Go ahead get that class D and get it out of your system.
Buckeye Amps musicality? Not measurements, musicality....
Hey Everyone.... question, I am contemplating the Buckeye Amps 9040 Purifi monoblocks. I am, at the same time, considering the Musical Fidelity M6x 250.5 (5 channel) all of this in an effort to run my LCR up front. (Arendal 1723 THX Monitors) - everything I read from Dylan at Buckeye and hear from his interviews in YouTube videos all surrounds measurements. Let's assume that every amp, in particular these two options, measure incredibly well. I get that.
But I also get that amp measurements are only a piece of how an amp ACTUALLY SOUNDS in the real world with my room and my speakers. Which is why its a red flag that Buckeye hides behind measurements as the end-all-be-all of buying an amplifier. If measurements were the absolute end of the discussion, there wouldn't have been a Class A or A/B amp sold in the last 5 years. I get that the Purifi stuff measures well, incredibly well, but to never say anything in public forums or in public interviews about how your amps actually sound or how musical they are compounds and continues the notion that while Class D measures insanely well, they sound cold, brittle, analytical, bright, shout'y and too forward. Class D or no Class D, it boils down to the amp designers' actual implementation of the technology in how it sounds, e.g. the input stage, the output stage, the signal path, etc.
So what I'm looking for I suppose is owners of exceptional Class A/B amps (like Musical Fidelity, Parasound, Rotel et al) who have made that leap of faith to the Purifi Buckeye either 7040 or 9040 modules and how your experience has been..... ?? Thanks immensely!
- ...
- 38 posts total
I own Buckeye, Deer Creak, and Nord monoblocks. As far as I know, there is nothing special with Buckeye's "implementation" that would distinguish it from other diy assemblers. That said, if it's for home theater, you should be ahead of the game over more expensive A/B amps. The clarity and bass slam/control are great on all the above. They'll drive almost any speaker very well. If you haven't looked into these other brands, do so. Also VTV have great options. You can roll op amps with some of theirs as well as Nord products. |
I own 2 buckeye amps. 3 channel Purify amp for LCR, and the 8 channel Hypex amp for my atmos and surround. I also own the Arendal 1723s towers and surrounds. To me the combination is very musical and very revealing of the source. The clean power I get to my speakers is what I like the most. No matter how high I push the volume I get no clipping or distortion. Im happy with my Buckeye amps. Rest of my system includes Anthem Avm 90, Holo Spring kte dac, Eversolo A8 as a transport. |
I didn’t see mention your listening habits, what genre is your favorite and what is your typical listening level? I tried Class D early on with a Rogue integrated, but it was not to my liking for the usual reasons, though I suspect things have improved since then. Personally if I was going to go Class D I would be looking at Bel Canto Ref601m’s, they review well and come from a company that used to build tube amps. |
@audiotruth The reason Buckeye doesn't talk about his amplifier sound is because, and I quote this is coming from him all his amplifiers are "true to source". A straight wire with amplification. What about other amplifiers like the AHB2? Well they are also "true to source" and thus sound completely identical. That is his claim, whether they sound identical or true-to-source or not, I cannot report. Personally I find him very lacking in knowledge. Saying things like "all op-amps sound identical when implemented properly" and "measurements tell the absolute truth". |
- 38 posts total