Many Yamaha's don't like impedance less than 6 ohms...check on it.
I'd take anthem any day over yamaha.
I'd take anthem any day over yamaha.
Anthem 225 vs Yamaha A-S2000
Just stumbled on this thread - I did audition the Yamaha amp for a week prior to purchasing my Anthem 225. The Yamaha is a beautiful amplifier for sure, but the Anthem is effortless in power, and just sounds more organic in my humble opinion, as well as having a more refined top-end. I just feel the value of this Anthem is off scale. But the Yammy sure is a nice one, I don't think you could go wrong with either one. |
Well, I guess only fools cannot change their perception of things! I had been thinking about my initial Yamaha audition when I purchased my Anthem 225. It had me thinking for months...well, I gave it another go and must admit that finally, it does sound more refined in every parameter - so I sold the Anthem and purchased the Yammy. The Anthem is still a fantastic amp for the money, but overall, it is more of your basic amplifier and a very well executed one at that. The Yamaha has a better phonostage built-in, a better headphone stage, much better tone and volume controls, and sounds stellar even when compared to much higher priced units. One final thing, the Yamaha actually sounds subjectively just as powerfull as the Anthem's whopping 225 watts per channel. |
Sorry to be blunt about this, but I once owned a Bada product and the thing broke down after 2 months - I could hardly get any service on it and sold it for audiophile peanuts. Sounded ok, but not great. I suggest you open your Bada up and have a look inside. Then have a look inside the Anthem 225, the parts quality, and if you know a bit about amp construction - the layout, the overall execution - as one review said it best - this is no flimsy integrated. Better get a good solid state OR a good tube amp instead of a compromised hybrid design like the Bader. |
I can also highly recommend the Anthem. Ours is now driving Revel M22's in the bedroom system with really nice and convincing sound. Prior to that, we enjoyed it in our main system (driving F52's at that time), where we eventually upgraded to an Accuphase E450 (which definitely plays in a different category and opens up a whole new set of details, no contest). Long before that, I had Yamaha amps, but can't really comment on how those compare, as they were driving speakers in a very different category. In it's price range, I think the Anthem can hold it's own very well, especially if you need some power and prefer the uncluttered concept of good integrated amps. |
The response's given seem to show a bias too ignorance. The Yamaha is heavier and runs fully balanced, the build quality is on another level in comparison to the Anthem. Im sure both products sound fine however the Anthem sells based on name alone. Check out the size of the caps used in the AS2000, that is all you need to see when asking if it can cope with impedance swings. |
The Yamaha puts out 190 watts as you can see in this review... http://www.goodgearguide.com.au/review/home_entertainment/yamaha/a-s2000/259907 .Also they was a French reviewer that just loved the yamaha a-s2000. He was using some Verity Audio Parsifal Ovation (25,000) and these speakers are hard to drive too...sensitivity is only 85.0db. He said this amp is an incredible value...compare it to integrated amps in the $5,000 to $7,000 range !.. A Classic that we will talk about for a long time! |
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No Yammie ever made deserves to be in the same sentence as the Anthem." I am a huge fan of all Anthem gear I have owned/heard but these upper tier analog Yamaha integrated amps(A-S1000, A-S2000, A-S1100, A-S2100, A-S3000) are overbuilt(48.5lbs minimum) and will dispel any "myths" about Yamaha not being able to compete with some of the more highly touted brands. Bill |