Disappointing On Mcintosh......help


 3 Months ago  I went to NYC and stopped by the WOM  and auditioned several MCintosh gear...........and left a bit disappointed or not impressed...then I told myself   " lets give a second shot"  and went today to a  HIFI store and again Good room accoustics10K speakers , MC Preamp , MC Amplifier........ and again  the same disappointment I felt 3 month earlier.

Is that the "warm" sound people reffer to about Mcintosh?  
The sound is ample, base is powerfull  but the the sound is simply  not to clear, the hights are not too "crisp"  It sounds like the treble is set at 3 and needs to be adjusted at 9 or 10.
It seems like  the sound is  coming through a thin layer of paper ...that is the way I describe that sound.  

Then 20 minutes later I auditioned a Parasound A21+ and a JC5 and the sound was more clear and the highs were crispier

Whats your take on my experience?  or That is the MC "warm sound? 
cydrone

Showing 2 responses by jmeyers

I decided to refresh this discussion, but not because I relish rabble-rousing.  This past weekend, I replaced my well-regarded stereo power amplifier with a pair of McIntosh MC 611 monaural power amplifiers.  While I get a kick out of those large blue windows with their needles bouncing to and fro, that was hardly the motivation behind my purchase any more than was their retention of value or their famous brand name.  Rather, I bought them because I wanted a better sounding system, this desire constrained by what would be to me, for that improvement, a fair price.

Beauty, in the sonic sense, is in the ears of the beholder.  I wanted to sit down and listen to music that was melodious, enveloping, and simply a delight to hear -- for hours on end.  These MC 611s fulfill that desire to a degree I had never before experienced in my media room.  I suppose that I qualify for being called an "audiophile".  I have steadily improved my audio system over the past 35 years; I doubt I shall never stop, although at this point I have reached a level of satisfaction that contentment is now the appropriate description of where I am.

This topic contains both praises and deprecations of McIntosh with lots of generalizations, particularly by those who are bad-mouthing McIntosh.  I find this amusing, as the only relevant comments are those where a specific component (McIntosh's or a competitor's) is introduced to a person's personal audio system, and that person articulates how well it worked. 

I know that a lot of people on Audiogon appear to relish "clarity".  I have a simple test for establishing whether a system (the amp and speakers being the most critical components) provides clarity.  Play "Wicked Games" by Chris Isaak.  A female chorus in the background softly sings "This world is only going to break your heart".  If the listener can make out every work without undue effort, then that system is truly clear.  (My former amps failed that test; the MC 611s passed it.) I may be wrong about this, but I believe there are two ways that clarity can be delivered.  The first is my having such outstanding ability to amplify the signal that nothing is lost in its boosting; the other is to "goose-up" the lower treble.  This is what airlines do enormously when they make passenger announcements, and it is really unpleasant to hear.  My suspicion is that a lot of amplifiers also do that, but to a lesser degree, of course.

I have been rambling, so let me bring this posting to a close.  I am not going to make a wholesale endorsement of McIntosh.  However, I do feel very comfortable saying that, in a first-class audio system, their MC 611 power amplifiers can be a terrific addition.  They certainly are to mine.

I am fortunate to have a very good system.  For the Wicked Games test, I used a Lumin T2 streamer/DAC, Kimber Kable Silver Streak to a Theta Casablanca V preamp/processor, Wireworld Equinox 8 interconnects to the two McIntosh MC 611 power amps, Wireworld Silver Eclipse 8 speakers to Revel Ultima Studios.  The power management was, for the components, Shunyata Venom V10 XC power cable to a Shunyata Denali Power Distributor and then Venom 14 to the two components; for the amplifiers, Shunyata Delta XC to a Shunyata Denali 2000/T power distributor and then Venom 10 XCs to the two amplifiers.

As good as the 611s are, the signal they got to amplify was very fine, too.  If any of the prior "chain" were of lesser quality, the clarity I enjoyed as well as the musicality might have been impaired.