Was my friend given misinformation.


My friend is just getting into audio for a music system. In his price rang I thought the Rogue Sphinx V3 would be a nice choice. He could also look at the Revel Concerta 2 line of speakers. Well he decided to stop by Magnolia at Best Buy.  Not a bad setup he got a Denon 3700 AVR and a pair of B&W 603's. He said the salesman told him to stay away from integrated amps as they are not anything but stripped down AVR's without the features. So I guess all us owners of 2 channel preamps and integrated have been duped. Who knew??

luxmancl38

The only thing I would buy at Best Buy’s Maybe is a tv ,and a sound bar ,

they know 💩 crap about what a Audiophile is !!

So to the OP's question, there is likely a kernel of truth in the statement. In the mass market that he serves, that is liekly the case. I would guess that every major manufacturer has a basic line circuit, power supply design, volume/remote ciruit etc. A simple integrated amp is those sans the additional doo-dads like dolby surround etc.

 

But what's an integrated amp at its core? Answer: a preamp and a power amp in once chassis, with significant savings, and no wires.  After decades of contract design and input in high end I'm back to designing my own stuff (maybe for market if the supply chain ever un-knots) and guess what I'm starting with? Yup, and integrated. It just makes sense if convenience and cost are a factor at all.  So in theory, IMO, its the perfect package.  Further integration (e.g.: on board DAC) comes with tome packaging and power trade offs that i dont wish to make, but combining the power and pre sections is quite manageable (biggest issue: controlling power supply noise from the big honking power output stage - and i figured out how to do that).

 

Remember also that at best buy the models are typically made specifically for big box sale and are not the "reference" series others carry.

 

@russ69 I have a friend who asks my advice and then asks all our friends for advice, then doesn't listen to any of it.

I know the type!

Sometime around 2009 I went into Circuit City to buy a new U2 DVD that came out that day. When I couldn't find it on the shelf (why would it be on the shelf when it's brand new?...) I asked the sales person if they had it. His response was: "YouTube? On DVD?"

I rest my case.