I would seriously think about plinius. They are what I believe to be the best match with totems. If budget does not allow go with NAD 372. For the price, that amp will not be beaten.
New integrated for Totem
I have a new to me pair of Totem sttafs. I am am interested in replacing my current yamaha RX-v730 receiver with an integrated. Since I am starting from relative ground zero, I realize that options are somewhat limitless. I have searched and read and searched. I have considered the following solid states: Music Hall 25.2, Arcam A70, NAD 372. I have gleaned from the sage advice here that the Sim and Naim work well. They seem to be a bit out of my price range.
Any thoughts on hybrid integrated units such as the jolida 1502/1702..
Any advise will help
BTW mostly listen to jazz/acoustic guitar/some classic rock at lower volumes....
Thanks, Steven
Any thoughts on hybrid integrated units such as the jolida 1502/1702..
Any advise will help
BTW mostly listen to jazz/acoustic guitar/some classic rock at lower volumes....
Thanks, Steven
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My advice is something with Tubes. A 30 w/c tube amp is plenty for the Sttafs. I'm on my second pair of Sttafs. The first pair I sold ~2 years ago when I upgraded to Mani-2s. I recently bought another pair for a small room system I set up. I'm driving them now with my TAD 60 tube amp. This is the best combination I've had with the Sttafs. I have driven them with many other solid state amps (no integrates though), and frankly they sound great with everything I tried. Other than the tube amps, the best was B&K M200s. |
I do not think that the NAD 372 gets its justice. This is a great int amp for the price. Good power for those Totems. I keep one around for a second system. Also it is like other amps. The better the source, the better it sounds. You have to spend quite a bit more to better it, especially after proper break in. |
Onkyo A-9555. Competitive with the British integrateds. Warm, low noise floor, great low level detail combined with inner clarity, great speed and instantaneous high current delivery. Sounds like a budget Asian amp for the first 100 hours and then turns into something organic after it breaks in. Competitive at its list price of $799, but stupid cheap at its online street price of $450-475 available at http://www.jr.com or http://www.amazon.com. Can also be had for as low as $400 as B-stock with a more limited warranty from http://www.accessories4less.com. I got mine primarily to propel an LP-based system and it works very well for that. The big surprise is how it brought digital playback alive as I hadn't heard at home before. Its low noise floor brings out low level detail that got buried in noisier electronics, bringing a more organic feel to digital sources. Mine replaced a couple of semi-legendary power amps: the Amber Series 70 and the VSP Labs TransMOS 150, both high current power amps. |