Apparently the manufacturing facilites for both Anthem and Paradigm are all housed in the same building now. Anthem was Sonic Frontiers "value" solid state nameplate. Unfortunatley Paradigm has since discontinued making any of the Sonic Frontiers products and has retired the name. Sonic Frontiers was known for their well reqarded tube gear of which I have one of their Line 1 preamplifiers - very good pre and inexpensive on the used market on Audiogon. If you get one replace the tubes with some decent NOS and watch the WOW factor climb! As S7horton says I would look at the Anthem before the Rotel/ B&K. A good quality North American made product. Another nice feature on the Anthem is the auto-on ability - once it detects a signal then it powers on. You can also use a trigger to power up or leave it powered all the time as some like. This amp is also available in two and five channel configuration. Hope this helps. Good luck on you search.
What amp for Paradigm Studio 60 v.2?
I recently bought some Paradigm Studio 60 v.2 speakers and just can not believe how good they sound! After my ears adjusted, I realized that my Denon 3802 may not be giving these speakers what they deserve to sound right. Will moving to a 2ch amp for music listening really improve the sound? even if I use the Denon as the pre-amp? I kind of feel like the Studio 60s need more power. Paradigm's site says a max amp of 180 wpc. Does this mean a 200 or 220 watt amp is too large? I mostly listen to jam southern blues rock and some acoustic music. My curretn room size is 26'x15'x9', but these speakers will eventually be moved into a smaller room. I was wondering opinions on the best amp under $1000 used for the Studio 60s? would you also suggest the same amp for the Studio 20s and 40s? I have been looking at the Rotel and B&K amps, but have not had a chance to audition any of them.
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- 12 posts total
- 12 posts total