, then appeared on the internet, and finally reached the UK hardcopy press too. As with any trendy fashion it is sometimes misused and/or misspelt (i.e. ‘faites accompli’ in HFW June 2006, p68) An obvious conclusion is that hi-fi is definitively an industry and that the hi-fi magazines reflect it. After all the press is an industry too, and a big market, especially for cable manufacturers. As far as HFW is concerned, I have noticed a net improvement since the ‘DP/NK’ editorship in general and that the word ‘couth’ has made a very new but oftenused appearance as an adjective in the reviews. I also feel that maybe I need to start a special index ‘DP and the NS1000’! Overall HFW would be my hi-fi mag. of choice if I had to read but one. In particular, the editorial tone, the articles ‘on a theme’, the comparisons between ‘old and new’, the Mail and the DIY sections are what makes your magazine far above the others. However, I would like to add my contributions to some audio-related topics if I may: (1) Vinyl vs. CD vs. master tapes: generally, people are comparing apples and oranges. There is not one master tape - there is the master tape for vinyl, another one for CD and sometimes a third one for radio. The first aim of mastering is to adapt the final mix to the medium the work will be released on. If an album has to be released on vinyl and on CD there will be two different master tapes (or digital files) created. If tracks X and Y have to go on air for promotion there will a third master made for tracks X and Y. It is therefore in general irrelevant to compare a vinyl to a CD as the latter has been made using either the record as the master (the worst case) or the master tape (mastered for vinyl). Only when the mastering has been done using the final mix has the CD a chance. For reference: The Who 'Live at Leeds' on vinyl (1970), on CD (1987), on remastered CD (1995) and on remixed and remastered CD (2001). As the CD versions are improving with time I guess that the 1987 version used the vinyl as the master, the 1995 version very likely used the vinyl master tapes and the 2001 version obviously used the

original tapes since it has been remixed. I am not comparing analogue vs. digital playback, I am just trying to point out that a huge amount of CDs had been made using a masters custommade for vinyl and therefore are flawed from the start from a sonic point of view. (2) DP and the NS1000: apart from the fact that you need to keep your Yams intact as it serves you as a reviewing tool, have you ever considered driving them multi-amplified? Let’s say with the NuForce for the bass and your modded WAD for the medium and treble? A second-hand computer (you don’t need great speed for the purpose) equipped with a 4-output soundcard and some audio software is all you need to make a digital crossover and it is easier to do and cheaper than to build a WAD kit! On the other hand you can use a Behringer DCX2496, just ask AG to rebuild the power supply as the stock one is hopeless. (3) CV and speakers using tuned cabinets: besides the Waterfall, Eclipse and Bösendorfer please have a listen to models from Ocellia (www.ocellia. com), OSH (www.osh-antimis.com) and Auditorium23 (www.auditorium23.de).

Ocellia Calliope loudspeakers - reviewer Channa should have a listen, says reader Jean-Christophe Xerri. Not only do they make use of tuned cabinets and they sound ‘natural’ but also they are very efficient, crossoverless and just love low-powered valve amps (don’t forget to invite NK!). Finally, there are a couple of topics I would like to read on: firstly a mainsisolated system. There are already turntables, phono preamps, portable digital recorders, computers, DACs, line preamps (and TVCs), integrated amps with battery-powered PS. Why not building an entire system free from the noisy mains corruption?

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MAIL a pot plant on top of them. Hi-fi is an immensely rewarding pastime, but is not really a fit-and-forget activity, especially if you like those valves and vinyl! As to the use of French, I suspect that, deep-down, we feel it confers a sense of the exotic and mysterious upon us when we use it. Of course, slipping into the realms of Del-Boy Trotter is always a danger, so we shall have to monitor these more closely in future. Mangetout! AS

was inarguably perfect, remember? Early CDs were flawed for a variety of reasons. Engineers were told CD had 96dB dynamic range, but that they must not run into overload at the mastering stage (digital has a strict headroom limit). So music was transcribed at a low level, in the belief that 96dB gave more than enough headway. What few realised was that digital was only ‘perfect’ at full level; at low levels it was very imperfect, distorting heavily in a way LP had never done. This greyed and coarsened the sound of early CD. This behaviour, as well as poor A/D convertors and jitter, hampered sound quality. Modern recordings are a lot better all the way along the signal chain and you can hear it. It is certainly the case that LPs and CDs are usually from different master tapes and therefore not directly comparable, but I compare them in any case! It’s always interesting. The issue of measurement is a little complex. Yes, products that measure badly can sound good, but that really depends upon what it is that measures badly. Not all measurements say much about sound quality, channel separation being one; much above 23dB is good enough for us

Au contraire Rodney - I mean Adam! Sometimes we need to use French to describe situations or sensations for which Yamaha NS1000 (again!) - benefit immensely from a set of adjectives or phrases custom-made stands. don't exist in English. No excuse for the odd typo admittedly, but using foreign Secondly, digital room correction. There words is accepted English practice, are already existing products (Lyngdorf, and useful too - as anyone who's Tact, DEXQ) as well as DIY attempts ever tried to describe déjà vu in on the net that do not cost an arm and English will know! a leg. Wouldn’t it be a good thing to As for the Yamaha NS1000Ms experiment what the mixing engineer and myself, I now realise I have attempted to do without transforming spawned a monster. I use our listening room (which is also the them because I've yet to family living room for most of us) into hear more transparent a studio suite spoilt with absorbers, loudspeakers (from any diffusers and Helmholtz resonators? era), but I admit they are That’s enough for now. Keep up the flawed in some ways (like good work! every other speaker). The Jean-Christophe Xerri trouble is, after twenty years in the wilderness (in this Hmm, I am not entirely sure that country at least), it appears it is true that a piece of equipment that every single Englishdoes not need to measure well in speaking NS1000 owner in the order to sound good. Very often any world picked up on me using irregularities in measurement can them and decided to write in. indeed be heard but the important Apologies for this, as I realise point is whether their resulting it is terminally dull for noneffects are objectionable or fairly NS1000 owners - maybe we benign. Ultimately, however, we do CD and LP come from different masshould introduce a ban, like the ter tapes, so they cannot be comtend to find that the best-sounding French once tried with English pared. Heaven Seventeen's 'Luxury equipment that we audition does words in la langue française! indeed measure fairly well as well. Gap' CD demonstrated what happens Given what I've just said, I shall Just to confuse things even further when you use the same master, in this not divulge my plans to run my however, we do sometimes find that case the LP cutting master. Yams with Marantz electronic a set of good measurements do not crossovers... DP necessarily guarantee a good sound... to perceive stereo. Distortion is I don’t think anyone could have another controversial one: second predicted fifteen years ago how some There were some glorious examples harmonic distortion (a signal at aspects of the current audio industry, of CDs being derived from LP cutting twice the frequency of the stimulus) such as valves and vinyl, would have masters, Heaven Seventeen’s ‘Luxury developed. Others, such as proper Gap’ being a classic example. But I am is also subjectively innocuous. Third harmonic adds sharpness, but at low setup, system synergy and suitable not aware this was ever a common levels gives the sound incision and accessories, seem to be a natural practice/ mistake. Quite the reverse a hard edged quality that some like, progression to me and I am surprised in fact: the recording business was as it seems to 'sharpen things up'. that it took so long for someone excited by the introduction of CD Much above this however and the to realise that the best place to site and the lack of any need to derive a ear starts to hear distortion not as their loudspeakers was not actually special cutting master, due to CD’s a change in quality of the music, but plonked down beside the sofa with intrinsic accuracy. Back then, digital

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MAIL roots are West Germanic (who said hi-fi is confusing?). Start worrying when we turn to Gaelic. NK Go raibh maith agat ar do litir. SM

HEADING NORTH

Hitachi HMA-7500 amplifier - measured perfectly back in 1979, but didn't sound that way. as a separate interfering signal. Then there's the modulation pattern of the distortion, or whether it is correlated with the music. Cartridge mistracking is interesting is an illustrative example; just before mistracking a pickup cartridge produces lots of distortion, but it isn't heard as such. As soon as the stylus lets go, the signal starts to take on a modulation pattern as higher harmonics join lower ones (that characteristic zzz... zzz) and this the ear hears immediately. Digital distortion is often uncorrelated with the music and possesses components that may be of fifteen times higher frequency than the stimulus; the ear detects this as something totally removed from the music, as greyness, hash, hardness and what have you. So there's distortion - and distortion! Some is innocuous, like 5% second harmonic, but some is not, like 1% digital quantisation distortion. So products can measure badly, but sound quite good all the same. The converse is more difficult to explain: products that measure well and sound bad. This is where argument breaks out! My oft quoted example was one of the first MOSFET amplifiers, launched in the late 1970s, the Hitachi HMA-7500. This was distortion-free, even at high frequencies, and measured perfectly in every other respect, yet there was no sound quality benefit. The reverse in fact: it had a peculiarly unengaging sound, characterised by a lack of stage depth and a slightly opaque quality. It was lifeless and unengaging to listen to; one reviewer said amplifiers like this sounded "boring" and, in a nutshell, he was right. Yet it measured perfectly, so here was a total contradiction. Why? Many people have put forward reasons, but to this day I am unaware of any measurable proof. Some amplifiers today, often based around MOSFETs, still measure perfectly and yet seem to benefit little, if at all, in sound quality. The general suspicion is that excessive feedback is the culprit, and, in the case of the HMA7500, poor 1970s component quality.

These days component quality has improved and so has sound quality, but still it is difficult to measure any difference between then and now, so what the ear is hearing, heaven knows! Thankfully, this situation, where a product measures perfectly but doesn't necessarily sound so good, mainly affects amplifiers and we just have to live with it. It doesn't negate the value of measurement, but it does suggest that with amplifiers the measurements we use are best at determining general operability rather than ultimate sound quality. Unfortunately, whilst this contradiction between measurement and sound quality exists with amplifiers there will always be room for argument, the most common being that our subjective assessment is flawed, not the amplifier. If this was the case then an awful lot of people around the world are deluded. All the same, at Hi-Fi World we endeavour to have more than one person listen to a product, often under different circumstances and always without prior discussion, to ensure there is consistency of view. Generalising then, if a product measures well then there is a good chance it will sound at least respectable. If it measures badly then the reason why is the issue when it comes to influence upon sound quality. In this case measurement usefully warns that sound quality traits are due to measured imperfection, avoiding the unfortunate situation where a reviewer hears the effect, likes it and declares the product a winner. Doh! What studio engineers do with equalisers and all the other gadgets they have available to them nowadays is a little different to improving room acoustics. We recommend more sumptuous furniture rather than treatment panels, although Studiospares have a good range of all those ugly things you list that can help. Helmholz resonators? Try a tall bookcase in a corner - much more effective. Hasn't French always been a part of English, even if Wikipedia says our

I have read and subscribed to Hi-Fi World since issue 14 and I admire your comments on hi-fi as we both think very much along the same lines. I, like yourself, purchased a brand new Garrard 401 turntable in 1970 which I fitted into a Howland West plinth with a Neat G30B tonearm and a Shure M75ED cartridge. This was amplified by my first amplifier which was a 45W (RMS) Nikko TRM1200 and it fed a pair of Wharfedale Unit 5 kit speakers (3 way units with a 12in bass driver). In 1976 I upgraded the arm to an Acos Lustre GST1 and in 1981 the cartridge was changed to a Goldring G900 IGC. The rest of my system was upgraded to a top end Rotel 1010 setup complete with tuner, tape deck, 100W pre/ power amps., complete with a spectrum analyser with an on-board pink noise generator, condenser mic. and a matching graphic equaliser to control it, all housed in its matching metallic brown and glass cabinet. Excellent! After lots of careful auditioning the speakers were changed for a set of 15in Tannoy Berkeley Dual Concentrics. All of this only had moderate use up until 1983 when I purchased (wait for it) a Philips CD104 CD player. This lasted until the mid nineties when it was replaced with a Marantz CD63 to which I later added a Micromega Duo BS2 DAC that turned out to be quite a smooth and detailed combo, for CD anyway! I then found a second hand Meridian 200 transport and 263 Delta Sigma DAC advertised in Hi-Fi World by a high-end dealer in London for the modest sum of £399. I quickly phoned them up and was lucky enough to secure a deal. When they arrived I unpacked them and was stunned to see the condition they were in. Immaculate! They were also supplied with a van den Hul digital interconnect. I could not believe my luck. I sent the transport off to Meridian for a check-up and service. Meridian contacted me and asked if I would like to have the unit upgraded as well. For the service and upgrade they wanted the princely sum of £35 so I snapped up their offer. When it arrived back I connected it up and what a difference. Deeper, tighter bass and more detail, well worth the small outlay. Thank you Meridian. Long ago I discovered the joy of valves but could not decide what to buy because a lot of the better products were out of my price range. Then along came the WAD kits that I could afford.

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MAIL Having had some past experience of building hi-fi I decided to go for it. I phoned up and ordered the three Pre II units. I then saved up and purchased a pair of 300B PSE monoblocks which I started to build but unfortunately had to put on hold due to health reasons. This

3 channels. A Pioneer DVD player with SACD and DVD audio feeds these into a Pioneer PDP-434 HDE 43in plasma TV. The speakers are two BK Electronics 10in active subs (these are superb by the way), a B&W CC6 centre and Mission 752 fronts. I will be replacing

Something to drool over - and it looks better in real life! The WAD Slatedeck with Garrard 401 turntable and SME312 12in arm. Heaven.

May07.qxd

led to me having to give up work and because of this and a few other reasons we decided to sell up and move from Kent to north west Cumbria where my other half is from. The upside of all this was that I could afford to buy a large, detached Victorian house with 18in thick walls, solid internal walls and doors, 9ft 6in high ceilings and - most importantly - my own wife-free A/V room complete with open fireplace, large (9ft long) sofa, with a handy glass shelf to place my wine/beer glasses fixed to the wall next to it and an in-room chiller to keep it in. An audiophile's dream set up I think! Since I moved up here five years ago I have set up an A/V system using mainly second hand equipment such as 03/03/2007 13:39 1 a Rotel RSP985Page THX processor hooked up to two Rotel 2 channel power amps. and a Rotel 6 channel amp. bridged to

the Tannoy 628 rears with a pair of Mission 751 units that a friend of mine had blown up and was going to take to the dump. I rescued these and after inspection found that two bass drivers and one tweeter were dead, but the crossovers were both okay. I phoned Mission and a very helpful lady called Nikki said that she could supply me with original bass drivers and a butterfly repair kit for the tweeters. The total cost would be £89.35 for all four units inc. p&p so I placed an order. I have since restored these and once again they are singing. I enjoyed doing this so much that I have decided to upgrade the crossovers and with the help of Peter Comeau and Nick Holland at Arena Electronics I have changed the internal wiring with better cables and will be replacing all the capacitors with their SAX type. If the

results are good - and I am sure they will be - I will modify the 752s as well. I would urge any hi-fi nut with an ounce of DIY skills to have a go at this as it is really enjoyable. These recent activities have inspired me to start building the valve amps again and also upgrading other equipment - which leads me to where I would like your advice. Having read Adam Smith's article on the Slatedeck/401/SME312/Rondo Bronze set up I have made the decision that I want some kind of slate plinth (probably a DIY Cumbrian green slate version as although I would love a Slatedeck my funds will not run to it), with an SME312 and I am thinking of using a Music Maker III cartridge in place of the Rondo Bronze as I know of a good second-hand one at a reasonable price and I don’t have step-up transformers in my PhonoII. As always I will value opinion and would be most grateful for your answer. Thanks to you and all your team for a great magazine that I have enjoyed and will hopefully enjoy for many years to come. Graham Taylor, Hi Graham. It is difficult to know quite what to say about the Music Maker III cartridge as a second-hand deal without a price - and age. As always though, you need to be sure it has some life left in it, and is not worn out - or going that way. Two new Ortofon moving magnet designs have just arrived however - see our review this month - and more top quality moving magnet cartridges from a well known and respected manufacturer are due out soon, so don't act hastily! Like your house by the way - sounds great, much better than my 1910 piece of London Victoriana that has - er - structural limitations shall we say, in contrast to what you have found in Cumbria (meaning the walls are crap and the roof leaks!). NK

SPECIAL OFFERS & EX-DISPLAY BARGAINS SOME AS NEW (MARKED*) 24HR DEL ONLY £8. CHECK STOCK BEFORE ORDER. S/H = Pre-Owned. E&OE

CALL SALES:(020) 8318 5755 or 8852 1321 - 248 Lee High Road, London, SE13 5PL � Creek - Destiny CD/Amp + PMC DB1 System

£2735 Save £340

Creek have a winner here. Tuneful, vibrant, a great partner for PMC - Come and listen. Could this be your Destiny? For this month we include PMC DB1+ for half price!

Arcam FMJ CD23 Player S/H (1Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . . . . . .(1099.00) Arcam FMJ A22 Amp Inc Dave Module S/H (1Yr G/tee) .(1200.00) Arcam FMJ P25/3 3 Chan Power Amp S/H (1Yr G/tee) . . .(999.00) Linn Mimik CD Player S/H - (6Mth G/tee) . . . . . . . . . . . . .(1100.00) Linn AV5103 DTS Processor - Black (1Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . .(4500.00) Linn Klout Power amplifier S/H (1Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . . . . .(2400.00) Linn Chakra 2200 Power Amp Silver E/D (2Yr G/tee) . . .(2530.00) Naim NAC82 Preamp S/H - (1Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .(2500.00) Naim CDS3 CD Head Unit Ex/Dem (2Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . .(5325.00) Naim Allae Speakers Cherry S/H (1Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . . .(2250.00) ProAc Studio 130 Speakers E/D (2Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . . .(1099.00) Spendor S6e Speakers Maple E/D (2Yr G/tee) . . . . . . . . .(1495.00)

£435.00 £449.00 £375.00 £325.00 £859.00 £895.00 £1750.00 £975.00 £3895.00 £1495.00 £769.00 £995.00

For latest News, Products, Offers, additions to our pre-owned and ex-display bargains in Marketplace section please visit www.billyvee.co.uk.

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We are proud to anounce that we are dealers for VPI RECORD DECKS, ROKSAN, ORTOFON, GOLDRING, PROJECT, E.A.R. INCA DESIGN, ISOTEK, WE HAVE VARIOUS CARTRIDGES IN STOCK – MORE EQUIPMENT ARRIVING DAILY – please ring, or see web.

matrix hi-fi

NEW AND GOOD QUALITY VINTAGE/USED HI FI

65-67 DARENTH ROAD, DARTFORD KENT DA1 1LU - UK TEL: 01322 281787/ 281700/ 292391/ 227668 FAX: 01322 229908

RECORD DECKS/HEAD AMPS/TONE ARMS ACOUSTIC SOLUTIONS NEW (IDEAL FOR MIDI SYSTEMS) £ 69.99 GOLDRING GR1.2, WITH RB250 ARM AND GOLDRING ELECTRA CART. BRILLIANT £139.00 GOLDRING GR2 £239.00 NEW PROJECT PHONO STAGE MM MC £ 45.00 NEW – PROJECT VALVE PHONO STAGE MM/MC WITH OUTBOARD PSU £300.00 NEW – ROKSAN RADIUS DECK WITH UNI-PIVOT ARM - wood/acrylic £749/849 NEW MICHELLE UNI COVER £ 44.99 NOTTINGHAM ANALOG MENTOR TONE ARM £299.00 LINN LP12 BASIC PLUS ARM IN M/PLINTH £600.00 NAD 5120 – NEW GOLDRING ELAN CART. £99.00 REGA PLANER3/LINNK9 £139.00 THORENS TD170 £85.00 QED DISCSAVER MM PHONO STAGE £35.99 VPI SCOUT WITH UNIPIVOT ARM £1,199.00 TARGET T/TABLE WALL SHELF £59.95 PRE-AMPS ALBARRY PASSIVE PRE. MUSICAL FIDELITY A3CR BOXED MINT SYMPHONIC AUDIO VALVE LINE WITH REMOTE NEW ROTHWELL PASSIVE PRE. MARSH P2000T HYBRID QUAD 44 – GREAT QUAD 34 POWER AMPLIFIERS - VALVE AUDIO INNOVATIONS SERIES 300 AUDIO NOTE ZERO MONO BLOCKS KLYSTRON 2A3 MONO BLOCKS 15WATT NEW...SHANLING STEREO INTERGRATED AMP SEE WEB SITE – ORDERS TAKEN NOW VAA EL34 INTEGRATED 25 WATT. RADFORD STA 25 WOODSIDE EXCELLENT RADFORD STA 35 MODIFIED BLK/GOLD AUDIO RESEARCH CLASSIC 60 – vgc SHANLING POWER AMPS (SEE WEB SITE) SHANLING MONO BLOCKS EX. DEMO MR LIANG 845/300B STEREO SINGLE ENDED MKIII AWESOME

MUSONIC STYLI

EMAIL: mailto:info@matrixhi-fi.co.uk WEB: www.matrixhi-fi.co.uk

£199.00 £399.00 £499.00 £699.00 £550.00 £249.00 £169.00 £399.00 £399.00 £899.00 £1,300.00 £ 299.00 £1,100.00 £1,199.00 £1,399.00 £2,000.00 £1,550.00 £ 899.00

POWER AMPLIFIERS – SOLID STATE SUGDEN A21a – GREAT NEW ACOUSTIC SOLUTIONS SP101 CYRUS 2 ZETA ECLIPSE MONO BLOCKS QUAD 303 QUAD 405 II QUAD 606 CRIMSON 630C MONO BLOCS & PRE AMP

£399.00 £ 89.00 £175.00 £299.00 £ 90-00 £ 249.00 £ 399.00 £ 599.00

TUNERS, CASSETTE DECKS ETC. NEW Acoustic Solutions DAB tuner NEW PURE EVOKE-1XT RADIO CHERRY/MAPLE NEW – PURE DIGITAL 701ES DAB TUNER

£ 99.00 £89.00 £159.00

Quad FM3 YAMAHA CT710 TUNER CD/HDCD/SACD/DVD/MD PLAYERS CARY CAD955 TUBE CD PLAYER CARY CD303 HDCD BOXED – SUPERB MUSICAL FIDELITY XRAY NEW INCA KATANA CD PLAYER – BARGAIN NEW INCA KATANA SE KATANA SE X DEMO ARCAM DELTA BLACK BOX TRICORD RESEARCH PULSER DAC WITH EXTERNAL TR POWER SUPPLY, UPGRADED TO HDCD MERIDIAN 506 20BIT. REMOTE MERIDIAN 200 CD MERIDIAN 200 CD WITH 203 DAC MICROMEGA DRIVE 2 & DAC – MINT BOXED MARANTZ/HEART VALVED CD PLAYER NEW/BOXED BLACK OR GOLD NAD DVD/CD T550 MINT THETA DSPRO BASIC II DAC AUDIO NOTE DAC3 AND BORDER PATROL PSU. MICRO SEIKI CD PLAYER CDM2 – SUPERB MYRYAD MC100 CD PLAYER AUDIOLAB 8000 SERIES DAC – BOXED ASSEMBLAGE DAC2 HDCD CAMBRIDGE AUDIO DAC MAGIC EXPOSURE 2010 CD PLAYER SHANLING CDT80 SHANLING CT200 SACD EX DEMO NEW SHANLING CT200 SACD SEE WEB SITE SHANLING CDT 300 OMEGA LIMITED EDITION SPEAKERS MONITOR AUDIO MA2 DOMESTIC REFERENCE KEF MODEL ONE-TWO CHERRY FLOORSTANDERS KEF C55 BLK STAND MOUNT, STANDS NOT INC. SPENDOR SP1 VGC WITH STANDS GRADANT REVOLUTION (£3700 NEW) NEW MISSION M3i SERIES BEECH OPTIMUS LINIUM TWEETERS AUDIO NOTE ANJ TEAK SILVERADO PIANO BLACK INCL STANDS SNELL ‘E’ TEAK WITH TARGET STANDS ACOUSTIC SOLUTIONS SMALL BOOKSHELF BEECH/CHERRY

£ 99.00 £ 45-00 £499.00 £1,399.00 £ 349.00 £ 600.00 £ 995.00 £650.00 £ 199.00 £ 699.00 £ 499.00 £ 299.00 £ 399.00 £ 499.00 £ 599.00 £ 199-00 £399.00 £999.00 £800.00 £299.00 £199.00 £199.00 £150.00 £299.00 £ 649.00 £1,650.00 £2,150.00 £3,899.00 £199.00 £499.00 £150.00 £ 299.00 £1,899.00 £ 129.00 £ 150.00 £499.00 £1,499.00 £ 649.00

POWER CONDITIONERS ISOTEK POWER CLEANLINE ISOTEK ORION 2/4/6/ OR 8 WAY ISOTEK MINI SUB MISC

CABLES – Silver Arrow – Van De Hull - QED SOUND STYLE EQUIPMENT RACKS & VARIOUS BEYER HEADPHONES - PLEASE PHONE

£ 29.95 £299.00 £P.O.A £495.00

How to get the most out of your record player in 3 easy steps: 1. Buy from Musonic 2. Fit your purchase to your player 3. Turn up the volume

After 50 years in the business We know what we’re talking about! Manufacturers and suppliers of Styli, Pickup Cartridges and Audio Accessories. Musonic (UK) Limited 271B Wenta Business Centre Colne Way, Watford Hertfordshire WD24 7ND Tel: 020 8950 5151 Fax: 020 8950 5391. For info and to buy online visit: www.musonic.co.uk

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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LAT INTERNATIONAL

Since 1989 IC 300 Signature, IC 200 MKII, IC 100 MKII Analog, DI-30 Signature & DI-20 Digital and VI-6 Video Interconnects, AC-2 MKII Power cord, SS800 MKII and SS1000 MKII Loudspeaker cables, also available in Biwire form..- Tonearm interconnects TA300, TA200 and TA100. Solid Core Silverfused wire technology with Teflon insulation and are fully shielded,

On demo at Rochester HiFi

LAT International Maintenance prod-

ucts - Contact Cleaner, Record Cleaning solution, CD/DVD disk cleaning solution Enhancement products - Vibra Killers, C Diamond, Once & Done and Green Line

AUDUSA OOM

products include ceramic speaker cable isolators from the USA, MK Tough plugs, IEC’s, & Wattgate 320L IEC with silver plated contacts. Locking banana and RCA connectors with silver plated pins.

North Star

192 top loading Transport (Pro 2 CD Mech) and Extremo DAC.

AUDUSA EUPEN

The world’s only true Ferrite technology cables - a high quality ferrite is extruded over the conductor strands. Power Cords - GNLM 5/2.5 (CSA 2.5) and GNLM 05/04. From £48 for a 1m cord terminated with an IEC and MK tough plug. Other terminations include Fig of 8, 16 amp IEC, and mains plugs Schuko, USA, Danish, India, Swiss etc

Bosendorfer Loudspeakers

Best Loudspeaker - Wallpaper Magazine 2004. Reviewed in the UK by HIFI News, HiFi Plus and HiFi Choice. Many other great overseas

Ask for product brochures and price list and visit our web site and check the list of ex-demo bargains on offer

reviews. Ask for brochure and price list. VC1 from £3450, VC2 from £4750 and VC7 from £6400. All three models on demo at KJ West One, London.

WWW.AUDUSA.COM T: 020 8241 9826, 020 8264 0249 HFW-Mar 2007 BW.indd 100

F: 020 8241 0999

E: sales@audusa.com 13/03/2007 23:32:56


Specialist Suppliers of Audio Accessories www.mantra-audio.co.uk PRICES INCLUDE P & P FOR UK DELIVERY 1 TO 10 DAYS SEE WEBSITE FOR FULL PRODUCT RANGE AND SHIPPING CHARGES TO EU & WORLDWIDE

CARTRIDGE SELECTION Goldring Elektra 1006 1012 GX 1022 GX 1042 Eroica LX/H Elite Audio Technica AT 95 E AT 110 E AT OC9 ML II Denon DL 103 DL 103R DL 110 DL 160 DL 304 Grado Prestige Black Prestige Gold Lyra Dorian Argo Shure M 97 XE Sumiko Blue Point Special Blackbird

£33 £76 £95 £126 £144 £135 £238

£28 £62 £76 £104 £117 £113 £194

STYLUS

HEADPHONE SELECTION

GEX £24 GEX £54 GEX £67 GEX £86 GEX £108 GEX N/A GEX N/A

GRADO Award winning Headphones Prestige Series SR-60 £75 SR-80 £90 SR-125 £140 SR-225 £175 SR-325i £260 Reference Series RS-1 £635 RS-2 £450

£25 £30 £330 £295 EX

£16 £18

£105 £95 EX £190 £170 EX £79 £69 EX £95 £83 EX £210 £190 EX

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A

£40 £110

£29 £77

£495 £395 EX £795 £635 EX

N/A N/A

£98

£58

£235 £200 EX £585 £500 EX

REPLACEMENT STYLI Swiss Quality Diamond Styli ADC XLM Mk III £17 Akai AN 5, AN 60 £13 AN2, AN 70 £15 Aiwa AN11 £13 Dual DN 145 E, DN 165 E £17 JVC DT 55, DT 60 £13 National EPS 24 CS, P 30 D, P 33 D £13 Ortofon FF15/VMS20 EII, OM5/10/10/20 £17 Pioneer PN 210/220/240 £13 Shure N 75 C, SC 35 C £13 N 75 ED T2, N 75 EJ T2 £17 N 95 ED/EJ, N 75 3 (78) £17 VN 35 E £20 N 97 HE, VN 35 HE £27 Sony ND 142/155 G, CN234 £13 ND 143/150/200 G £15 Stanton D 681 EEE £21 ***Over 500 Styli Types Stocked***

GEX - Goldring new for old exchange price for any make/type of cartridge EX - Exchange price same make moving coil cartridge

Order direct online or Tel/Fax (01757) 288652 MANTRA AUDIO (HFW), Town End House, Skipwith, Selby, North Yorkshire Y08 5SQ

AWARD WINNING PRODUCTS FROM AUDIOCRAFT

web: www.audio-craft.co.uk email: kevin.walker@audio-craft.co.uk tel: 01895 253340 www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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HI-FI WORLD Come and meet the Hi-Fi World team at The Heathrow High Fidelity Show 2007 at The Park Inn Heathrow on 31st March - 1st April 2007 Park Inn Hotel, Bath Road, Heathrow, Middlesex, UB7 0DU

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High End Cable visit www.highendcable.co.uk For the best prices telephone Dave Jackson on 01775 761880 Free P&P worldwide on all interconnects Abbey Road Cable Analysis Plus Audience Chord Company Ecosse Hovland Nordost MIT Oehlbach Purist Audio Design Stereovox Townshend van den Hul Wyrewizard IsoTek - Power Conditioning Cable Tower Clearlight Audio Cones Oehlbach Accessories STAX headphones Tannoy Echo Busters Arye CD - IsoTek CD Oehlbach Phono PreAmp Lyra Moving Coil Ortofon Moving Coil Sumiko Moving Coil

Leak Stereo 20 full rebuild using Jensen Paper in oil caps £299.00 Conversion of Leak valve pre to passive including:Silver wired/soldered/rhodium plugs £299 Rothwell Indus SE passive pre amplifier. Now in stock. Awesome. Just £799.00

wanted classic and modern hifi eqpt. FOR SALE.PRE/POWER AMPLIFIERS

Second hand Sub woofer cables Media cables iPod cables XLR cables Pulsar Points Component cables Digital cables DIN cables HDMI cables DVI cables Jumpers Optical cables Mains & Power cables SCART S video ONLINE SHOP

Cable Tower

Cable Burn In

Seismic Sink

Reference cables include free Burn In.

Cyrus 3I integrated amplifier.Ex cond.Book/no rem £ 225 Quad 303 power amplifier. Boxed/good condition. £ 149 Quad 66 pre amplifier with large remote control. £ 349 PS Audio pre amp with separate PSU. Cost £998. £ 299 Tube Technology Unisis power amp.Chrome,boxed £ 995 Ming Da valve pre amplifer. Chrome finish.Boxed £ 249 Sugden A48 amp & T48 tuner in wooden sleeve. £ 299 Quad 33 pre amplifier. Mint/boxed/instructions. £ 125 Oakley Image 6 valve pre-amp with MM phono. £ 275 Rogers Cadet pre & power amplifier.VG condition. £ 275 Leak Varislope pre amp. Converted to Passive. Pure silver wire/silver solder/rhodium plate phonos/alps pot. £ 350 Quad 11s in various condition and prices £POA Leak Stereo 20 valve power amplifiers from…. £Various Leak TL12+ valve amplifiers.Bronze finish & rebuilt with expensive paper in oil caps & Rhodium plate phonos £ 695 Quad 303 power amplifiers from …………………. £ 125 Leak Stereo 20 rebuilt with Jensen paper in oils. £ 695 Quad 405/1. Excellent condition. £ 195 Quad 405/1. Boxed and in good condition. £ 225 Rotel RA-920AX integrated amplifier.Ex condition. £ 69 Pair Leak TL12+ amplifiers.Stunning.Bronze finish. £ 799 Nap 180 power amplifier. Mint. Boxed. £ 799 Harmon Kardon integrated valve amp.110V. V rare £ 299 Heybrook P2 power amplifier.80 watts/ch. Black. £ 249 Marantz PM66SE KI signature integrated amplifier £ 199 Pair Musical Fidelity MA65 class A monoblocks. £ 595 DNM pre amp with PSU. Audiogone enhanced. £ 395 Arcam Alpha 10 amplifier.Super condition.Remote £ 449 Pioneer A300 integrated amplifier. £ 99 Arcam Alpha 9 integrated with remote & MM/MC £ 249 Musical Fidelity X can tube headphone amp.Boxed £ 125 Quad 33 pre amplifiers. From…….. £ 75 Rothwell Indus SE passive pre amp. Awesome.New £ 799 Luxman LV-103 int hybrid amplifier. Boxed. Rare. £ 349 Meridian Linear MC phono stage/pre-amp.Boxed. £ 149 Quad 405/2 power amplifier.Mint condition.Boxed. £ 249 Quad 34 pre amp.Excellent cond & bxd. 5 pin din £ 249 Exposure Super V111 power amplifier.Cost £849 £ 249 Heybrook C2 pre amplifier. Includes MM & MC. £ 199 John Shearne 2.5 int amplifier.Ex condition.Boxed £ 295 John Shearne 3.5 power amp. Ex condition.Boxed. £ 295 Musical Fidelity A100 pure class A integrated. 50W £ 299 Mod Squad passive pre amp.Absolutely stunning £ 299 Musical Fidelity Pre 8 pre amplifier. Chrome front. £ 149 Sugden A21A in wooden case. Beautiful condition. £ 249 Nakamichi CA5 pre-amplifier. Ex cond. Cost £750 £ 375 Nakamichi PA5 100W/CH power amp. Cost £1300 £ 650 Wilmslow Audio Mercury B power amp.Ltd edition £ 295 Nad monitor series 1300 pre-amp with MM/MC. £ 149 Unison Research Mystery One line level pre amplifier.Stunning condition with box/book.Serviced.Cost £1700 £ 995 Galactron MK-2121 amplifier. 60 watts of pure class A. Beautiful Italian styling. Wood cheeks.Cost new £1400 £ 699 Marantz PM17 int amplifier & rem.Mint.Boxed. £ 549 Leak Stereo 30 integrated amplifier. £ 50 Musical Fidelity B1 integrated amplifier. Good cond£ 125 Leak Varislope pre amplifier. Ex condition. £ 95 Affordable valve Co tube amplifier.Mint & boxed. £ 550 Naim NAC 92 pre amp. S/NO 161840. Mint. Boxed £ 299 Musical fidelity Typhoon pre and power amplifier.With balanced cables. MM/MC input.Boxed & instructions. £ 295 Linn LK1 pre-amp and remote. Good condition. £ 249 Linn LK2 power amplifier. Good condition £ 299 TURNTABLES/CD PLAYERS

Sony CDP-M303 CD player. Boxed. Remote.Cheap£ 25 Trichord Research Pulsar one Dac with book.£1399 £ 599 Cyrus DAD 3 CD player and remote.Ex condition. £ 199 Roksan ROK-DS4 PSU for ROK–DA1 DAC.Mint. £ 295 Nad C541i Cd player. Mint & boxed £ 199 Trichord Research Pulsar 1 Dac with Michell PSU £ 799 Garrard 301. Stunning condition. Strobe platter. £ 599 SME 3009 series II improved. Excellent condition. £ 150

Trichord Research/PDS707 transport.Clock 3. Exc. £ 450 Pioneer PD-S505 Cd + PSU & Mod by Tom Evans £ 499 Arcam Alpha 9 CD player with remote. Cost £800 £ 399 Roksan ROK-DA1 DAC. Stand alone DAC.Mint. £ 275 Sony HAR-LH500 CD with built in 80G hard drive £ 249 Cambridge Audio CD5 CD player with remote. £ 49 Project 1.2 with cartridge. Ex condition & boxed. £ 119 Transcriptors Hydraulic Reference turntable. Nice £ 799

SPEAKERS

Pair Quad ESL57 speakers. Bronze. Ex condition £ 549 Pair ESL57 in black.Were service One Thing Audio £ 650 Kef IQ1 dual concentric speakers. Boxed as new. £ 139 Roksan ROK-ONE speakers. Black. Mint. Boxed. £ 295 Pair ELS63 electrostatic speakers. Brown cloths. £ 799 Celestion Ditton 44’s. Super condition. £ 175 Celestion Little one speakers in white.Boxed. £99 £ 49 Kef C20. Black finish. £ 59 Pair Quad ESL63 speakers in black. All new panels and full service. I year guarantee. Beautiful condition. £1799 Pair Quad ESL57 spkrs. Fully rebuilt by One Thing Audio. Black cloth fronts.5 star review in Hifi World. Mint. £1899 Rupert stands for Quad ESL57 and ELS63 speakers £ 209 Mordaunt Short MS20I pearl. Brand new. Black £ 169 Quad ESL57 speakers.All fully serviced with full 3 months warranty.Hear what ESL57s should sound like From £ 1250 pr OTHER ITEMS

Mayware Formula 4 tone arm with book.Excellent. £ 149 SME FD 200 fluid damper kit. Unused/new.Boxed. Syrinx PU2 tonearm. Boxed. £ 149 Quad II mains transformers. Used, but good. Russian EL84 tubes. Superb quality.Price each. £6.50 Bulgin plugs for Quad II amplifier. Brand new.Each The Missing Link phono pre amplifier.Ex condition £ 349 Musical Fidelity Xplorer tuner. Mint & boxed. Quad II choke. Good working order. £ 35 Grado presteige series SR-125 headphones. Boxed. SME M2-9 tone-arm. Boxed. Superb. £ 399 Notts Analogue ace-space tone-arm. Unused/boxed. Musical Fidelity T1 FM tuner. Award winner. £300 £ 95 Yamaha YST SW-300 subwoofer. Cost £350. Sell. Quad FM1 Valve tuners. Various prices from only £POA Teak sleeve for Quad 33/FM3 Excellent condition. Linx Tuner. Mint.Boxed. Very unusual. Cost £549 £ 199 Quad FM3 tuner in excellent condition.

£ 59 £ 99 £9.99 £ 299 £ 89 £ 499 £ 149 £ 59 £ 99

QUAD ESL57 & ELS63 PANELS/SERVICING ETC

Full rebuild of 57s including latest Otec treble panels for only £1399.00 We sell serviced Quad ESL57 speakers from only £1200.00pr.Why spend £4000+?

ESL57 SPEAKERS STANDARD SERVICE £649. PR

Price includes 2 completely rebuilt treble panels etc. Ring for further info.

"Classique Sounds servicing restores the Quads to a position where they can hold their head high", Jon Marks. HIFI WORLD. April 1999.Full servicing facilities available. TRANSLUCENT. (somewhat of a bargain) Hifi World. Jan 1999 PURE SILVER INTERCONNECT CABLE 99.99% pure silver conductors. Quality gold plated RCA phono plugs. Half Metre terminated £70.00 One metre terminated £90.00. Available with Eichmann plugs + £30 New Translucent ULTRA + Heavy duty. 99.99% pure silver (4N). Eichmann 24 Kt gold plate plugs £199.00 per metre. Or £149 per half metre. 7 day money back guarantee if not better than existing cable

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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History has a way of repeating itself... 1.

2. 3.

1. Transcriptors Reference turntable

2. fluid arm

3. stylus scales

[ range of spare parts available / full turntable restoration service ]

Transcriptor Ref MKII + SME M2-10 Arm - £2,995.00

TRANSCRIPTORS T

U

R

N

T

A

B

L

E

S

UK Distributor: English Valve Amplifiers

67 Springfield Road · St Leonards-on-Sea · East Sussex · TN38 0TU Tel: 01424 445107 · Mob: 07842 126218 · Email: paul@valve-amps.co.uk · Web: www.valve-amps.co.uk EVA-HFW May07 v1 out.indd 1

8/3/07 17:00:24

Rochester Hi-Fi

30 HIGH STREET, ROCHESTER, KENT, ME1 1LD - 01634 880037

ARCAM, ATACAMA, AUDION, AUDIOPHILE BASE, AVI, CHORD CABLES, CHORD ELECTRONICS, CLEARAUDIO, CREEK, DALI, DK DESIGN, EPOS, EUPEN, EXPOSURE, FOCAL JMLAB, GAMUT, GRAVES AUDIO, GRAHAM SLEE, LAT INTERNATIONAL, METRONOME TECHNOLOGIES, NORTHSTAR, NOTTINGHAM ANALOGUE, NU FORCE, OPTIMUM, ORIGIN LIVE, PARTINGTON, PROJECT, QUADRASPIRE, RESOLUTION AUDIO, RENAISSANCE, STIRLING LS35/a, TANNOY PRESTIGE, USHER.

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IAN HARRISON HI-FI TEL: 01283 702875 HIFI AT DISCOUNT PRICES. FREE NATIONWIDE DELIVERY

Made by enthusiasts for enthusiasts

SALE!

TRADE IN YOUR OLD MOVING COIL CARTRIDGE & SAVE UP TO 60% OFF THE RRP. CARTRIDGES & STYLI

HIFI FURNITURE

HEADPHONES

VAN DEN HUL ZYX JAN ALLAERTS DENON CARTRIDGE MAN AUDIO TECHNICA GOLDRING SUMIKO TRANSFIGURATION GRADO ORTOFON RESON CLEAR AUDIO KOETSU SHURE

B.C.D. CUSTOM DESIGN OPTIMUM ASH DESIGN APOLLO SOUND STYLE SOUND ORGANISATION ALPHASON

ERGO SHURE BEYER STAX SENNHEISER SONY AKG GRADO AUDIOTECHNICA

CABLES

PIONEER SONY

CASSETTE DECKS

VIRTUAL TUNERS DYNAMICS BLACK RHODIUM PURE DIGITAL DENON TRANSPARENT SONY TONEARMS QED CREEK SME ORTOFON PHONO STAGES GRAHAM NORDOST MOTH HEED SUPRA CARTRIDGE MAN GRAHAM SLEE WIREWORLD CLEARAUDIO WHEST AUDIO HADCOCK CD PLAYERS TRICHORD MICHELL AUDIO ANALOGUE MOTH TURNTABLES CREEK MONRIO NAD MICHELL GAMUT EAR CLEAR AUDIO SONY TOM EVANS EAR CLEAR AUDIO ACOUSTIC SOLID CREEK

DVD SONY

MB50 Monoblocks

MINI DISC SONY LOUDSPEAKERS OPERA TRIANGLE FINAL ELAC HARBETH EPOS USHER AUDIO DIAPASON TANNOY AMPLIFIERS

CM05 Preamplifier

CREEK HALCRO MOTH C.A.T. GAMUT ALOIA EAR AUDIO VALVE ACCUSTIC ARTS GRAAF MONRIO AUDIO ANALOGUE PATHOS ACOUSTICS UNISON RESEARCH

A50R Integrated amplifier Anatek’s famous fully patented output stage helps to produce a remarkably natural sound. It has all the benefits of Class A (nonswitching) with no crossover distortion but does not generate the heat and consequent stresses on components.

For more information please visit: www.anatekacoustics.co.uk or call +44 (0)1903 524602

PLEASE PHONE TO CONFIRM PRICE & AVAILABILITY PRIOR TO ORDERING. ALL GOODS ARE BRAND NEW & BOXED WITH FULL U.K. GUARANTEES. NO EX. DEM OR EX DISPLAY GOODS. NO GREY IMPORTS. GOODS ARE NOT SUPPLIED ON APPROVAL. SORRY, NO GENERAL CATALOGUES. PLEASE PHONE OR WRITE FOR SPECIFIC REVIEWS, BROCHURES OR PRICES. SUPPLIER OF HIFI PRODUCTS & ACCESSORIES SINCE 1986 MAIL ORDER ONLY FROM; IAN HARRISON, 7 MILL HILL, REPTON, DERBY, DE65 6GQ. TEL: 01283 702875. 9am - 9pm INCLUDING SUNDAYS.

114

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk AnatekAcoustics_QuarterA4_advert1 1

P114.indd 114

1/11/06 08:00:06 13/3/07 10:59:11


202 Findon Road, Worthing, WEST Sussex. BN14 0EJ Tel. 01903-872288 or (after hours) 07860 660001 Fax. 01903-872234 e-mail: heatherdale@hifi-stereo.com //www.hifi-stereo.com ‘0% FINANCE AVAILABLE FOR UP TO 3 YEARS ON SELECTED ITEMS. SUBJECT TO STATUS. CONDITIONS APPLY.

SPEAKERS JM LABS Mezzo Utopia speakers B&W 801 MK 1 speakers B&W 802 MK 1 speakers Tannoy Westminister Royal HE speakers Hales Trancendence 5 speakers Dynaudio Audience 7 speakers with stands Origin Live OL-2 speakers KEF Concorde speakers

£1995 £695 £650 £9995 £2895 £395 £250 £150

PRE-AMPS; Mark Levinson ML380 pre amp Mark Levinson ML26S Balanced pre amp Audio note M8 pre amp with phono (£19500) Mark Levinson ML380S pre amp Audionote Zero remote control pre amp (new) Mark Levinson 28 Pre Amp

£1995 £2495 £9995 £3495 £695 £995

Naim Nac 92 with Nap 90/3 amp Proceed PAV pre-amp

£595 £995

AMPLIFIERS Lumley ST70 Power Amp with Passive Pre Pathos Twin Tower Integrated Amplifier Pair of Trilogy 958 Power Amps with Trilogy 902 Pre Amp Nakamichi Amp 1 with Cassette Deck 2 & CD Player 3 Meridian 605 Monoblocs Audionote Kegon Mono Amps (£28000) Exposure 15 Integrated Amp Mark Levinson ML432 Power Amp Kora Triode 100 SB Monoblocs Classe A CA201 Power Amp Audionote Neiro mono-blocks

1595 1695 1995 £795 £795 £11995 £3454 £4995 £3500 £1595 £5495

MISCELLANEOUS Nakamichi 682 Cassette Deck Nakamichi CR7E Cassette Deck Mint/Boxed/Remote Russ Andrews Mains Block JPS "The Power AC Plus" 2 meter Power Cord Sony AM/FM ST-SE370 Tuner Technics ST-610L Tuner (FM/MW/LW) Transparent Music Wave+ 10-ft pair Hitachi FT5500 MK II Tuner Technics ST-GT550 Tuner Winds ALM-01 Stylus Gage (New) Sony ST-SE570 Tuner 15 Foot Transparent Music Wave Super single mono run.

CD PLAYERS & TRANSPORTS Theta Data Basic 2 CD Transport Theta Chroma DAC with HDCD Esoteric XO3SE CD/SACD Player (our demo model) Sony CDPM41 CD Player

£395 £195 £POA £60

TURNTABLES, CARTRIDGES & TONEARMS Thorens TD160 with Thorens Tonearm £195 Blue Pearl Turntable with Graham Phantom arm £POA My Sonic Eminent cartridge (new) £2750

ALL USED CARTRIDGES ARE CHECKED UNDER A MICROSCOPE BEFORE BEING OFFERED FOR SALE.

£395 £1095 £50 £195 £75 £65 £425 £125 £65 £525 £60 £795

VISA - SWITCH - MASTER CARD - AMEX - DINERS CLUB WELCOME. WE TAKE PART EXCHANGE ON NEW & USED STOCK and buy in for cash

plug ‘n’ play ‘n’ smile

Charlotte Drawer unit for 480 CDs & 75 Cassettes 32” x 21” x 21”

JT Hi-Fi CD/Cassette Unit

74” ‘V-Max’ can hold 660 CDs etc

Est. 1970

Elegant Storage Solutions for Hi-Fi, Books, LPs, CDs, DVDs Special orders welcome

‘Super 14 Wizard’ Rotary Unit. 2296 CDs, etc

Tel: 01423 500442 Fax: 01423 705200 www.iansbespokefurniture.co.uk The Old Chapel, 282 Skipton Road, Harrogate, N. Yorks, HG1 3HE

One Decent Wallshelf

Thoroughly Recommended - David Price, Hi-Fi World Jan 06 featuring: steel frame with multipoint fixing upto 25mm thick 1/2 metre acrylic isolation platform tuning pack for system matching available: hdw - £129 odw (pictured) - £249 odwt (2 shelf) - £349 all in either silver or black

The Decentscale

featuring: non metallic construction suitable for all types of cartridge record height measuring platform (patent applied for) upto 20% more accurate than any other sub £100 scale available: now! - £35

www.kudosaudio.com 0845 4586698 for details…

Wallshelves, Isolation Platforms, Digital Tracking Force Scales, Cables

Decent Audio 0845 6019390

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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B R I T I S H

Sounds of Music

Firgrove Business Park, Firgrove Road, Cross in hand, Nr Heathfield, East Sussex, TN21 0QL. By appointment only please.

• 8 Demonstration Rooms • One of the best product selections in the uk • Free all-day parking to the door • One-month home trial scheme* • Extended Guarantees for free* *subject to conditions.

H I - F I

LUMLEY

O F

dCS

QUAD

Contact Sounds-of-Music for more information or to arrange a personal audition.

It comes at a premium but if you want the best at it’s price, nothing comes close to the Lumley Stratosphere. It is a true compliment to every musician who ever breathed.

was created by John Jeffries. The Lumley Stratosphere reference turntable is one man’s dream to give music lovers one of the finest turntables in existence today.

Whether you listen to CD or SACD, dCS products deliver a performance from silver disc that can best be described as truly breathtaking and with the emergence of stunning new models, they will as before, lead the way.

SME

since 1936 has been at the very cutting edge of high-end audio, winning acclaim and respect for their products around the world. Build quality and reputation for service is unequalled in the world of consumer electronics, as is the longevity of the products they manufacture.

Contact Sounds-of-Music for more information or to arrange a personal audition.

now has over 40 years experience in high quality precision engineering and the Company’s plant at Steyning is now probably the largest and one of the best equipped concerns devoted to the manufacture of precision pick-up arms and turntables.

Most famous of course is the legendary range of Quad Electrostatic loudspeakers, one of our true favourites and arguably one of the finest loudspeakers available today.

Fax: 01435 865 213 www.sounds-of-music.co.uk info@sounds-of-music.co.uk

Quad hi-fi systems have and continue to endure decades, having been passed from father to son and even grandson.

A little more affordable but none the less capable of true ‘State of the Art performances’. The present manufacturing programme consists of three precision turntables and twelve standard pick-up arms so offering one of the most comprehensive ranges available today. Engineering at its finest.

music

Contact Sounds-of-Music for more information or to arrange a personal audition.

of

Contact Sounds-of-Music for more information or to arrange a personal audition.

Tel: 01435 865 212

are world leaders in digital audio technology. Their Unique patented Ring DAC Conversion architecture and advanced in house IC design skills have made their high end audio converters the first choice of discerning audiophiles.

B E S T

sounds SOM-HFW May07 v1.indd 1

22/3/07 11:38:44


MIDLAND AUDIO XCHANGE The Old Chapel Forge Lane Belbroughton Worcestershire DY9 9TD t. 01562 731100 f. 01562 730228 e-mail. sales@midlandaudiox-change.co.uk web . www.midlandaudiox-change.co.uk Ex-demo and second hand items Digital Arcam Diva CD92 Silver dCS Ring Player S/H Audio Synthesis DAX Decade 22 Bit Balanced S/H Audio Synthesis DAX Decade 22 Bit Single ended S/H dCS Elgar Plus DAC BNIB dCS P8i SACD/CD Player BNIB dCS Verdi Encore Transport BNIB dCS Verdi laScala SACD/CD Transport/upsampler S/H Densen Beat400 XS x demo Linn Karik CD Player S/H Linn Karik Numerik DAC S/H Marantz CD65 KI Sig MKII S/H Nagra DAC x-demo Naim Audio CD3 S/H Naim Audio CD3 Serviced S/H Nakamichi MB10 5 play CD S/H Orpheus labs Zero CD player x demo Shanling CD-T80 Valve CD Player S/H Theta Generation V Balanced S/H Theta Pro Basic II DAC with Oscom/Balanced S/H

Was

Now

799 3500 2999 9500 6500 9500 9000 2600 1999 1500 N/A 7250 N/A N/A N/A 4600 600 6290 2990

449 1799 1499 6449 4999 6449 4250 1499 499 499 329 3999 299 375 149 2999 399 1299 695

N.A N/A N/A N/A 225 N/A D/A 650 650 650 270 2500 9250

49 279 119 199 179 1399 179 399 399 399 179 1699 6999

Analogue Audio Techinica S ShapeArm wand for AT1100 Audio Technica AT1010 S Shape Arm Used Audio Technica AT1100 Straight Arm New£ Boxed Audio Technica AT1120 Straight Arm New& Boxed Heed Audio Orbit 1 TT PSU New & Boxed Kuzma Stabi/Stogi S Turntable New& Boxed Logic DM101 rare wood finish SME CutS?H Mc Cormack Micro Drive Phono Stage S/H Phonomena BPS Battery supply for phono BINB Phonomena Phono stage MM/MC BINB Rega P2 /Bias Turntable S/H Vdh Grasshopper GLAIII MC Cartridge x-demo VPI HR-X Turntable x-demo

Preamplifiers Audio Analogue Bellini Remote Preamplifier X-demo Audio Research SP16 with Phono Stage x-demo Audio Research SP16L Beard CA35 Preamp MC/MM S/.H Conrad Johnson Premier 18LS x-demo Convergent Audio CAT SL1 Signature Black S/H Densen B200 Preamplifier S/H Electrocompaniet EC4R Preamplifier S/H Musical Fidelity X P100 Preamplifier S/h Nagra PLL with remote x-demo Nagra PLP battery Phono stage x-demo Orpheus Two Preamplifier x-demo Roksan L1 Preamp (requires PSU) S/H Roksan L1.5 Preamplifier (requires PSU) S/H Spectral DMC 30s Reference Preamplifier x-demo Sugden masterclass Preamplifier x-demo

625 2249 1799 N/A 4000 6000 1100 1799 899 5450 7250 3200 2299 2699 7600 2300

399 1749 1249 399 1999 2299 799 599 499 2999 4999 1999 995 1299 4499 1599

9000 2499 6400 1995 N/A 2500 8000 1800 1800 1800 2498 10450 N/A N/A 2995 1495 6600

7499 1699 3999 795 599 1895 5999 999 999 999 2199 7999 399 299 1799 599 4999

Amplifiers Audio Research VM220 Valve mono Amplifiers x-demo Audio Research VS55 Stereo Power Amplifier S/H Audio research VT100MKIII Valve Power Amplifier S/H Audio Research VT60 Stereo Power Amplifier S/H Beard P35 MKII Power Amplifier S/H Conrad Johnson MV60 SE Valve Amplifier S/H Conrad Johnson Premier 350SA x demo Densen Beat 300xs x-demo Densen Beat 320 S/H Densen Beat 340 x-demo Krell KAV400xi Black x-demo Nagra MPA RCMI X –demo Naim 32.5/140 Pre Power S/H Naim 42.5/110 Pre Power S/H Orpheus Three power amplifier x-demo Roksan S1.5 stereo power amplifier silver S/H Sugden masterclass monos x demo

Loudspeakers Audio Physic Spark 3 maple X-demo BKS 107MKII Supreme hybrid Ribbons S/H Diapason Adamantes III with stands S/H JM Lab Micro Utopia Classic x-demo JM lab Electra 927 be Anniversary S/H KEF Reference 104.2 S/H Martin Logan Aeon I Oak x-demo Monitor Audio Radius 360 Subwoofer Cherry S/H Pen Audio Rebel 2 x-demo Pen Audio Charm Active Subwoofer x-demo ProAc Response D25 Maple x-demo Rogers L7 Teak S/H Roksan Ojan3 Rosewood S/H Rega ELA 2000 S/H Sonus Faber Concerto Walnut S/H Sonus faber Ironwood Stands S/H Spendor S3 Cherry S/H

1699 1750 2150 4700 2800 N/A 3189 350 995 1995 2800 N/A N/A 850 998 449 599

1099 799 1299 3750 1699 449 2300 249 699 999 2199 199 399 449 599 229 379

N/A 420 220 450 710 3950 N/A 1400 459 190 199 650

99 249 175 229 399 2995 40 799 229 99 99 549

N/A 850 1600 N/A 395 N/A N/A N/A

69 599 795 99 199 59 175 99

Cables and Accessories Cogan Hall Intermezzo EMD 0.75m RCA S/H Madrigal MDC2 1m RCA/RCA 75ohm Digital Cable new boxed Nordost Shiva 2m mains cable x-demo Shun Mook 1pr Spatial Controller x-demo Shun Mook Ultra Diamond Resonators set of 3 x-demo Siltech LS188 Classic 2x3m Silver & Gold Speaker cable BNIB Sound Organisation Record Rack with CD insert S/H Spectral MI-350 20ft Interconnect RCA-RCA x-demo Transparent Music Link Plus 10ft RCA-RCA S/H Transparent The Link 1.5m RCA-RCA S/H Vdh CD102 MkIII 2m S/H Western Electric 300b Valves 1Pair NEW `

Tuners & Tape decks, power supplies Creek T40 FM Tuner S/H Densen Beat 800 AM/FM Tuner x demo Isotek Substation special version S/H Luxman 50A FM/AM Tuner S/H Magnum Dynalab FTR remote/Tuner for Etude S/H Nakamichi BX2 2 Head cassette deck S/H Nakamichi DR3 2 head cassette deck S/H Sony MDS JD920 QS Mini Disc recorder S/H

Suppliers and installers of High Quality Audio Systems 47 Laboratory ATC Audio Research Cardas Clearaudio Conrad Johnson Copland Crystal Cables Dartzeel dCS Densen DNM/Reson Electrocompaniet Finite Elemente Jadis Koetsu Krell Kuzma Lavardin

Living Voice Lyra Magnum Dynlab Mark Levinson Martin Logan Mimetism Nordost Primaluna Primare ProAc Rega Siltech Sonus Faber Sugden Transparent Audio VPI Wadia Wegg 3 Wilson Audio

Midland Audio X-change are looking for Audio Research, Krell , Mark Levinson , Naim Audio, SME, Wadia.

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DIAL A DEALER

DIAL A DEALER This is a comprehensive directory of Hi-Fi Dealers throughout the UK and Ireland. ACTON GATE AUDIO

BIRMINGHAM MIDLAND RADIO SUPPLIES. Tel: 0121 706 0313. Vintage & Classics. We buy and sell the best of British Designs and manufactured mono and stereo valve amplifiers radio tuners, turntables, pickups, loudspeakers systems, horns, drive units, tape recorders, micorophones, mixers, measuring apparatus, valves and testers. Mono and stereo LPs and Tapes. Quality items required now.

www.acton-gate-audio.co.uk 4 Ruabon Road, Wrexham, LL13 7PB, (01978) 313464 Arcam,Atlas, Audiolab, Croft, Denon,Grado, JM Labs, KEF,Michell, Monitor Audio, Musical Fidelity,NAD,Ortofon, Opera, Onkyo, Pro-ject, QED, Quad, Rel, Roksan, Sugden,Sennheiser, Unison, van-den-Hul, Wharfedale,Yamaha. Tuesday - Staurday 9.00 - 17.00 email: info@acton-gate.com

8 Hawkenbury Road Tunbridge Wells Kent, TN2 5BJ United Kingdom tel: (+44) 01892 541 746 Free vinyl LP catalogue. Every month-24 pages-rare & deleted ex+ and mint LPs starting at only £4.99. 60’s & 70’s Rock, Jazz, Blues, Psych, Progressive, Soul, Folk. It is the best regular vinyl catalogue in the UK! Call or write today.

CLEVELAND

MIDDLESEX

THE RIGHT NOTE

WAVEFRONT AUDIO

Tel: 01225 874728. Happy with your system? Wonder why there’s so much for sale secondhand? Avoid the frustration and expense of “upgradeitis”, never quite “there”. With infinite patience we’ll help you plan longer-term. Brands selection: Accustic Arts, Audio Physic, Aesthetix, Bel Canto, CAT, Chord Co, Clearaudio, dCS, Gamut, Graham, Halcro, Sumiko, VertexAQ, Wadia.

RIVERSIDE HI-FI

For 2 Channel Music Systems. Hear the Modwright Pre Amplifier, Albedo Cables, Almarro Valve Amplifiers, Cain & Cain Speakers, Rethm Full Range Speakers, Acoustic Zen Adagio, Battery Powered Amplifiers from Red Wine Audio. Digital Amps DAC’s, Pre’s and Head Amps from Channel Islands Audio. Pure Power APS. Contact andy@wavefrontaudio.co.uk. Web site www.wavefrontaudio.co.uk or Andy 01642 482 393.

422 Richmond Road, East Twickenham, Middlesex, TW1 2EB. Tel: 020 8892 7613. www.riversidehifi.co.uk, email soundadvice@riversidehifi.co.uk, Audio Research, Blueroom, Bose, B&O, Copland, Denon, Fatman, Infocus, Krell, Loewe, Living Control, Martin Logan, Michell, Monitor Audio, Martin Logan, NAD, Primaluna, Project, QED, Optoma, Rel, Roksan, Sennheiser, Speakercraft, Sonus Faber,Theta, Wilson. Export orders welcome. UK mail order available. All major credit cards. Open 10am-5.30pm Mon-Sat.

HiFi Consultants: 36 Druid Hill, Stoke Bishop, Bristol. BS9 1EJ. Tel: 0117 968 6005. ATC, AVI, Alon/Nola, ALR Jordan, Audio Analogue, Avid, Electrocompaniet, Infinity, Origin Live, Ruark, SME, Sugden, Triangle, Unison Research, VPI. Projectors / Sim2, JVC, Mitsubishi, Infocus. Screens/ Stewart, Draper, Da-lite. Demo’s by appointment only - Please ring/e-mail for unbiased, honest advice based on 40 years experience. (icvhifi@yahoo.co.uk). We are not a shop!

CHESHIRE

CORNWALL BIGEARS AUDIO To find a system that will allow you to hear the music instead of the equipment phone Bigears Audio, here you will find an interesting array of new and good quality used equipment! my intention is to have satisfied customers whatever their audio preferences. Naim dealer for the South West. chrisbirchley@btinternet.com Tel: 01736-740421

DEVON

ACOUSTICA 17 Hoole Rd, Chester CH2 3NH. www.acoustica.co.uk. Tel 01244 344227. HiFi & Home Cinema from Amphion, Arcam, ART, Ayre, B&W Nautilus, Classe, Focal.JM Lab, Monitor Audio, Naim Audio, Primare, Rega, REL, Rotel, Spendor, Sugden, Thiel, Wadia. We offer full demonstration facilities, interest free credit, delivery & install systems throughout Cheshire, Merseyside & North Wales. Tuesday to Saturday 10.00 to 5.30.

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SUGARBUSH RECORDS

BRISTOL & BATH

V’AUDIO

118

KENT

HI-FI WORLD MAY 2007

USHER, NUFRORCE & NAD IN DEVON Come round for a coffee and hear the Usher Dancers and the Usher R.1.5 Class A amplifier or NuForce Reference 9SE. Or the Usher 520’s on a NAD amplifier. Also the Usher CD-1 player with ‘the’ Burr-Brown DAC and op-amps, Goldring turntables and NAD CD players. Sound Hi Fi, Viewpoint House, Dartmouth, Devon, TQ6 9HN. Free parking. 01803 833366 www.SoundHiFi.com.

SOMERSET ALTERNATIVE AUDIO, Brompton Ralph, Taunton, Somerset, Tel: 01984 624242 www.alternativeaudio.co.uk. Email: peter@alternativeaudio.co.uk We specialise in valve amplification and vinyl replay with the accent on high quality musical enjoyment. ExDem and used equipment for sale. Art Audio, Border Patrol, Clearaudio, Diapason, EAR/Yoshino, Experience Filtration, Lector, LFD Audio, Lyra, Music First Audio, Nottingham Analogue, Opera, Quadraspire, Shun Mook, SME, Transfiguration, Unison Research, Vandersteen Audio.

To advertise in this space please call 020 7372 6018 or email: advertising@hi-fiworld.co.uk

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

20/3/07 16:34:51


DIAL A DEALER

YORKSHIRE (WEST)

VINYL/RECORD MAIL ORDER

AUDIO REPUBLIC

DIVERSE VINYL

78 Otley Road, Leeds 01132177294 www.audio-republic.co.uk for the best in quality hifi in West Yorkshire, representing Naim Audio,Rega,Sugden,Conrad Jonhson,Krell,Copland, Karan Acoustic,Ar cam,Nottingham Analogue,Roksan,Hutter, Avalon,Proac,Dynaudio,PMC,Fujitsu,M&K, Finite Elemente,SME,Cardas and others. Open Tues-Sat 9.30am to 5.30pm

10 Charles Street, Newport, NP20 1JU. Tel/Fax: 01633 259661/256261. Email: sales@diversevinyl.com. Probably the most varied and impressive selection of brand new LPs you’ll find anywhere: international new releases, reissues and audiophile products. Also UK distributor of the Disco Anti Stat LP Cleaning Device. Call for a free catalogue, or visit www.diversevinyl.com

To advertise in this space please call 020 7372 6018 or email: advertising@hi-fiworld.co.uk

MEET MAKER

MANUFACTURERS

YOUR

A reference guide to Britain’s manufacturers and distributors

CREEK AUDIO LTD

E.GANE AND SON

12 Avebury Court, Mark Road, Hemel Hampstead, Herts, HP2 7TA. Tel. 01442 260146 E-mail:info@creekaudio.com Internet: www.creekaudio.com The beginning of 2006 saw Creek Audio launch two exciting new ranges, EVO at entry level and its high end - Destiny. At the same time, Creek’s most popular products in the past 5 years, the 5350SE amp, CD50mk2 CD player and T50 tuner are now badged as Creek Classics. The OBH miniature range completes this new Creek line-up.

For service repairs upgrades and re-manufacturing of all valve audio equipment leak trough line specialists realigned etc. We have been restoring leak product back to new for over 40 years. Mail order service available worldwide. For more info contact E.F.G (London) Ltd. Inc. E.Gane and Son.Established 1948 on 00 44 02087432727

EPOS ACOUSTICS 2 Avebury Court, Mark Road, Hemel Hampstead, Herts, HP2 7TA Tel. 01442 260146. Email:info@epos-acoustics.com Website: www.epos-acoustics.com Innovative design and superior sound distinguish EPOS speakers from other brands in similar price categories. Nine models in total including a 5.1 surround system. All available in 3 finishes. Supporting stands and plinths complement the speakers. In addition to its two channel appeal, Epos is now equally sought after in the fast expanding world of home cinema. -

MONITOR AUDIO LIMITED 24 Brook Road, Rayleigh, Essex SS6 7XL Tel 01268 740 580. Fax 01268 740 589 e-mail: info@monitoraudio.co.uk website: www.monitoraudio.co.uk Monitor Audio designs and manufactures British loudspeakers of the highest quality. Since 1972 Monitor Audio has been developing and perfecting the implementation of metal drivers, innovative crossovers, and exemplary speaker cabinet construction and finish to further the ideal of achieving sound which to the original is "as close as it gets".

PMC/BRYSTON PMC & Bryston are Emmy award winning Loudspeaker & Amplifier manufacturers - Used throughout the professional world as reference. Our clients record for Deutsche Grammophon, Decca and countless blockbuster Movies. The identical, award winning ATL (Advanced Transmission Line) technology is used in all HiFi designs from

the DB1+, TLE1 Sub through to the Active BB5 XBD. PMC Ltd 43-45 Crawley Green Road. Luton, LU2 OAA. Tel: 08704 441044 Fax: 08704 441045 Email: sales@promonitor.co.uk website: www.pmc-speakers.com website: www.bryston.ca

SUGDEN AUDIO PRODUCTS Designed and manufactured in the UK each Sugden product is hand-built by one highly skilled technician. A full range of pure class A amplifiers are available including integrated, stereo power and the incredible Masterclass balanced monoblocks. The class A HeadMaster offers a pre-amp with three inputs a fixed and variable output with remote control. The HeadMaster can be used as a control unit in a high quality audio system and excels with headphones. Please contact us for product information, dealer list and brochures. Tel: 01924 404088 email info@jesugden.co.uk.

M & J DESIGN LTD (MUSIC) Superb Interconnect Cables; balanced or phono, made to measure. Using silver plated pure copper, and the finest connectors, these cables present the cleanest possible path for your signal, the end result being sublime listening pleasure. Each cable set is serial numbered and have their own instructions and are guaranteed. M&J Design Ltd (Music) 01628 622115 & 07809 394995. John50hifiman@btinternet.com.

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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Kits for the Audiophile D I Y S p eaker Par t s - D r ive Unit s , Cro s s over Comp onent s , Fl o or S pi kes SONIQS PDC per metre £2.61 Heavy 6mm Bitumen Panel Damping Compound 50mm wide strip

We have selected SEAS Drive Units for their natural sounding performance and smooth response allowing simple crossovers to be used. Below is a selection of drive units from the complete SEAS range that we hold in stock. Ring us to enquire about drive units not shown here.

SEAS A26RE4 £71.98 25cm (10") Paper Cone Bass unit as used in the WD25 Speaker kits SEAS CA22RNX £83.79 22cm (8") Paper Cone Bass unit 89dB for TL or Aperiodic designs SEAS CA18RLY £51.11 18cm (7") Paper Cone Bass unit 88dB for TL or Aperiodic designs SEAS CA15RLY £53.52 15cm (5.75") Paper Cone Bass unit 87dB for Bass Reflex designs SEAS 29TFF/W £38.34 29mm soft dome treble unit used in the WD25 STD speaker kits SEAS T29CF001 £137.82 29mm Excel soft dome treble unit used in WD25 XL speaker kits SEAS T25CF002 £161.09 25mm Excel 'Millenium' treble unit lowest distortion, smooth response

SONIQS M8 spike set £4.70 Set of four speaker floor spikes with matching M8 cabinet inserts SONIQS M4x16mm £0.08 SONIQS M4x25mm £0.09 Hex Hd Nickel Plated wood screws

SONIQS CDF per metre £1.49 Long fibre enclosure damping mat 30mm thick by 250mm wide

SONIQS Ferrite Inductors Aperiodic reticulated foam £1.25 SONIQS coils are wound on high density 80ppi reticulated foam strip for 12.5mm dia. ferrite cores for high power Aperiodic port airflow resistance handling and dynamic range. High purity copper 0.71mm wire heat bonded to reduce vibrational effects. Tolerance 5%. State value required when ordering.

25mm core 0.33 - 0.6mH £2.47 50mm core 0.6 - 1.0mH £3.49 50mm core 1.1 - 2.5mH £3.98 SONIQS Polypropylene Caps SONIQS capacitors are formed from high voltage polypropylene film and hand soldered using silver solder to copper leads. Construction and resin encapsulation has been formulated for optimum acoustic and electrical performance.

PXX 1.0uF 250V PXX 1.5uF 250V PXX 2.2uF 250V PXX 3.3uF 250V PXX 4.7uF 250V PXX 5.6uF 250V PXX 6.8uF 250V PXX 8.2uF 250V PXX 10uF 250V PXX 12uF 250V PXX 15uF 250V PXX 18uF 250V

£1.13 £1.28 £1.41 £1.70 £2.06 £2.35 £2.66 £2.90 £3.18 £3.74 £5.03 £6.03

SAX 1.0uF 630V SAX 1.5uF 630V SAX 2.2uF 630V SAX 3.3uF 630V SAX 4.7uF 630V SAX 5.6uF 630V SAX 6.8uF 630V SAX 8.2uF 630V

£2.40 £2.81 £3.17 £4.19 £4.49 £5.28 £6.16 £6.93

We offer a crossover and speaker design service to suit your specific requirements. Please ring or e-mail for details. See our on-line catalogue at

WDSpkrParts.indd 123

SONIQS Air-Core Inductors SONIQS air core coils utilise 0.56mm dia high purity copper wire on a rectangular bobbin that allows vertical and horizontal orientation to minimise coupling effects. Tolerance 5%. State value required when ordering.

Air-core coil 0.18 - 0.5mH £1.99

Vitreous Enamel Power Resistors High Power resistors encapsulated in Vitreous Enamel to minimise vibrational effects. Tolerance 5%. State value when ordering.

3W 0.68 - 100 Ohms 7W 1.0 - 100 Ohms

£0.99 £1.47

SONIQS TP1 panel

£3.60

Bi-wireable terminal panel with gold plated connections allowing spade, bare wire and 4mm plugs. Plain Tufnol CCB circuit board also available to fit PCB slot at rear to allow component hard wiring.

SONIQS CCB board

£1.49

www.world-designs.co.uk Tel: 01832 293320

11/07/2006 17:12:53


specialist hi-fi dealers London

Oranges & Lemons

O’Brien Hi-Fi 60 Durham Road - London - SW20 0TW 020 8946 1528 or shop@obrienhifi.com

Hi-Fi, Home Cinema & Multi-room Specialists

www.obrienhifi.com Martin Logan Clarity Moon i5 Sonus Faber Concerto Krell KAV300CD Copland CDA 823 Audio Analogue Enigma Sonus Faber Cremona Unison Research CDP

020 7924 2040 www.oandlhifi.co.uk 61 Webbs Road, Battersea, SW11 6RX email: oranges.lemons@virgin.net

Speakers - Ex Demonstration - Cherry Amplifier - Ex Demonstration - Black Speakers - Part Exchange - Walnut CD Player - Part Exchange CD Player - Ex Demonstration System - New, Boxed with Warranty Speakers - New, Slight damage CD Player - Ex Demonstration

Naim Specialists

£1895 £2100 £550 £795 £1595 £695 £4200 £699

(£2200) (£2695) (£970) (£3000) (£2100) (£899) (£5000) (£895)

Loudspeaker Repairs

Great Savings : 20% off

Are you hearing your Naim Audio system at anywhere near its full potential? The inherent sonic ability of a Naim Audio system

All Vivid Audio Demo Stock

has never been in doubt, however with products such as the Fraim support and more recently the Hi Line interconnect and CD555PS CD power supply, Naim Audio themselves have amply demonstrated the ever greater levels of performance that are achievable with your existing components. Tom Tom Audio can optimise your Naim Audio system through thoughtful and creative upgrade routes, and by utilising a number of products and accessories that are both compatible with and sensitive to the Naim Audio ethos. As well as a range of loudspeakers and analogue products that work wonderfully with Naim Audio electronics we also have a range of compatible accessories that will unlock the potential of your system and maximise the investment you have already made. These include the incredible range of products from Vertex AQ, an end to end solution of supports, filters and cabling that will simply stun you. The incredible effect of this system can be demonstrated here or in your own system, but prepare to be shocked.

Two-channel

A

Home Cinema

ud on st

io

Custom Install

e

Full System Design

E

Installation

T

Loudspeakers: Naim Audio, Kudos Audio, Neat Acoustics, ART, Shahinian, Audio Physic, Living Voice

ni pa

m co ro ct le

Free Consultation

e

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ru ou

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V

Supports & Cabling: Naim Audio, Vertex AQ, Nordost, Chord Company, Isoblue, Kudos Audio

iv id

Naim Audio, Avid, Dynavector, Lyra, Tom Evans

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Analogue:

Call St Albans 01727 86 86 59 Visit www.tomtomaudio.com

Hi-Fi Consultant Rowles Music Limited Lancing, Sussex

Services & Consultants

Tel 01903 530005 Mob 07950 274224 ray@rowlesmusic.co.uk www.rowlesmusic.co.uk

Front End Problem? contact

The Cartridge Man It doesn’t have to cost an arm and a leg to get the best - listen to my Koestsu - and Decca -eater. Also agents for Croft, Hadcock, E.A.R, Michell & Moth.

plus cartridge re-tipping service 020 8688 6565 Website: www.thecartridgeman.com

Valves & Tubes

To advertise in this space please call

Loudspeaker Repairs

020 7372 6018RM-HFW May07 v1.indd 1

D.C. Boultons

or email: advertising@hi-fiworld.co.uk

9/3/07 10:47:03

Loudspeaker Repairs & Manufacture All types including P.A. Disco, Hi.Fi. Juke Box etc. Agents for B&C, Celestion, Eminence, Fane, Precision Devices etc. From re-foams to complete re-builds, even with slipped magnets. Trade and retail supplied. Custom units our speciality. Over 35 years experience of loudspeaker design

Unit 12, Damgate Lane Ind. Est, Acle, Norwich, NR13 3DJ Tel 01493 750075 Fax 01493 751155

The Stables, Baddow Park, Great Baddow, Chelmsford, Essex, CM2 7SY. Tel: 01245 241301 Fax. 01245 241309 Email: sales@chelmervalve.com

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

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BIGEARSAUDIO website: www.bigearsaudio.org.uk updated daily

Quality used vintage & modern equipment bought, sold-part-exchange most welcome!! audio cables & accessories bigears speaker cable and interconnects-mail order specialists worldwide.

WE ACCEPT PAYPAL PAYMENTS and ALL CREDIT CARDS!!

NAIM dealer for the South West: TANNOY, KEF, LECTOR, VIVA, AUDION, AUDIO NOTE, MICHELL

MAGNUM REFERENCE MF125 MONO POWER AMPS £475 LOWTHER ACOUSTA’S PM7AS £550 VALVE AMPS. MVL A1 INTEGRATED, CLASS A, 100 WATTS £450 EPOS M14’S BOXED £225 GAMMA RHYTHM 211 £1250 NAIM SNAPS, JUST SERVICED, £225 TANNOY CANTERBURY’S 12” SILVERS £4000 [SOLD] WORLD AUDIO PRE-COMPONENTS UP-GRADED £275 £450 TANNOY LANCASTERS 15 GOLDS £1400 CANARY AUDIO 806 [£2500] £1000 TAG MCLAREN CLASSY PRE-AMP, MM, MC, [£850] £225 TANNOY CORNER YORKS 15 REDS £4500 CONRAD JOHNSON PV10AL £450 MISTRAL INTEGRATED, BLACK, WARM BUT DYNAMIC £425 NAIM CREDO’S IN CHERRY BEAUTIFUL, BOXED £775 CROFT VITA FULL PRE-AMP £990 QUAD 66 PRE-AMP WITH LARGE CONSOLE CONTROL KEF CORELLIS, MINT, £150 CROFT EL84 POWER-AMP £350 QUAD 33/44 PRE-AMPS, 303/306/405 POWER AMPS ALWAYS AVAILABLE £POA ROGERS LS7’S £265 AUDION SILVER NOTE ONE £2500 £315 SPENDOR SP1’S £325 RGD PX4 VALVE AMPS FROM THE1950’S BEST EVER?? £2500 EXPOSURE SUPER 8 POWER AMP YAOIN MS-12B VALVE PRE-AMP WITH PHONO STAGE MC/MM £225 CD PLAYERS CR DEVELOPMENTS ROMULUS 5881 [25WATTS] [£2995] £1250 SPEAKERS LECTOR CDP-7T, TOP LOADER £2150 AUDIO RESEARCH VT60 POWER AMP £1250 LUMLEY LAMPROS 200’S £2500 £850 MHZS CD88 TOP LOADING 24BIT 196K XLR TUBE CD PLAYER £875 LECTOR VALVE HYBRID, INTEGRATED, 50 WATTS, NEW £1050 TOWNSHEND GLASTONBURY 11’S, RE-CONDITIONED £850 £2500 SONIC FRONTIERS ANTHEM, MULTI-CHANGER, VALVE ARIA MUSIC ANGLE KT88 VALVE AMP £550 BEAUHORN ACCELERARDO’S HUGE HORN SPEAKERS DX2’S £375 £1275 ROKSAN CASPIAN CD, BOXED, AUDIO NOTE OTO SE INTEGRATED £1899 SONUS FABER ELECTA AMATOR’S, BEAUTIFUL, BOXED £550 £425 ROKSAN KANDY CD AS NEW, BOXED EASTERN ELECTRIC M520 INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER £1539 LINN ISOBARIK’S, MINT £455 £325 USHER CD-1 [ASTONISHING!!] MEIXING MC67-HA VALVE TUBE PRE AMPLIFIER £575 LINN KANS PLUS STANDS, £650 £350 AUDIONOTE CD 1 DAC AS NEW, BOXED [£950] CROFT OTL 3’S M/BLOCKS PERFECT FOR ELECTROSTATICS £1250 AUDIO NOTE K’S LECTOR DCP-O6T VALVE CD PLAYER £875 QUAD ESL 57’S BRONZE, SERVICED, BOXED, £850 AUDION STERLING MK1 EL34 £650 £850 £750 NAIM CD5I AUDION STERLING MKII EL34 £750 ROGER BBC LS3/5AS, 11OHMS, WALNUT, MINT £595 TANNOY 3LZ’S 10 GOLDS MINT £750 MARANTZ CD17 MKII [£850] BLACK CAT ELECTRONICS PX4 VALVE, STEREO £225 £325 AUDIO INNOVATIONS FISH-EYE CD-TUNER BOXED AS NEW POWER AMP [LOWTHERS/TANNOY] £2750 CASTLE 7’S £725 £1650 CYRUS DAD7 & PSX AS NEW AND BOXED AUDIO NOTE KIT 4, 6L6S, 25WATTS £850 LOWTHER DELPHICS, MINT, DX2’S, DX3’S £275 £1250 REGA PLANAR, BOXED ANTHEM X1 EL34 SINGLE ENDED VALVE INT. AMPLIFIER £425 LOWTHER BICOR 2000’S USES 2 PAIRS OF DX2’S HORNING AGATHONS DX2’S, DX3’S £1500 AUDION PRE £750 TOTEM MITES [£499] AS NEW, BOXED £325 TURNTABLES/ACCESSORIES AUDION CD1 PRE £315 ARIA 300B, EXCELLENT VALUE-NEW £750 QUAD ESL57’S BLACK, REBUILT & SERVICED BY BIGEARS BOXED, £850 TRICHORD DIABLO WITH NEVER CONNECTED POWER SUPPLY £1050 £295 AND HIGH PERFORMANCE PSU INTERCONNECT [£1524] AFFORDABLE VALVE AMP EL34 £425 JORDAN WATTS EX-BBC £675 £275 GARRARD 401, SME 3009, DYNAVECTOR 10X5, BAT 3KI, HYBRID, PHONO STAGE, BOXED £1400 DYNAUDIO AUDIENCE 5’S LINN LP12, AFORMOSA, ORIGIN-LIVE DC POWER SUPPLY, QUAD IIS, PLUS 22, SERVICED, EXCELLENT £850-1000 DYNAUDIO AUDIENCE 10’S £275 £975 £350 BASIC PLUS ARM, DYNAVECTOR 10X5 LEAK STEREO 60 £875 SPENDOR BC1’S MINT £85 £275 THE ISOLATOR-UNBELIEVABLE RESULTS!! LEAK STEREO 20, MINT £550 MONITOR AUDIO MONITOR 3’S £599 EPOS ES 11 BRILLIANT SMALL STAND MOUNTER, £185 ORIGIN LIVE SILVER ARM RUARK SABRES, CHERRY £175 ALL GRAHAM SLEE PHONO STAGES TRANSISTOR AMPS £775 £325 RED KOETSU NAIM NAIT 5I £715 CELESTION SL6’S EXCELLENT COND. £255 HEYBROOK QUINTETS,GOLD PIETZO TWEETER (£1450) £425 OKKI NOKKI RECORD CLEANING MACHINE NAIM NAP 250-BOXED-£650 NAIM ARIVAS EX-DEM [£1300] £950 NAIM NAIT 2 £250 chrisbirchley@btinternet.com tel: 01736 740421 JR150 AS JR149 BUT BIGGER, NEW FOAM COVERS, MINT £450 AUDIOLAB 8OOOA- BOXED-£250 £175 CONRAD JOHNSON SONOGRAPHE SC-1 £225 RUARK ICON’S [£350] MINT, mobile: 07947 678256 £285 Z AMP TAMP DESIGN, STUNNING PERFORMANCED £1500 USHER S-520 PIANO BLACK

PRODUCT TESTING IN HI-FI WORLD To ensure the upmost accuracy in our product reviews, Hi-Fi World has extremely comprehensive in-house test facilities, and our test equipment - from big names like Rohde & Schwarz and Hewlett Packard - is amongst the most advanced in the world. Loudspeakers are measured using a calibrated Bruel&Kjaer microphone feeding a Clio-based computer analyser, using pulsed and gated sinewaves, in a large room to eliminate the room’s influence. Pickup arm vibration is measured with a Bruel&Kjaer accelerometer. No other UK hi-fi magazine has in-house testing, and none has access to such advanced tests across all types of equipment. That's why you can depend on Hi-Fi World reviews.

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FREE READER CLASSIFIEDS

FREE READER

CLASSIFIEDS

TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Only one advert per reader. Maximum length per advert is 30 words, Adverts over 30 words will not be accepted. Telephone numbers and E-mail addresses are treated as one word. Model numbers are treated as one word i.e. Quad 303 = two words. Email your advert to; classifieds@hi-fiworld.co.uk or fill in the form on page 129 and post it to Hi-Fi World Free Readers Ads, Suite G4, Argo House, Kilburn Park Road, London NW6 5LF. Sorry, we cannot accept adverts over the telephone. The Publisher reserves the right to judge submissions.

AUDIOJUMBLE GRAND M25 presents Ashtead Audiojumble at Peace Memorial Hall, Woodfield Lane. M25 Junction 9. 10am/11am. Sunday 15th April. Tel: 07730 134 973 (Jun) AUDIOSTATIC WINGS c/w optional Fins. 3.5 Years old. Silver. Superb Full-range Electrostatics in lovely condition. Boxes, manuals. May also sell Final S200 in piano black gloss. £1900 Both £2300 01458 860765 LINN GENKI CD, silver, 14 mnths old, (£1100) £650; Linn LK85 Power Amp, silver, £350. PMC TB2 standmount Speakers, 14 months old, (£800), £550. All boxed, mint. Nottingham 0115 960 3934 ACOUSTIC ENERGY AE1 MK 3 Reference Speakers, cherry, mint condition, boxed with manual £825.00 (£1695.00). Musical Fidelity A308 integrated amplifier, mint condition, boxed with manual £925.00 (£2000.00). Tel: 01732 220664 TWO RAY Lumley Reference 120 monoblock valve amps. One ok, other just stopped working. Buyer collects as they are a two man lift. Cost £4500 new £1995 ono. Email: donwllm@aol.com MARANTZ AMPLIFIER PM7001 KI Signature £425. Marantz CD SA7001 KI Signature £450. Marantz Tuner ST7001 £200. Silver, boxed, mint, guarantees. B&W CM1 speakers, maple, £300. Glass HiFi stand, 5 shelves £45. Tel: 0115 975 4070

TOM EVANS - The Grove Phono. Set for Vdh Cartridges. Eight Months Old and only Forty Hours Use.Stunning Sound-read the reviews. Only 1200 Pounds. Tel. 07956 125 695

CYRUS 3 Integrated Amplifier Black £250 Cyrus Power Amplifier Black £250 Mission 752 Rosewood Veneered Speakers £300 All in excellent condition 012603 732901 after 6 and weekends

ARCAM ALPHA 8R and 8P. B&W DM 602 S2 bi-wireable standmount speakers. Good upgrade from a budget system, £450 or may split. (They work well together though) Mike 07710 737 232

AUDIOLAB 8000S remote control amplifier in black finish, immaculate condition, in original box with instructions, £260.00 ono 01453-545551 Bristol/Gloucestershire area.

SAP RELAXA 1 equipment support, levitates equipment up to 25kg for complete isolation from vibration - see Ken Kessler review. Cost £450, now £200 ono. Contact 07734 850600 / pcaveller@yahoo.com

USHER 1.5 Power amp. 150 watts per channel. Class A. (£1500). Selling: £850. Buyer collects. Townshend Isolda speaker cable, 2.5 metres, £185. Tel: 01491 614 325

RUARK ACCOLADES. Black Ash. Efficient (90dB/Watt) 3way floorstanders.Bass drivers re-built by DK Electronics. Love valves. Fine condition. £700 ono. Tel 0117 959 0663 PIONEER AMPLIFIER, Turntable, Tuner, Cassette Deck, SONY CD/DVD Player in Glass Cabinet. Manuals, Remote Control and two large free standing speakers. Good working order £120. 01322 338213. SONY KDF-50A12U, Bravia 50 inch rear projection tv, high definition, 3 LCD with stand remote and user manual, mint condition, £800 Lancs 07932330269. FOR SALE. Musical Fidelity. A3.2 Dual Mono Integrated Amplifier. Mint condition, Boxed, Manual, Remote, Rarely Used. (RRP £979.00). Received Outstanding Reviews. £600. Karl: 07815723494. CLASSIC EXPOSURE Super 18 amplifier, 21 Pre-amp with remote. Excellent. £450. Includes carriage. Tel: 01851 890 410

PRIMARE D30.2 CD £545 (£1,500) Nakamichi DR8 ( 2 head) £125 (£500) Both mint / boxed Philips CD104 (CDM1 Transport) £75. Apollo 4 tier stand (black) £40. 01621 772884 (Essex) i_greenslade@hotmail.com CROFT EPOCH Elite, Croft modded £750; Croft Cypher 7W 6A7SG OTL, £2500 (£4000); Audio Classic speakers, high sensitivity, Cherry, Hayden Boardman design, stands £750 (£1500). £3500 everything, offers. 07963 803682 PASSLAB AMPS, Audionote e/sp, speakers, stands, cables, cartridge, Altec speakers, AVI CD player, EAR Transformer, Nakamichi 1000, 582Z, Studer, Akai Reel&Reel, Ariston Turntable, various new 300B valves, 07944909209 stevehifiman@hotmail.co.uk REL 200E sub bass, 200w, 250mm driver, spiked, manual, £235. Pure DRX 701ES digital tuner, mint, £150. Sony TCKA6ES cassette deck, mint, £140. Tel: 0190 463 4112. www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

May 07 class ads final§.indd 123

DYNAUDIO AUDIENCE 62 for sale. 4 years old, cherry finish, good condition. £400 ono, demo available. Contact Jeremy 07977254160 MUSICAL FIDELITY A1000 pure Class A amplifier and p.s.u. Near mint condition. £595 ono. Tel: 0794 117 4804 (Berks) GLASSHOUSE 300B-SE power amplifier with matched pair JJ/Tesla triodes complete with NAD 1000 full feature preamplifier, £600. Tel: 01344 454 504 (Bracknell) PIONEER CT91A cassette deck £250. Pioneer F91 tuner £200. Thule A1.100 amplifier £250. Mitsubishi separates, mini-system 1980’s, offers. Trio KA501 amplifier £50. Trio KD3100 turntable £50. All very good condition. Tel: 01224 646 473 CREEK T50 FM/AM high quality tuner. Superb sound. Only 20 months old. Mint condition with box and instructions. Cost £595. Will accept £300 ono. Buyer collects or by arrangement. Tel: 02380 274 494 MAY 2007 HI-FI WORLD

123 20/3/07 14:24:23


Kits for the Audiophile WD K E L 8 4 Valve Ampl if i er K it “The quality that can be gleaned from this amp is a fine introduction to the joys of the valve sound”

The WDKEL84 features a pair of EL84 valves in Push Pull configuration per channel, providing two channels each 18 Watts into an 8 Ohm load. Available as a 5 input integrated amplifier with ALPS volume control.

WDKEL84 kit £369 WDKEL84 built and tested £544

WD 8 8 VA Valve Ampl if i er K it “It proved itself to be an engaging valve amplifier that measured well and sounded superb. Quite simply it plays music, and plays it extremely well.” Adam Smith, Hi-Fi World Dec 06

Often described as a 'sweet sounding' valve, our particular implementation of the KT88 makes sure that it is driven to its ultimate performance. Available as a 35W stereo power amplifier with single input volume control, or as a relay switched integrated with five inputs.

WD88VA Integrated Amp kit £849 WD88VA built and tested £1099

Headpho ne I I Valve Ampl if i er K it “Headphone II is a singleended design with the power pentode wired up in triode configuration for added purity and is as quiet as a mouse”

A beautifully simple stereo headphone amplifier design using Mullard ECL83 valves. It works directly from any source. The circuit uses twin high specification E/I output transformers that can be wired to drive any headphones between 16 to 300 Ohms.

Headphone II kit £275 Headphone II built and tested £404

WD 2 5 A S t and mo u nt S p eaker K it “The one aspect that stands out is the easy ability to resolve instruments and voices ... bass quality and definition is a revelation” Cabinet kit (pair) £179

The aperiodic enclosure offers the bass clarity and definition of a larger closed box, together with the efficiency and easy amplifier load necessary for users of valve amplifiers. Available with SEAS STD soft dome treble unit, or high performance SEAS Excel treble unit.

WD25A STD kit (pair) £215 WD25A XL kit (pair) £398

WD 2 5 T Fl o o rs t and i ng S p eaker K it “The WD25T always sounds crisp and taut, but can 'rumble' menacingly giving impressive physicality reminiscent of far larger boxes. Imaging is superb, the midband is also special; it's very open with masses of detail about the condition of the recording” Cabinet kit (pair) £398

Cunningly arranged as an aperiodic enclosure leading to a lower sealed compartment, the WD25T combines the optimum damping of aperiodic loading with the bass extension of a large closed box. Available with STD soft dome or high performance Excel treble units. Both the WD25 kits are based around a SEAS 26cm (10") paper cone bass unit with an efficiency of 89dB for 1W. The crossover has been developed for an easy drive 6 - 8 Ohm load making the system ideal for all types of amplifiers.

WD25T STD kit (pair) £279 WD25T XL kit (pair) £459

All our kits are complete with pictorial easy-to-follow instructions. All parts are included - all you need is a screwdriver and soldering iron.

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FREE READER CLASSIFIEDS AUDIO ZONE AMP-1 integrated amplifier outboard power supply superb sound mint condition £800. Tel: 07765 808 374 KRELL KSP7B preamp £500 (£2600) (new) Sumo Athena II preamp £350. Tel: 01509 230 694 (anytime) NAKAMICHI CR7, mint condition, instructions, remote, boxed. £650. Rogers LS3/5A 15ohm, good condition. £550. Audio Research SP9, superb phono stage, boxed, immaculate. £450. Rega Planar 3. £120. Tel: 0772 962 0621 RMS REVELATION One. Unusual standmounted speakers, curved metal cabinets, external crossovers, £350. IPL Acoustics S3TLM ribbon Mk2 transmission line floorstanders, ribbon tweeters, aluminium mid bass, crown white ash, £400. Tel: 01202 298 447 or 0777 387 6019 or Email: paynetar@lineone.net REGA PLANER 3 Elys cartridge £150 Rotel RC870 pre x2 RB870 power amps boxed £240. TDL RTL 3 speakers £130. Tandberg TCD 440A spare pinch rollers manuals £230. Tel: 01903523375 MUSICAL FIDELITY A3 CD, A3 Pre Amp, Two A3 Power Amps (used in Bi Amp mode). £300 each or £1,000.00 for all items. Call 01344 751446 or 07713 622115. DENON DVD-2900 Black DVD Player, Little used, Mint Condition, boxed, All Manuals, Remote Control Un-used, £425 ono. Tel (01535) 648407. NEAT ELITE SE maple £600. Mission 753f blk. boxed £300. Audiolab 8000SX boxed £250. Vdh The First 0.6m boxed £65. Vdh The First 0.6m loose £60. Tel: 0114 2339603 evenings.

KEF 103.2 speakers and stands, B&W subwoofer, Quad poweramp, Hitachi pre-amp and tuner, Sony CD and cassette players. Offers for all or parts. Contact Hedgeland 01494 525266 (High Wycombe). MAXELL TAPES 35-90B XLI with bags and labels. Used once for mastering onto CD. £8 each. Philips LP18/DP18 and TDK 3590B £5 each. Tel: 07710 828 286 TDL RTL-2 one pair Transmission Line speakers, Rosewood, Exemplary Condition. £285.00 ovno. 2 pairs B&W 602 S3 Speakers, Cherry, exemplary condition, £320.00 pair. Call John on 01628 622115 & 07809 394995 EPOS ES22 slim floorstanding loudspeakers, cherry, h/w/d 87/20/25cms, excellent condition, very musical, £350 ono (£1100), am having to go for wallmounts now - shame! phone 02083686558, Email ernie@takeiteasy.me.uk MICHELL ISO Hera £249. Hitachi FT5500 £70. Tel: 01606 784 767. CROWN IC150 preamplifier, DC300A power amplifier, 150wpc £500. Lecson AC1 preamplifier, AP2 Tower of Power 100wpc design classic (offers). Buyer collects. Preston area. Tel: 01772 864 684. Email: james_cragg@yahoo.co.uk PIONEER A88X amplifier £250. Mordant Short A5000 amplifier £195. Rogers Ravensbourne amplifier £95. Tannoy P10 speakers (cherry) £210. Wharfedale 708 speakers (black) £195. Goodmans IC100 speakers £120. Tel: Graham 07837 188 670 (Ilford) FOR SALE: NAD C445 FM/ AM/DAB tuner, mint condition, perfect working order, boxed, manual. £250 ono. Tel: 02476 422 967

B U Y / S E L L

H O M E

PAIR WORLD Designs stand mount speakers WD 25A XL with latest X-Over. Silver laquered with 16 inch Atacama stands.Van den Hul ‘Teatrack’ speaker cables, 2x 4mtr lengths. Monster connections. Serious offers please. Tel: 0115 975 4070 WAD HEADPHONE II upgrades include Panasonic pot, Black Gates, Audio Note PIOs, Aerovox Power Caps, spare Mullard NOS valves. Under 10 hours use. As new. £425 ono. Tel: R. Richards 01639 641 043 MERIDIAN DVD 596 upgraded professional player + MSR. Quad 99/909 140wrms + remote. EAR Yoshino 8L6 50 watt tube. Technics SL110/ SME 3009. Denon TU260L II. Possible P/Ex. Wanted: IMF etc. Tel: Jim 01206 510392 or 0788 0983 630 LOWTHER ACADEMY Horn loudspeakers floor standing piano black, costs £2999. Audion Silver Night 300B mono block costs £1999. Both for £2500. One owner. Whole afternoon audition possible. Bargain. Tel: 020 8743 3352 or 07914 225 992 AVI PRO-NINE loudspeakers. Cherry, excellent condition, £299. Hi-Fi News magazines 1995 to date, £5 per year, binders available £3 each. Tel: 01942 891 741 WORLD DESIGNS Standmount speakers WD25A’s, new, some running in time only. Built and tested by World Designs. Ebony black. Excellent. Can supply stand free. £400. Tel: 01373 301 423 FOR SALE. Dynatron stereo tuner & record player. Fantastic example in excellent original condition. One owner from new, August 1971. (No speakers). Offers. Contact John on 07825 560200 or j_phillips10@yahoo.co.uk

C I N E M A

RAILWAY RECORDINGS for sale. Twelve Argo Transacord LPs, four EPs, two BBC LPs, one Audio Fidelity LP, three Australian LPs, one Saydisc, one ‘Talyllyn’. £60. Will split. Tel: 01570 471 422 LEAK STEREO 20 good working order £500 ono. Spendor BC1 £350 ono. Mordaunt Short 500 Decca Kelly Ribbon Celestion twelve inch bass mid unit £350 ono. Tel: 01392 462 935 (Exeter) WANTED: BEN Duncan Pure Power Stnd. 240v/240v isolation transformer. Tel: 01204 531 016 NAIM 82s. NAC SC. Hi-Cap. 250 £2150. Naim CDi £500. Chord Anthem (Din) £100. Quad 33, 303, FM3 £220. Pioneer F676 tuner £60. Thorens TD160 Hadcock arm £175. All mint. Tel: 01722 334694 OLD SANSUI TU317 tuner, manual signal and tuning £55. Denon TU260L/2 tuner £65. Nakamichi BX125E two head cassette deck £85. Musical Fidelity A3.2CR pre-amp £475. All boxed. Tel: 01883 342 039, mobile 01947 450 367 WORLD AUDIO P.S.E. 18watt 300B valve amplifiers, quality build, upgrades include DC heated Svetlana valves, Black Gate capacitors etc. Can be heard runnning any trial. £950. Tel: 01246 810 851 (Chesterfield) CHORD CPA 2200 pre-amp and SPM 1200B power amplifier. Boxed, manuals, remote. Recent service by Chord Electronics. (Retirement sale) £2300. Tel: 01825 722 936 NAIM CDS3 CD player, 11 months old, and Naim XPS2 power supply, 3 years old. Both mint condition and boxed. £5000. Will split if required. Tel: 01833 650 155

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Kits for the Audiophile D I Y Valve Ampl if i er Par t s - Valves , P C B s , Connec tors , Hardware

We stock a full range of valves (tubes) from famous manufacturers. The list below is a selection of favourites. If you don't see what you want - please ring or e-mail. We are happy to match valves on request. EL84M Russian (Sovtek)

Valve Amplifiers by Morgan Jones

£29.50

Building Valve Amplifiers by Morgan Jones

£19.50

Life & Works of A.D. Blumlein by R.C. Alexander £18.00 Understand Amplifiers by Owen Bishop £19.50 Audio & Hi-Fi Handbook edited by Ian Sinclair

£34.50

£11.49

Hardwire Tag Board twin rows of 18 tags £2.33 Switched IEC AC 'mains' inlet chassis mount with fuse £2.88 Unswitched IEC AC 'mains' inlet chassis mount with fuse £2.34 UK IEC AC 'mains' cable fitted with fused plug, 2m length £5.36

EL84 JJ (to Tesla Specification) £9.75 JJ 300B (popular and reliable) £83.50

PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS

EH300B Gold Grid

£69.00

HD83 Headphone II

£16.25

Svetlana KT88 (outstanding)

£36.50

Phono II phono stage

£16.25

PSU II power supply

£16.25

Pre II preamplifier

£16.25

KEL84 Power amp

£24.98

Sovtek 6550 WE

£19.49

Eichmann Bullet Plug phono plugs - pack of 4

Sovtek 5881 EL34 ElectroHarmonix

£12.49 £11.85

Neutrik Professional Gold Plated phono plugs - pack of 2 - Red/W £1.69

EL34 JJ (balanced and precise) £15.49 5U4G Sovtek

£9.94

GZ34 JJ

£16.99

5687 WB Philips NOS (gutsy) £12.49 Svetlana 6N1P

£6.50

6SN7GT EH (to RCA spec)

£10.25

ECF80 EI

£7.30

Gold plated, teflon insulated phono sockets - pack of 2 Silver plated speaker terminals pack of 2 Twin speaker Terminal Set chassis insulated - Red/Bk Chassis mount earth post nickel plated

£25.00

£4.75 £9.40 £2.94 £1.23

POWER SUPPLY PARTS

VALVE BASES B7A Chassis Mount B9A Chassis Mount B9A PCB Mount

£4.70 £4.70 £4.70

Octal Chassis Mount UX4 Chassis Mount

£4.70 £16.98

BOOKS

ALPS Blue Beauty 50k dual log pot.

£13.69

ALPS Blue Beauty 100k dual log pot.

£23.00

Stereo carbon track 100k dual log pot.

£2.95

UF5408 700V 3A rectifier diode ultra-fast recovery £1.25 Cree CSD4060A rectifier diode Schottky 600V 4A £6.75 Jensen 4700uF 16v DC 4 terminal electrolytic £25.85 RIFA 47uF 100V DC PEG Axial Al Electrolytic £2.99 RIFA 100uF 100V DC PEG Axial Al Electrolytic £4.25 Polyester 0.1uF 630v DC WIMA Metalised film £0.55

Valve & Transistor Audio Amps by John Linsley Hood £24.50 Self on Audio by Douglas Self £26.50

Cermet 'Humbucker' 2W at 70 C 22R or 100R linear pot. £8.99 6 way Selector Switch 2 pole 6 way rotary wafer

£1.88

Polyester 0.47uF 630v DC WIMA Metalised film £1.29 Panasonic FC 220uF 500V DC Low ESR Al electrolytic £8.95

Valve Radio & Audio Repair Handbook by Chas E. Miller £22.50

AC 'mains' chassis switch DPST 4A silver contacts

£1.99

Bridge Rectifier 25A 700V 28.5mm x 7.5mm

We stock a wide range of parts to facilitate the build of valve amplifiers. Please ring or e-mail for details. See our on-line catalogue at World Designs, 59 Main Street, Great Gidding, Huntingdon, Cambs, PE28 5NU

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FREE READER CLASSIFIEDS QUICKSLIVER ALL Valve monoblocks with 6550’s. Amazing. £750. Fisher X101D all valve integrated amplifier, 7519’s, £275. Wanted: valve CD player/recorder, good valve preamp. W.H.Y.? PX? Tel: Stanley 07951 553 091 (London, NW2) FOR SALE: 2m pair Chord Odyssey bi-wire speaker cable. Chord terminations. Downsize forces sale. £75 ono. Tel: Dave 01483 728 657 (Surrey) AUDIO NOTE Zero system. Pre. monoblocks, DAC transport, floorstanding speakers, all cables, fabulous analogue sound. Large soundstage, high-end valve bargain, mint condition, 1 years use. £1700. Tel: 01992 300 713 HITACHI FT5500 tuner £70. NXT/Mission type cardboard speaker - who remembers these? Unopened box. £100. Tel: 01606 784 767 SUGDEN A21a, renowned integrated. Black front, 2 years old, mint, boxed. £500 ono. Contact: Sonny. Tel: 07795 562 848 or Email: sornram.k@fsmail.net (London, W2) MONARCHY SM-70 Pro 25watt, mint, box, manual, (£900) £360 plus carriage. Quad 306, Quad serviced, mint, box, manual, £160 plus carriage. Tel: 01903 247 779 KEF RDM2 standmount Reference monitors. Black with thick high gloss solid cherry side cheeks. Excellent looks and sound. Cost £700. Sell for £200. Tel: 0116 284 9087 (Leicester area) NAIM INTRO II loudspeakers. Mint Condition with full original packaging. Cherry wood finish. Excellent sound. £440. B&W DM601 S3s. Current Spec. Mint Condition. Cherry Finish, £140. Tel 01522 797994.

WANTED: DECCA FFSS heads wanted. Mono, 78, H4E. Tel: 01344 776 445 REVOX B750 amp, Revox B760 tuner. Excellent condition. Manuals. £200 ono pair. Michell Focus record deck. No arm. Mint. £100. Tel: 01384 390 067 (West Midlands) REGA 3, RB300 with CS Split Slab (Ref P.T. LPT) + Avondale Taps1 power supply and Space Mat. £300 ono. Thorens TD150 with Linn Basik + and LP12 springs. £100. Tel: 0780 320 7330. ELECTRONICS HOBBYIST requires for projects non working Quad 34 and 44 preamps. 405, 606 power amplifiers. Quad and Leak tuners. 405 boards etc. Contact Mike on 01758 613 790 for price. MUSICAL FIDELITY Tri-Vista 21 DAC and X-Ray V3 CD, both mint condition and lightly used. £1100 ono. Will split. Isotek Substation with two Transformer sections. £500 ono. Tel: 01625 430 797 NYTECH CTA252XDII receiver, mint, boxed, manual, £150. Leak Troughline tuner Stereo II. Professionally fitted decoder. Sounds nice. £130. Myst GOhm amplifier. Needs looking at but works. £90. Tel: 01922 865 414.

MUSICAL FIDELITY XAS100 power amp. A3CR pre-amp. A3 CD. Castle Richmond 3i. Kef Coda 7 standmounts. Stands. Denon TU215RD tuner. All items excellent condition and little used. All going cheap. Tel: 07818 894 926

FOR THE BUYER 1. Not everyone is honest Buyer Beware! 2. Don’t send cash! 3. Accept no verbal guarantees. 4. Have you heard the item or something similar? If not, why do you want it? 5. Don’t pretend to have knowledge - it’s your fingers that will get burnt! 6. Is it working? If not, why not? 7. Has it been modified and, if so, have notes been kept? 8. Was it any good in the first place? 9. Don’t send cash! 10. If you are in the slighest doubt, arrange an audition (see point 5) If it’s too far, wait for another time. 11. Either buy it or don’t: vendors are excusably impatient with ‘consulta tion’ exercises. 12. Don’t send cash!

AUDIO RESEARCH SP8 £795. Edison Twelve £225. Rata turntable stand £130. Oracle Paris turntable £450. Audio Note Anv £135. Kelvin Labs integrated £225. Leak Troughline mono. Hugen stands for Audio Note K’s £145. Rehdeko RK125’s, Mullard ECC83’s, EL84’s. Tel: 0113 255 9475 ARCAM 8 Delta 90.2 Intergrated Stereo amplifier £100. Arcam Delta 70.2 Compact Disc player £100. Arcam Delta Black Box Digital Audio Interface £100. Arcam Delta 80 AM/FM Stereo Tuner £100. Email: snagaitis@hotmail.co.uk

FOR THE SELLER 1. Not everyone is honest Seller Beware! 2. Make no verbal guarantees. 3. Even ‘nearly new’ is still second-hand. If the manufacturer’s guarantee is no longer in force, your price should reflect this. 4. There is very little intrinsic value in second-hand hi-fi; it’s only worth what someone will pay for it. 5. The best guide to pricing is last month’s Classifieds: that a ‘classic’ was worth £xxx a year or two ago is no guide. Values fall as well as rise. 6. Amateur second-hand dealing is not a big money game: you win some, you lose some. 7. Be prompt with despatch. If in doubt about buyer’s bona-fides, either wash out the deal or send C.O.D. 8. There will always be timewasters; be tolerant within reason!

MINT CONDITION Tube Technology pre-amp and power supply. £1500. Genesis mono block power amps. £3000. If you know your High-End hi-fi call Vernon on 07836 697 717. No timeswasters. Thanks AUDIOSTATIC WINGS c/w optional Fins. 3.5 Years old. Silver. Superb Full-range Electrostatics in lovely condition. Boxes, manuals. May also sell Final S200 in piano black gloss. £1900 Both £2300 01458 860765

QED XT400 speaker cables. 5 metres long bi-wired/biamped pair, terminated with 4mm Airloc plugs at each end. £180 ono 01453-545551 Bristol/Gloucestershire area.

AUDIOJUMBLE GRAND M25 presents Ashtead Audiojumble at Peace Memorial Hall, Woodfield Lane. M25 Junction 9. 10am/11am. Sunday 15th April. Tel: 07730 134 973 (Jun)

H O M E

SECOND-HAND EQUIPMENT

WILLIAMS HART monoblocs £900. Lyngdorf SDA1 integrated £1000. Three weeks use. Two of the best amps ever.Voyd turntable, played less than hundred LPs, £800. Tel: 01977 620 558

CABASSE POLARIS monoblocks transistor. Lector two box valve CD Player. Lector valve pre-amplifier. Both black. Naim 03 FM tuner. Shahinian Hawk speakers. Speakers have updated tweeters. Work great with Naim equipment. Phone for prices. Tel: 020 8524 2181.

B U Y / S E L L

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NEXT MONTH June 2007’s Hi-Fi World is a veritable cornucopia of the weird and wonderful - we have a heady mixture of the great and the good in hi-fi hardware. Here’s just some of what we hope to bring you:

PODIUM ONE LOUDSPEAKERS - PANEL PERFECTION? EXCLUSIVE! £100K SYSTEM FEATURE - HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVE! REVOLVER AVF LOUDSPEAKERS - TOWERS OF POWER? LUXMAN L550A VALVE INTEGRATED - JAPANESE CRACKER? EXCLUSIVE! AUDIA FLIGHT CD TWO CD PLAYER - SEXY NEW SILVER DISC SPINNER EXCLUSIVE! SHANLING MC-3 MINI SYSTEM - TAKING THE FIGHT TO DENON CD ACCESSORY SUPERTEST - GET THE BEST FROM YOUR DISCS PROGRESSION PARALLEL TRACKER TONEARM - CHEAP AND EASY EXCLUSIVE! FATMAN ITUBE AUDIO SYSTEM - WHEN THE IPOD MET THE VALVE OLDE WORLDE: MORDAUNT SHORT SYSTEM 442 LOUDSPEAKERS - EIGHTIES BRUISER REVISITED CHANNEL ISLANDS AUDIO D100 MONOBLOCKS - OFFSHORE AUDIO HAVEN? (pictured) DENON DVD3930 DVD PLAYER - HOT NEW MID-PRICE HI RES CONTENDER NUFORCE REFERENCE 9 PREAMP - AS GOOD AS THE REF9SE POWER AMPS? EXCLUSIVE!

PICK UP THE JUNE 2007 ISSUE OF HI-FI WORLD ON SALE JUNE 30TH OR SUBSCRIBE. SEE PAGE 68 P128 subbed final§.indd 128

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ORDER/INDEX

ADVERTISERS INDEX 2nd Hand Hi-Fi 113 Anatek 114 Audio Xpress 107 Audiocraft 109 Audusa 108 Aurousal 38 B&W BC Big Ears 122 Billy Vee 106 Choice Hi-Fi 123,125 Classique Sounds 111 Decent Audio 115 Densen 42 ECS 46 English Valve Audio 112 Heatherdale 115 Henley Designs 76,80 Hi Audio 44 Hi-End Cable 111 Hi-Fi Sound 113 Horn Audio 111 I Cube 56 Ian Edwards 115 Ian Harrison 114 Kudos 115 Leema 34 Linn 6 Mantra Audio 109 Martin Kleiser 48 Matrix 107 Meridian 24 Michell Engineering 92 Midland Audio Exchange 117 Mikam North 60 MIT Cables 64 Musonic 107 Naim 74 Origin Live 60,114 Pioneer IFC Podium 56 Quad 86 Real Hi-Fi 26 Retro Reproduction 109 Rochester Hi-Fi 112 Sevenoaks 28,29,30,31 Shadow Audio 72 Signature Audio IBC Slim Devices 12 Sounds of Music 116 Sounds4Enjoyment 16 Stamford Audio 84 Tangent 56 The Right Note 92 Tube Shop 107 Turntable World 113 Vertex 44 Walrus 78 Whest Audio 64 World Design 120,124,126

FREE READER CLASSIFIED ADS S S E R ORDER FORM STOP P TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Only one advert per reader. Maximum length per advert is 30

words, Adverts over 30 words will not be accepted. Telephone numbers and E-mail addresses are treated as one word. Model numbers are treated as one word i.e. Quad 303 = two words. Sorry, we cannot accept adverts over the telephone. The Publisher reserves the right to judge submissions.

You can email your advert to us at: classifieds@hi-fiworld.co.uk or write or type your advertisement copy in block capitals with one word per box and post it to us at: Hi-Fi World Free Readers Ads, Unit G4, Argo House, Kilburn Park Road, London, NW6 5LF. WE WILL ACCEPT PHOTOCOPIES OF THIS FORM 1

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CLASSIC CUTS

JEROME KERN SONG BOOK ELLA FITZGERALD 1963

T

he Verve years were great for Ella Fitzgerald. She had moved on from Decca where she struggled with patchy material – some excellent but too many of them novelties. Her Song Book series at Verve launched her star into the stratosphere where it has stayed ever since. Her ‘Cole Porter Song Book’, for example, became one of the biggest selling jazz records of all time. Fitzgerald began recording the Song Book series for Verve in 1956 with Rogers and Hart, and the last was undertaken in 1963 with Jerome Kern. Speakers Corner began covering the Song Book series back in the year 2000, with the ‘Cole Porter Song Book’. It was at this time that the label had the idea to publish all seven of the original series because the initial set sold so well. The label then issued a second series with consistently high sales – and so the series has continued with the new release of the ‘Jerome Kern Song Book’ featuring standards such as ‘A Fine Romance’, ‘Can’t Help Loving That Man’, ‘The Way You Look Tonight’ and ‘I’m Old Fashioned’. It is a beautiful release, superbly mastered by Acoustech in the USA. Rather than a complete unit of song books, the audiophile has to look at the series as a suite of linked yet separate albums. Some of the albums were recorded in mono and some in stereo. To that extent, Speakers Corner produced the very first stereo versions on vinyl of Song Book songs with the few tracks that

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"the Song Book series is an ideal method of dipping your toes into the cream of the songwriting crop" appeared on the largely mono Rogers and Hart production. The final vinyl volume will be the Harold Arlen Song Book which will be issued either late this year or early next year. CD fans should hunt down the song books on the Verve label. The ambitious can even purchase the entire series as a magnificent box set of sixteen discs. Vinyl fans who happen to be Fitzgerald completists may have to make some tough decisions too. Mainly because the CD versions of the song books included an array of extra tracks. As the MD of Speakers Corner, Kai Seemann, explained his vinyl versions, “sometimes include the extra tracks. If there was enough space on the LP we did. Sometimes there was no space left. For example, if a track was deemed too long for an album side, the sound quality would degrade so I wouldn’t feature it.” Speakers Corner sometimes found themselves with a spare fifteen minute track but it was too short to include on an extra 33rpm record or even a double sided 45rpm vinyl. So why didn’t they include it on a supplementary 10” or single sided 45rpm disc? “We are not able to manufacture 10” vinyl discs to the thickness we require. I could have done it with a single-sided 45rpm disc but I feel uncomfortable where one side is completely blank. It’s unattractive. When Classic do it they have an entire album on onesided discs. Oddly enough, we tried that route but our customers didn’t

appreciate it – maybe we have different customers.” There are no extra tracks on the new Jerome Kern release but, then, there are none on the older CD version either. In fact, Speakers Corner didn’t utilise the CD sets for comparison, to see what extra tracks were out there; the company instead depended on the tape library at Universal and for that library to say that, ‘well on this tape we’re giving you, there are extra tracks’. Some might call this approach rather blinkered and less than diligent whilst others might say the company wanted to give the public the best sounding product available and so only worked with the best tapes, instead of mooching around on the floor looking for bits and pieces to add to the end of an album. As individual records, the Song Book series is not perfect. The arrangements (on Cole Porter and Rogers and Hart, lovely as they are) can rightly be accused of being a little plodding which was restrictive to Fitzgerald. The heights were reached on the Gershwin and Duke Ellington Song Books where Duke Ellington and Nelson Riddle respectively created arrangements more suited to Fitzgerald’s style. Taken as a whole, however, the Song Book series is a tour de force, an essential item for any fan of the popular song and an ideal method of dipping your toes into some of the cream of the song writing crop. PR

www.hi-fiworld.co.uk

16/3/07 14:00:58


nature Audio Signature Audio Systems - Capturing the emotion in music -

Tel: 0208 480 3333 • Mob: 07918 022870 / 07738 007776 E-mail: info@signaturesystems.co.uk • Web: www.signaturesystems.co.uk

Upgrade your system in one fell swoop! “ Absolutely love the performance. ”

“ The best I’ve heard in 20 years. ”

Mr K. Tasker

Professor R. Jowitt

Rack mount version shown (standard version without side cheeks)

POWER PLANT PREMIER

AC Power Regenerator P S

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Everything you hear and see through your Hi-Fi or Home Cinema system begins its journey at the wall socket. AC Mains quality can and does impact the audio performance of your system. PS Audio is a recognised leader in power quality and power protection products. If you want to protect the investment in your system, and enjoy a dramatic improvement in your existing components at the same time, try the new Power Plant Premier. The Power Plant Premier is the world’s only true AC regenerator that offers the full power of the wall, low distortion even with difficult loads, MultiWave, CleanWave, remote control, true surge protection, front panel harmonic power analyzer, AC volt meter, and outstanding AC isolation. All this for just £1,799 represents unbeatable value. The Premier Power Plant is now available in the UK with US and UK plug outlets. Please call for more information. Digital Link III DAC £1,099

GCHA Headphone Amplifier £799

“ The Crowning Jewel... is the Digital Link III. ”

“ Brilliant. Loads of power and detail. ”

Absolute Sound, March 2007

ImageXperience, March 2007

GCPH Phono Stage £799

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Hi-Fi News, May 2007

Dealer enquiries welcome HFN/SAS/0507

SAS HFW May07 v1.indd 1

13/3/07 12:59:49


The new B&W 800 Series Incorporating B&W crossover technology

> CLEANSED

Audio signals are like spring water. The further they flow from their source, the greater the risk to their natural purity and vitality. Like a glass of cool, clear water, fresh from the stream, nothing compares to hearing music with the cleansing clarity it was created with. At B&W, we like to get listeners as close to the source as possible. The signal path in an 800 Series speaker couldn’t be any shorter, simpler or sweeter. By optimising, in every detail, the mechanical design of the drive units, we minimise the need for extra electrical components in the crossover. Less quantity, more quality. Every component we do use is handpicked after painstaking listening tests. Together in the 800 Series crossover, they deliver sound with every original nuance and texture intact. Not all water tastes the same. No other speakers sound like the 800 Series.

www.bw800.com Visit our website and order your free DVD Call +44 (0)1903 221 500


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