Focal Kanta 2 and CODA 16 amp


Hello All,
My audio system was sounding really good but I felt the need to go further and recently upgraded a McIntosh MC152 amp to a Coda 16. What was missing? A certain bit of clarity, the ability to place instruments in the soundstage, and an amp that is consistent in quality with the rest of my equipment.

McIntosh is one of the amplifiers that pairs well with my Focal Kanta 2s. I thought about a more powerful McIntosh but didn’t go there, heard a Luxman M900u in a dealer’s showroom that was OK, but a demo of the Coda turned my head. The Coda is an eye-opener in the clarity and power it brings to the system, but it has thrown the balance off. I am now struggling to overcome some brightness with certain music (not all), a slight edge that I had previously managed to defeat by changing cables, rolling tubes in my preamp and adding the Mac.

My listening space is not ideal and can use acoustic treatment to tame the highs, but things sounded pretty good before. The focus and bulk of time (say 85%) is with home theatre, but when I play two channel, I want it to be high quality. An obvious path is to correct my mistake, sell the Coda and look elsewhere.  Another alternative is to keep this excellent amp and get a different (warmer?) preamp to better match the Coda (must have HT bypass and XLR connections), or perhaps something like a MiniDSP with Dirac to tweak the sound. I'm even contemplating warmer speakers to replace the Kantas, but that means three speakers (L/C/R) for home theatre.

I appreciate any words of wisdom or solace from Kanta and/or Coda owners on a strategy to manage this issue. Thanks,
Robert

traubr

@audphile1 Duh!  I keep the Meitner volume on 100 because that is the pass-through setting. When I'm away from home for more than a few days I turn off all the equipment just in case. I come back, turn the equipment on, then wonder why the volume isn't half what it was before I left.  The Meitner is programmed to set its volume level back to a low level when the power is turned off then back on, and I have to remember to turn it up again to the pass-through setting of 100.

Dialing the volume back a few steps is such an easy fix.  Thanks again!

Yep I’ve mumbled “wtf” many times after power outage or after turning it off for few days. Volume 50 is a safety net. It’s about where you will be running it direct into amp for normal listening.
 

For the MA3i upgrade they upped the output voltage. Amadeus mentioned it to me when I spoke with him. The 97 on volume control is about where the MA3 was (according to me). It may chill things a bit. Try. 
 

I gave the lower volume trick a whirl and it was a big success, enough so that I think it unnecessary to send the preamp to Backert to adjust the gain.  I've fiddled with it and 80 is a good measure where instead of 2 clicks on the Backert remote (or the dial if I get off my butt) now requires 4 or 5, which provides finer adjustments and help control the overall sound.  I'll ratchet back to, say, 70 and see what that brings (away for a few days, that trial will have to wait).  What a great fix, and thanks for that.  New tubes and interconnects are coming next week, eager to see if they help.  If not... I'm preparing Plan B.  Thanks for the support,

Robert

Great hear it helped!
Try different volume levels on the Meitner and see what matches the backert best for your system. Amplifier is a major factor in the sound of a system and I’m not surprised to see additional changes as a domino effect. You’re on the right track though.