NAD M23 Stereo Amplifier: Best Amp Ever Bench Tested?!?


 

kuribo

@kairosman 

 




Now have a CODA CSiB integrated (Class A/B, first 12 watts in Class A)

 

I owned a CODA amp many years ago that did the same thing- class A for the first 10 watts or so, then class A/B. I ended up replacing it with a Spectron Musician II class d amp.

People should really take a breath and refrain from fighting over hifi gizmos.  There is enough strife out there to go around.   Adults fighting over toys....do we really need that?

Does this remind anyone else of the specmanship wars of the early Japanese transistor amplifiers?  Perhaps Stereo Review will be revived soon.

@twoleftears 

 

 

Only in the most superficial way...The spec wars of Japanese transistor amps were based on a false premise...The science and engineering has improved in the last 50 years. See:
 



"The other important trend in the 60’s was brought on by the usurpation of the role of the vacuum tube by the transistor. Japanese hifi firms hadn’t seen much success with their tube-based designs in the early 60’s.But with the advent of the transistor Pioneer, Yamaha, Sony, Sherwood, Kenwood, and Sansui, all entered the US market with products whose specifications far exceeded those of US-made tube-based components. Of course 20-20 hindsight shows that these specifications used THD or total harmonic distortion figures rather than breaking down the harmonic distortion into 1st, 2nd, 3d, and 4th order harmonics. If they had, audiophiles would have seen how the distortion characteristics of early transistors were much worse at higher odd-order harmonics than tubes. Many audiophiles switched from tube electronics to solid-state electronics and discovered that the sonic results weren’t a step up in quality or enjoyment."