A followup about the Oyaide.
I've had it for 10 days (as of tonight at 10pm) and I think there's something extremely important to mention.
The unit will sound excellent from the box, but DOES sound better after a week of being on my Arcam FMJ integrated).
HOWEVER, a friend and I listend to the Kirov Orchestra Scheharazade (Philips 470 618-2)and it sounded great. Didn't give it a second thought, execept that we could hear considerably more low-level detail than we'd heard on it with prior listenings months ago, preceding the Oyaide.
I left the music playing at low levels last night. Today, the entire picture has changed. A mild haze, one I attributed to the CD (I'd never thought it a great-sounding CD) vanished. Completely. Hadn't touched a thing. The strings, which I mentioned only last night, sounded strained and gritty, now sound terrific on fff passages. The vivacity of the 2nd movement, which seemed restrained -- now is not restrained at all. (The Chicago Orchestra version (HP's favorite) made chopped liver of the Kirov: now they're close to equal.) Haven't listened to the Chicago today)but the point is: the unit is clearly not completely broken in. Keep it playing or plug a light in for at least 9 days (the length of time I've had it) before you even think of assessing it. I would've said the Oyaide was an excellent outlet. Now I would say it is a superb outlet. Comparisons are extraneous: this outlet matches my Hurricanes in that hard to explain category: continuousness. When flutes would go up and down the scale, before today, certain notes would drop out as though they'd gone below the noise floor. Not today. And flutes do not play loudly, so it's easier to hear. On top of this, the orchestral environment has ramped up quite a bit, so the Mariinsky Theatre (yes, it's spelled correctly according to the CD jacket!) has an ambient atmosphere not evident before-- or I should say, less evident that last night. And to top this off, the volume on the Arcam is at 7. Last night it was at 8, and I hear, in the 4th movement, right before the players begin to play, begin to wind up to hit their first notes, meaning the low level detail is greatly evident, also meaning: extremely low noise floor.
Give this -- and any -- unit you buy, time. I do have to say, the FIMs, even the gold one, are excellent, but in the areas of transient information, lower treble information, inter-transient silence, and "jump" simply not competitive.
I'm breaking in a Tesla on the dedicated outlet right next to this one. Two days ago, it sounded hazy. I can only assume it will also take weeks to break in as well. I want to thank crossram2x4, who loves the Teslas more, for his suggestion about breaking in for 2 weeks. I shall apply this wisdom to the Oyaides as well. But if they continue to improve, I shall consider this $145.00 purchase exceedingly well spent money, next to the purchase of the Hurricanes 7 years ago, and the Audience 2aRp-Teflon unit most of all (God, that thing is dazzling).
I've had it for 10 days (as of tonight at 10pm) and I think there's something extremely important to mention.
The unit will sound excellent from the box, but DOES sound better after a week of being on my Arcam FMJ integrated).
HOWEVER, a friend and I listend to the Kirov Orchestra Scheharazade (Philips 470 618-2)and it sounded great. Didn't give it a second thought, execept that we could hear considerably more low-level detail than we'd heard on it with prior listenings months ago, preceding the Oyaide.
I left the music playing at low levels last night. Today, the entire picture has changed. A mild haze, one I attributed to the CD (I'd never thought it a great-sounding CD) vanished. Completely. Hadn't touched a thing. The strings, which I mentioned only last night, sounded strained and gritty, now sound terrific on fff passages. The vivacity of the 2nd movement, which seemed restrained -- now is not restrained at all. (The Chicago Orchestra version (HP's favorite) made chopped liver of the Kirov: now they're close to equal.) Haven't listened to the Chicago today)but the point is: the unit is clearly not completely broken in. Keep it playing or plug a light in for at least 9 days (the length of time I've had it) before you even think of assessing it. I would've said the Oyaide was an excellent outlet. Now I would say it is a superb outlet. Comparisons are extraneous: this outlet matches my Hurricanes in that hard to explain category: continuousness. When flutes would go up and down the scale, before today, certain notes would drop out as though they'd gone below the noise floor. Not today. And flutes do not play loudly, so it's easier to hear. On top of this, the orchestral environment has ramped up quite a bit, so the Mariinsky Theatre (yes, it's spelled correctly according to the CD jacket!) has an ambient atmosphere not evident before-- or I should say, less evident that last night. And to top this off, the volume on the Arcam is at 7. Last night it was at 8, and I hear, in the 4th movement, right before the players begin to play, begin to wind up to hit their first notes, meaning the low level detail is greatly evident, also meaning: extremely low noise floor.
Give this -- and any -- unit you buy, time. I do have to say, the FIMs, even the gold one, are excellent, but in the areas of transient information, lower treble information, inter-transient silence, and "jump" simply not competitive.
I'm breaking in a Tesla on the dedicated outlet right next to this one. Two days ago, it sounded hazy. I can only assume it will also take weeks to break in as well. I want to thank crossram2x4, who loves the Teslas more, for his suggestion about breaking in for 2 weeks. I shall apply this wisdom to the Oyaides as well. But if they continue to improve, I shall consider this $145.00 purchase exceedingly well spent money, next to the purchase of the Hurricanes 7 years ago, and the Audience 2aRp-Teflon unit most of all (God, that thing is dazzling).