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#1
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Hi,
I would like to get some assistance regarding selection of amp and speakers for stereo. I have listened to two combinations of amp and speakers. They a 1. Rotel RA1060 with B&W DM603 2. NAD C350 with KEF I would have preferred to listen to other combinations as well (Rotel with KEF, NAD with B&W). Unfortunately, they are at two different shops. I find both KEF and B&W to be very smooth sounding. I was earlier considering PSB Image 4T but, dropped the idea after listening to KEF and B&W. I am wondering what combinations I should select. I listen to India Classical, Jazz and Rock and my listening volume level is between 9 and 10 positions I have the following questions: 1. If I have an option to go higher in Quality, should I spend money on speakers or the amp 2. I have been reading about tube amps lately and it seems they sound more warm and realistic. I have no prior experience with them. Should I consider them at all. I know the local shop carries a model called "Cary" 3. Any suggestions on a good CD player and a casette-deck This is my first purchase of hi-fi stereo equipment and therefore knowledge on most of the products is limited. Any other companiew should I consider. I am willing to spend around Can $2000 - 2500 on the amp + speaker combination Thank you Varghese Devassy |
#2
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Just let your ears be your guide. Listen to as much in your price range as
possible. Cary products are very, very expensive. I don't believe there is any way you could squeeze an amp and speakers in under 2K. There are cheaper tube amplifiers, though. Cary has a cheaper line in fact. As for how to spend the money, I would get the speakers first, then match the amp to them, keeping in mind a certain minimum you might need for a good quality two-channel amp that you like and would be happy living with |
#3
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![]() "Varghese Devassy" wrote in message om... Hi, I would like to get some assistance regarding selection of amp and speakers for stereo. I have listened to two combinations of amp and speakers. They a 1. Rotel RA1060 with B&W DM603 2. NAD C350 with KEF I would have preferred to listen to other combinations as well (Rotel with KEF, NAD with B&W). Unfortunately, they are at two different shops. I find both KEF and B&W to be very smooth sounding. I was earlier considering PSB Image 4T but, dropped the idea after listening to KEF and B&W. I am wondering what combinations I should select. I listen to India Classical, Jazz and Rock and my listening volume level is between 9 and 10 positions The speakers are good picks. However, neither the Rotel midline nor the NAD amps at any price point run with the best out there. I would look instead at Hafler, Parasound, Adcom, B&K, and the lower power British amps. The first three mentioned have outstanding build quality, high amperage, and represent several different musical presentations. |
#4
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"Varghese Devassy" wrote in message
om Hi, I would like to get some assistance regarding selection of amp and speakers for stereo. I have listened to two combinations of amp and speakers. They a 1. Rotel RA1060 with B&W DM603 2. NAD C350 with KEF Smart move number one about building a system is not to spend too much money on electronics, and instead save your bread for buying speakers and improving room acoustics, not to mention some nice new recordings to listen to. I would have preferred to listen to other combinations as well (Rotel with KEF, NAD with B&W). Unfortunately, they are at two different shops. I find both KEF and B&W to be very smooth sounding. I was earlier considering PSB Image 4T but, dropped the idea after listening to KEF and B&W. I am wondering what combinations I should select. I listen to India Classical, Jazz and Rock and my listening volume level is between 9 and 10 positions Good amps sound pretty much the same with any reasonable speaker. So, trying to listen to combinations is a waste of time. Furthermore, no speaker sounds at home like it sounds in the store. For example, had I taken seriously what I heard in the store when I demoed my NHT 2.5i speakers, I would have left them there. When I brought them home, I knew almost instantly that I had made a really good choice. The moral is that you should look for a store with a good variety of speakers, and has a good return/exchange policy. If the store has used and/or demo speakers they want to sell you and is more flexible with them, and they are good speakers, work with them. I bought a pair of demo Paradigms and I still really like them. Their *problem* was that they were last year's model and were discontinued. Speaker technology moves on, but pretty slowly. You're better off with a last year's model that are well-designed and built, rather than getting this year's model that is mediocre. Who makes good speakers? Lots of people but my favorite brands are Paradigm, PSB, Boston Acoustics and NHT. I have the following questions: 1. If I have an option to go higher in Quality, should I spend money on speakers or the amp Speakers, no doubt! Seriously. If you upgrade from a $200 Pioneer receiver to $2,000 worth of separates (I have both) your major benefits are remarkably subtle considering the extreme price difference. In your first system, there's a lot to be said for keeping things simple. 2. I have been reading about tube amps lately and it seems they sound more warm and realistic. I have no prior experience with them. Should I consider them at all. I know the local shop carries a model called "Cary" Tubes are for boobs. Seriously. They are a niche, specialty, boutique thing. Time to get on with just building a good system. Tube amps do have to be matched to the speakers you use them with, and this is a problem for people who just want to get on with the serious business of listening to music. Their price/performance is miserable. 3. Any suggestions on a good CD player and a cassette-deck A good DVD player will play CDs as well as anything. I can't stand to listen to cassettes on a good system, what with all the noise, compression and distortion, so you're might want to ask someone else about them. If I had to buy a another cassette machine for myself, I'd be prone to pick up a good used Tascam on eBay. I work with them all the time and they are built like a tank and keep on ticking. But for casual use, sub-$100 cassette machines were once amazingly good performers, for a while. The medium is really limited, sonically and spending the big bucks wisely primarily gets you durability, not more sound quality. This is my first purchase of hi-fi stereo equipment and therefore knowledge on most of the products is limited. Any other companies should I consider. I am willing to spend around Can $2000 - 2500 on the amp + speaker combination If you spend $2K on a pair of speakers plus a subwoofer, you can end up with a system that really sings. Spending more than $500 on a receiver and a disc player for a system in this price range is IMO & IME sheerest folly. I say this as a person whose main system set him back about $6K. I have to admit that if I had to do it all over again, I might consider not building a big home system at all. My life's too busy to sit down and listen to music and nothing else for more than a few hours a week. My last audio purchase was a Creative Labs Nomad Jukebox 3 and a pair of Sony MDR EX70LP ear buds. I really like being able to choose from my favorite music where I am without fiddling with discs, working from the equivalent of about 50 CDs. There's 20 GB of disk so I don't have to tolerate listening to MP3 files. Under $300 for the whole enchilada. But I'm thinking about upgrading the "speakers"... |