Pairing NAD Masters & Harbeth [poss. SHL5+ or 40.2]


Good Morning,  I'm new to the Audiogon Forum but have been on here reading/buying for a while.

My question is pretty basic: I have the NAD M12 & M22 and they're currently hooked up to some average B & W bookshelves and Klipsch sub [bored and dissappointed].  To make a long story short, I've been looking at and listening to Harbeths [5's or 40.'s] for a few years and may finally be ready to spend the money. I listen to classic rock, some jazz, a lot of classical and a lot of Billy McLaughlin.


Would the M12 & M22 work well with the Harbeth SHL5+ or 40.'s?  Would I really enjoy my music again?

Anyone have this set up or an experience pairing the two?

Hope for some feedback :)


talc2471
Erik asks some good questions, but only you can answer the question of whether you think Harbeth speakers will work with your NAD equipment.  

If you're buying new, perhaps you could work with your dealer for a home demo or for you to bring your NAD gear to the store for a listen.

If you're buying new, maybe you could just buy a pair.  If you then don't like how they sound with NAD, you could resell them for little or no loss or figure out how to get different electronics.

Good luck!
Dear OP we are an NAD Masters Dealer and this combo should work great, The over all sound quality of the Masters series is clean, tight, fast articulate. 

The Harbeths tend to be a bit on the warmer side so this combo should be good. 

The real question is why just the NAD gear there is a ton of great gear out there.

Dave and Troy
Audio Doctor NJ NAD Masters dealer
Thanks to each of you for the responses.  My room is basically 20 x 20 and it carries into a 12 x 24 kitchen area [32' in total sound projection].  Standing at the island you will be facing the speakers.  I don't have a dedicated listening room.  These will be for everyday/extensive use.  

Why the NAD gear? I guess I just like it and haven't spent enough time exploring other options.   For me personally, there's way too much stuff out there, and I've had good luck with there stuff in the past so I went with the best they have.  Usually paired it with top end klipsch which I liked a lot, but now I want something more refined.  Thought B & W would work and not really impressed.  Like my klipsch better.

I like a really rich/warm sound.  I'm not a bright/high tone guy which is what the B & W seem to give me, even more than the Klipsch [Forte 2].  Gets hard to listen to after a while.  Hoping my equipment can achieve that with the Harbeths. 

ps - im a layman so don't make fun of me for my terminology.  lol
Personally If I were looking especailly at the 40.2 I would look at a serious upgrade over the NAD pieces.

The 40.2 were just at the New York show with way, more expensive gear and they sounded surprisingly good. 

I would look at a Naim stack, or a Krell integrated, the Coda CS iB is a stunning integrated amplifer, and the Coda separates are just fantastic.

Then add a good external streamer and dac or a good streamer and you will have a fantastic system.

A real cool integrated amplifier is the Unison Unico 150 a tube/hybrid integrated for $6,500.00 the preamp uses fantastic Russiona 6H30 tubes with a powerful solid state ouput stage. Just stunning.

If you need any guidance we sell a lot of of fantastic lines of electronics that will sound great on the Harbeths. 

It will really come down to a number of factors

Do you want an intergrated amp with a dac/streamer a two piece setup or a dac/preamp amp combo like the Nad which is also two pieces?

What will your sources be analog, digital? TV connection, other?

Do you have a price range that you want to explore good setups would run from $4-6k up to $20k and beyond with the Harbeths.

Would a hybrid tube preamp plus solid state amp be possible? Tubes in a preamp tend to be less expensive and last longer. 

Dave and Troy
Audio Doctor NJ