I have to ask, what do you guys do for a living that allows this level of disposable income for equipment? Its so far out of my playing field I cannot comprehend having that kind of budget.
Help me find my ideal Stereo Integrated Amp
Hi all. Do you know of a Stereo Integrated Amps with these features?
1) $10,000 or less
2) DAC
3) Streamer
4) Phonostage
5) XLR connections (does not have to be truly balanced)
6) 200 Watts at 8 ohms/400 Watts at 8 ohms
7) Optical/Coaxial/HDMI digital inputs
Thank you in advanced for your help.
Showing 5 responses by livinon2wheels
all of this recommended equipment is so far out of my price range I can offer little guidance in that range...its totally beyond my experience. But as a point of reference, I have a TA-1 sold by emotiva that I really love. Its an integrated dac/pre amp with sub output and rca outputs to drive bigger amps if desired, but honestly it sounds wonderful thru the built in amplifier. Will it drive inefficient speakers to ear splitting levels? No, but it will drive them to reasonably loud and satisfying levels. It comes with a decent FM tuner and coaxial/optical inputs and a phono input as well and serves me nicely in an office system. If others are looking for a solution for that kind of environment, you'd be hard pressed to find something better at its price and probably at twice the price. I think this is currently offered at $499.00. |
@grislybutter - partly my reason for being here is to see what reasonable upgrade paths are and how to get more out of what i have. Also to see what’s available that has solid construction and reliability with decent performance. Im replacing most of my equipment and am not up to date on what is good now. Huge learning curve because i loved what i had before and most of that is no longer available. Modern day equivalents to what I had are hard to find. I cant assess equipment i cannot touch and hear, and bricks and mortar audio stores are scarce. It’s a quandry |
@oddiofyl I appreciate that way of thinking too, and try not to buy 'cheap.' Not that spending a lot of money results in tangible improvements necessarily, but by choosing something that has comparable specs to more expensive equipment but perhaps gives up some feature that I probably wouldnt use anyway because of the way I listen. And while I know this may open up a bag of worms with some who might read this, all of my old equipment had bass and treble controls that could be invoked with any source connected to the system and I appreciate the subtle effect that can have. All of the new receivers or pre/processors I have seen have no tone control other than some kind of built-in room correction. Lets be clear, I am talking about a 5.2 surround system. I wont be doing ceiling speakers for atmos. No one seems to offer this most basic form of tone shaping for ANY surround sound system. Using room correction software is inconvenient because, as far as I know, none of those response shaping tools can be invoked on the fly while listening, unlike a bass and treble control. I purchased an Emotiva MR-1L receiver to test out the concept of using room correction software and see first hand how well or poorly it worked. Lets just say I am NOT a fan. Too time consuming, less than wonderful results, channel balance is awful, I can do better by ear but it takes a LOT of tweaking to get to a place where the response corrections fit a curve that sounds good, Overall its a great receiver with a few quirks that irk me, I will have to spend clearly more, a lot more, to get functionality that doesn't irk me. Due to the generally poor amplifiers in most receivers offered today, particularly at MR-1L's price point, its clear I am going to have to go upscale quite a bit...The only one that appears to tick all the boxes is the Marantz AV-10. And then add amplifiers to suit. By the time I have done that, I have close to 10K in just a processor and amplification.....Or go completely in the other direction and by the Schiit 5.1 channel processor for $400 that does everything in analog and follows NONE of the modern formats. It converts any 2 channel source into 5.1 in the analog domain and provides a satisfactory listening experience for movies (if you believe the reviews) and music as well. Not sure how much Schiit I would be buying if I went that route, but the idea of not having to keep up with the ever more complicated Dolby standards and yet have a pleasant and rewarding movie experience anyway is more than a little appealing. Certainly financially and possibly sonically. So its a quandary...with either choice external amps are required. I could be all in on the amplifiers via Emotiva for about $2000 if I was willing to settle for 200 wpc, and nearly $4000 to double that and have the Schitt processors for 400 and be all in for something over half the price of the $7000 Marantz. Or marry digital and analog together by buying an Emotiva TA1...to use as a DAC - It gives me FM radio, A phono input, an optical input, real tone controls, preamp ouputs to send to the Schitt processor and then to the amps and I am in for most of the electronics I need for under $3000 or $5000 with high power amps. So I could have FM, TV, and another source (streaming or CD) plus Phono and be a modern 'old school' mostly analog and never have to concern myself with whatever the latest video codec is and whether I can decode it. The speakers in this system are yet to be decided and should be the topic of yet another post...so what would you guys do and why? Would you buy up to the AV-10 or buy some Schitt? Or go the Emotiva DAC route? |