Just took delivery of the Red Wine Audio 30.2 and-


...and this thing is quite miraculous really. Have recently had the Lavardin IS Reference and Shindo Aurieges/Montille combo in house played over Living Voice IBXR2's via Auditorium 23 speaker cables with a Lector CDP 0.6T mk. 2 player-- and let me tell you, this little Red Wine punches like Mike Tyson and sings like Callas.
Specifics? Yah-- I got yer specifics right here... tight DEEP bass (I mean it-- frightening!), black backgrounds, wiiiide soundstage (the sidewalls are alive with the sound of music yada yada)Defined/refined treble (supposed to get better with age-- 100 hrs or so). Shall I continue? Thank you.
A breezy user interface, sharp looks, a crisp feel to the volume control/solid build in general and no need for a Fatboy Electraglide mk. 8 SE power cord etc. This amp is thus far dynamic, detailed and refined.
Criticisms? So far a few minor ones. It could be-- and I mean could maybe be... a hair brighter balanced. The treble's all there in spades, though it's certainly a shade darker than the Shindo gear for example (which for my taste-- may be a hair too tipped up tonally-- so what 'the tonal truth' is here... only Harry Pearson knows).
The RWA is punchier and more alive than the Lavardin (as promised by the Vinnster), with perhaps a broader soundstage and a bit more dynamics-- yah--not quite as sleepy-- which was perhaps my only niggle with that otherwise splendid amplifier.
Finally, in the way of niggling, I myself might like even finer gradations on the volume control for those times with a string quartet when you'd like juuuuuust a WEEE bit more volume to make it sound live-- but not a whole lot. Incidentally, the remote is super small and cutie and functions like a charm-- perfect.
Now the kicker--- I have a Manley Stingray enroute to my home as I type this and that comparison should be REAL interesting.
I shall rid myself of the loser, and that means yes-- as phenomenal as this RWA 30.2 is so far-- if tubes give it a sound trouncing-- back to Vinnie it shall go within the alloted trial period (and dont let the door hit you in the ass on the way out etc).
I am very interested to hear the tonal differences, as I thought the Shindo stuff would be richer etc. and perhaps the opposite is true. Incidentally- both the Shindo stuff and the RWA are quite pacey and involving-- high on my priority list. Havent listened to many great piano recordings with the RWA as yet-- and this is one of my true tests in terms of tone/density and all that jazz. Perhaps tonight.. I'm praying for density and not just leading edge flash n' tinkle.
But even still-- the sheer convenience of the thing--the elegance/simplicity of the design and the direct and uneventful way in which it goes about the business of DOING its business... is something rare-- certainly at this price point.
It isnt often I like the sonic signature of components a certain Head Moonie recommends (IMHO often a touch on the squeaky clean and bright side or possessed of, to me anyhoo, idiosyncratic tonal signatures-- at least in the past)-- but on this one I wholeheartedly agree. If I were to review the RWA amp in two words or less after only a single day of hearing thing, I would write: NO JOKE.
The RWA 30.2 is thus far cutting a good deal of mustard. One day of ownership though doesnt quite cut the ketchup in terms of the credibility of this opinion and so we shall see what tomorrow holds; the Stingray, the power, pride and prejudice of Evanna Manley and Bob Neill, my own sonic pleasure, and the very existence (in my home anyway) of the RWA amp hang in the balance...

(too much? Dramatic though-- you gotta admit- I was on my lunch hour. Well.. better than just saying Vinnie's a friggin' genius and the RWA is really err.... good so far:)
abramsmatch
I agree great insights. Now that you are looking at speakers the Devore Silverbacks should be considered .
hey Abramsmatch,

Nice write up!
You wrote: the gibbons 8's were a touch forward and thinner/more 'neutral'/revealing than I'm used to.

man I am using the RWA 30.2 with DeVore Super 8's and the combo sounds damn good! Two words come to mind are musical and engaging. see if you can listen to the 30.2 with some Dvore models because this amp is a sweet match with them and i read on AC that Vinnie used the Nines when developing the 30.2 design so I am not surprised. I'm hooked on the sla battery concept and am saving some more coin to get the red wine Isabella tube preamp with dac option when it is out in the spring. i'll sure post when I get one!

good luck with speaker hunting. i'm sure there many out there that will gel with Vinnies 30.2!

-Nate
Bravo to you for the write up! Not many audiophiles have the guts to admit Vinnie' amps are up to par with the so called "hi-end". Anyway, as far as speakers the Quad esl 57' work pretty well for me with my Sig 30. Very good depth and emotion, sounds great with all types of music, but you may want a sub for rock. Cheers.
In response to Plinko's inquiry-- the battery power does not make the RWA totally silent-- but there isnt a lot of hss and hum at the speaker as compared for example with the Stingray-- whch has the typical ransformer hum of a tube amp. The Stingray is just a touch brighter and has a bit less depth.

Someone asked about 'different batteries' or something. The batteries in the RWA are in there to stay as far as i know and I sure as hell wouldnt want to monkey around in that thing!

As for the Devore possibility- buying a speaker brand again that I once re-sold owing to my reservations about the sound does give me pause-- but I am certainly open to the idea that there might not have been the best system synergy at the time and maybe the 30.2 will be to the Devore's liking...

BTW-- further experimenting tells me I may slightly prefer the Lector now overall to the MHDT DAC when I use the Signal Cable Magic Power Digital ref power cord I have along with placing the Lector on a neuance shelf. These additions brightened the sound a bit and thinned the midbass just a touch-- making I think, a more copascetic pairing with the RWA. Love to give the heralded Monarchy NM24 a go...Marty De Wulf in Bound For Sound seems to think it's 'Reimyo-good.'
In any case-- no matter the power cord or the isolation shelf or what-have-you-- the 30.2 is most definitely 'high end'-- whatever that means for you.
In other words-- even if you've got 20 grand in equipment to compare to the RWA-- you wont be laughing when you turn the thing on and press play on your source or drop the needle or whatever. You'll be wondering quite seriously why all your pricey gear didnt necessarily get you 17,500 dollars closer to the music!
The 30.2 may not be the best amp on the planet-- but it'll hang with anything i've heard in my 20 years or so of monkeying with this crap. If you dont fancy it-- it'll be down to taste-- not quality. Possibly different -- not worse, though-- than ANYTHING... and that says a lot for a 2500 dollar amp.
I also recently took delivery of the Signature 30.2 and am blown away by how good it sounds!!! I'm running Gallo Ref. 3.1s and it puts a big smile on my face every time I listen and I am listening more and more these days. I've been in this hobby for years and have owned much more pricey tube and SS gear and the 30.2, like abramsmatch says, "hangs with" some of the best I've owned and i'll say is one of the most enjoyable amps I've listened to in a long time. My friend also has the 30.2 and is running Quad ESL 57s and is equally floored after trying plenty of amps that were more costly and didn't "glue him to his listening chair."

yeah - its a keeper!

Jeff