LSA Voyager GAN Amplifier


Just got mine last week.  After 24 hours of play all I can say is that this is not your father's class D amplifier.  There is not one thing about its sound that reminds me of the class D gremlins that I do not like.  The low end filled in and now has deep impact, the midrange is the love child of a beautiful tube and clean hybrid amp - just gorgeous.  Highs are very clean and extended. Spatial cues are top notch. My system has had some damn good tube and solid state amps in it before and it has never sounded this good.  I am blown away with the quality of sound coming from class D amplification at this price point.

This 300 wpc amplifier is a real winner.....
jaymark

Showing 8 responses by amplifierdude

Look harder. I’m pondering over building active retrofit kits for existing passive speakers. Any passive speaker can be converted to active and achieve much higher performance. And the crossover can be adapted to the living space, as well as the listeners preference. Hard to do that with passive speakers without a soldering iron. 

Many people are content with mediocrity. I don’t share this viewpoint, so I don’t expect you to relate. 

This statement is false on two counts.

External crossovers don't contribute noise to any system nor do they add distortion. If either were to happen, it would point to a severe flaw in the amplifier driving the crossover.

Passive crossovers of themselves cannot cause noise or distortion. 
 

Well we will see next week. Do you own an audio analyzer?

I was asking because if I conduct an experiment, and post my results, you can conduct the same experiment and see if your results are the same. If we both get the same results, then neither of us can argue the validity of the claim.

 

Which model of analyzer do you own?

I know who Ralph is. That’s why I was asking about an audio analyzer. Surely he can’t be creating the next generation of giant killer class D amps without one.