CanJam at RMAF 2014 impressions
Oct 14, 2014 at 10:09 PM Post #181 of 441

ALO Audio's Studio Six powering their new Phono stage amp that uses the Studio six as its power source.
 

A small part of the Astell & Kern booth. Here is the AK120 MK II (My Favorite) Basically without AK there would be no CanJam as EVERYONE used their gear for source material. 
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Pendulumic's booth showing their new S1 Bluetooth HP. $200 and a nice sound I am wearing the S1's so I will have to find another pic. One minor challenge was a few dropped signals that I am assuming was due to a room filled with interference. It would be fun to hear them in a normal environment. Thanks the Mike Johnson for the invite to come by!
 

Next was the CTM (Clear Tune Monitors) from Orlando. A full line of BA CIEM's priced from $250-$800. Good value here.
 

The HiFi Man booth featuring the new HE560's and the 400 i's. Of course the HE-6's were in the house as well. Both new cans are sweet.
 

Noble Audio is on a roll! and it's a Kaiser!  Amazing sounding 10 driver CIEM's....$1799....or you can Prestige them for prices starting at $2599....
 

 
 
RHA's new T10i. User selectable filters to customize the sound and the kit comes with a bunch of different ear tips. The chassis is cast metal. The cable is reinforced and iPhone/Android friendly. I like them!
 

 
 
A table full of Cavalli!  Liquid Gold, New Liquid Crimson, Liquid Lightning Tube and SS. Oh, the balanced cables from the LG are attached to the Abyss HP's on my head.
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To be continued....
 
Oct 14, 2014 at 11:20 PM Post #183 of 441

PS Audio Sprout...A tiny over achiever! HP Amp, Phono stage, Integrated amp, Bluetooth streaming and about the size of a hardcover novel.
 

JDS Labs C5D Portable DAC/Amp. A nice value at $299.
 

Fostex HP-P1 DAC/Amp being used for its DAC only into the HP-V1 Portable tube amp. I have used an HP-P1 for a coupe of years and still love it. The addition of the HP-V1 to the chain added a great tube sound and a more robust presentation.
 

Moon Audio had an amazing array of top flight gear. Here is the awesome Bryston stack. The BHA-1 amp, the BDP-2 Digital player and the BDA-2 DAC.

Another Moon Audio pic. Drew pulled out all the stops for CanJam!
 

Val Kolton in the house with V-Moda!
 
Oct 14, 2014 at 11:21 PM Post #184 of 441
   

Pendulumic's booth showing their new S1 Bluetooth HP. $200 and a nice sound I am wearing the S1's so I will have to find another pic. One minor challenge was a few dropped signals that I am assuming was due to a room filled with interference. It would be fun to hear them in a normal environment. Thanks the Mike Johnson for the invite to come by!

I do encounter dropped signals and found them due to nearly exhausted batteries. Either I charge or change new AAA usually gets rid of it.
 
Also, crowded Wifi or hi power WiFi signals do interfere but rarely. 
 
Still, wireless the way to go for me...
 
Cheers!
 
Oct 14, 2014 at 11:42 PM Post #185 of 441

Schiit Ragnarok statement HP and Integrated amp and the soon to be available Ygdrisil Statement DAC.
 

Steve Guttenberg, the Audiophilliac from CNET and Tyll Hjertsens from www.innerfidelity.com.
 

 

Drew Baird from Moon-Audio's maxed out Cary CAD-300SEI fed by a PS Audio Perfectwave Transport.
 

The new Dennis Had (Founder of Cary Audio) Inspire Headphone amp...$1600 of pure sweetness.
 

OK...So what is better than $15,000 of Woo 234 amps?  Listening to them with JPS Labs Abyss $5400 headphones... Including the source & cables how about $26,000 of headphone chain?
 

The Woo Audio WA-5's and the Abyss 1266
 

Another Cavalli Liquid Glass shot with the Abyss...for me, the best cost no object amp with the Abyss for a reasonable (
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) $3950.......
 

The Wells Audio HP amp released at the show. a beast able to drive any HP to ear bleed levels. $7000. My #2 pick with the Abyss. Source was the new Mytek Manhattan.
 

All in this system ran just a touch under $20k.....
 

MacIntosh MHA-100. My #3 pick with the Abyss. LHLabs Pulse X and Linear PS in the background.
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 12:14 AM Post #186 of 441

A possible top of the mountain experience for portable audio. Astell & Kern AK240 as transport to the Chord Hugo DAC/Amp into the JHAudio Roxanne's....
 

Audeze's booth...'nuff said!
 

Beyer Dynamics had their full suite on hand.
 

Todd The Vinyl Junkie (TTVJ) Teton fronted by Sennhieser HD800's and Fostex TH-900's
 

Schiit Audio's Mike Moffet's Birthday cake....
 

TTVJ Apex amp and a pile of amazing headphones.
 

Moon Audio and the awesome BMC gear
 

Moon Audio and the King Sound Electrostats
 

The Cavalli Liquid Crimson. This amp was introduced at the show. great sound for under $3k!
 

Jimmy Moon and the fantastic Astell and Kern team. These guys rock!
 

Hard to get better...AK240, Crystal Cables and HD800's!
 

Woo WA8 Prototype #2 portable tube amp! The sound was fantastic and they are not even finished yet!  Jack Wu and Mike Liang were justifiably excited about how it is progressing. Looking like summer 2015 or so for this one.
 

Sony HAP1-ZES Digital player, TA-A1ES Integrated Amplifier and the brand new (They came in Saturday!) Z7 flagship headphone coming in for $700. Light solid and really fun. Sony is back!
 

 

 

 
The soon to be released Sony PHA-3 portable DAC/Amp. $999. 28 hour battery life! listening through the Z7's and the optional balanced Kimber Cable sony packaged cables (Est $250) Phenomenal sound!
 

Stax 009 Electrostas with the Stax tube amp sourced through a Wyred 4 Sound MPre. Lightning fast....
 

CanJam 2014
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 12:39 AM Post #188 of 441
Continuing my impressions, moving on to the heavy-hitter stuff:
 
- Sony Z7 | source: Sony DAP: I've been reading about the Z7 and was really interested in getting to hear them. It'd be a stretch for me to call it great because it didn't sound all that amazing, but I did think it was very good overall. It had a lot of the trademark Sony-type treble and clarity that I've heard before from such headphones like the V6 and SA5000, but it didn't have those headphones' thin mid-ranges either, which was good. It was about as bassy as I'd expect for an upper-end closed headphone, which is to say that it wasn't a bass monster but still had good extension and quantity, at least that I could tell. It was definitely promising enough that I'll probably end up buying my own pair eventually.
 
- MrSpeakers Alpha Prime | source/amp: Schiit Gungnir / Mjolnir and Cavalli Liquid Glass: I wasn't really all that impressed by the Alpha Prime, mostly because it didn't sound all that different from the Alpha Dog (I took some time to swap between the two on the same amp). But when I told Dan (of MrSpeakers) about it, he told me that in order to hear the difference one should use acoustic music, particularly jazz (I was admittedly using Daft Punk's Random Access Memories). Since jazz isn't one of my preferred genres (and I couldn't find any acoustic music on MrSpeakers' computer that I was really familiar with), I sort of just stopped my audition there. That's not to say that I didn't hear a difference between the Alpha Dog and Alpha Prime, because I did, but it wasn't huge to my ears. Just a marginal difference with the Alpha Prime sounding a bit more trebly to me, and a bit more spatial. Still, I thought the Alpha Prime sounded very good on its own and there's a decent chance that I'll properly ABX it against the Alpha Dog on my own setup someday, probably after I re-acquire something like the Garage1217 Project Ember to drive it.
 
- HiFiMan HE-560 (at HiFiMan and Moon Audio): I had these before on HeadAmp's demo program for a few days where I used them only out of a HeadAmp Gilmore Lite, so I thought I'd check them out again on the better equipment at the show. Didn't overly impress me out of the electronics at HiFiMan's table, or at Moon Audio's for that matter, but I'll admit they're strong headphones with very good clarity and soundstage. At Moon Audio, they also sounded way better out of the April Music Stello MKII stack than out of the Bryston stack—enough of a difference that I thought the Bryston stack pretty much sucked in comparison. Personally I'd call these headphones something like an HD800 replacement for those who can't afford the HD800, because to me they had very similar strengths (open soundstage, strong treble—not that they sounded similar though, since I can't say that for sure).
 
- AKG K812 (source/amp: Bryston BHA-1/BDA-2 and April Music Stello HP100/DA100 MKII): Another headphone that I've really been wanting to hear, so when I spied them at Moon Audio's table, I had to check them out. They weren't terrible on the Bryston stack, but holy crap did the April Music Stello MKII stack really transform these! The K812 nearly became bass monsters on the Stello stack, enough that I was really satisfied with the bass for electronica (Moon Audio happened to have one of my reference electronica albums by The Crystal Method on their source device). The K812 sounded really promising to me, with AKG's trademark open soundstage (from the K7xx, but even more open-sounding) and delivered very good clarity too. It didn't quite have the mid-range presence that I would've liked and seemed a bit recessed, but now I'm definitely more interested in acquiring my own pair in the future.
 
- Schiit Ragnarok & Yggdrasil: Not really an "amp" impression per se but I sat down at Schiit's table because I wanted to find out if the combined amp/DAC would transform the LCD-3 for me, because I don't have a high opinion of the LCD-3 (it just isn't enough of a sonic upgrade over the LCD-2 for me). The LCD-3 certainly sounded good on the setup, but I can't say that my opinion of it changed, it sounded just as lacking in clarity and musical dynamics as what I've heard before from it (when I previously compared it to the Stax OII MKI on the HeadAmp BHSE that I also owned at the same time). Not to say anything negative about the amp & DAC of course, just that they didn't help improve the LCD-3 for me when I thought they might. The Audeze headphones just aren't what I consider great—Schiit, on the other hand, is delivering fantastic value in the Ragnarok and Yggdrasil, even if I can't say anything about how they sound. But I doubt I'll be buying either of them for myself because they looked just too physically big for my desk space. If either of them were smaller I might consider buying one.
 
- April Music Stello HP100/DA100 MKII: As already pointed out in the above impressions for the HE-560 and K812, this stack of equipment was totally amazing. I'd never heard anything by April Music before (never got the chance back when they made the MKI versions of the amp & DAC), but this stack blew away the Bryston stack set up next to it at Moon Audio. It delivered deep, heavy bass into all 3 headphones that I plugged into it (the HE-560, K812, and another I'm forgetting) while the Bryston sounded positively bass-anemic. It was so much of a difference that it was obvious the Bryston stack was incapable of driving high-current loads. Turning up the volume on the Bryston stack didn't really increase the amount of body to the mid-range, but on the Stello stack, more and more bass and mid-range was filled in as I turned up the volume.
 
If there was ever a case of "night and day" differences between electronics that I've heard, the Bryston stack versus the Stello stack was clearly one of them. Now I'm totally interested in buying the Stello stack for myself someday to pair with the K812. That combo in particular was just awesome. I'd love to hear what the Stello stack would do with my Audio-Technica AD2000.....
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 12:56 AM Post #189 of 441
I want to give a big shoutout to Astell and Kern for providing the drinks at the Saturday social and to Schiit who provided the food and cake.

Thanks guys,
Andre
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 1:12 AM Post #190 of 441
Great hanging out with you Andre!
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 1:38 AM Post #191 of 441
  Continuing my impressions, moving on to the heavy-hitter stuff:
 
- Sony Z7 | source: Sony DAP: I've been reading about the Z7 and was really interested in getting to hear them. It'd be a stretch for me to call it great because it didn't sound all that amazing, but I did think it was very good overall. It had a lot of the trademark Sony-type treble and clarity that I've heard before from such headphones like the V6 and SA5000, but it didn't have those headphones' thin mid-ranges either, which was good. It was about as bassy as I'd expect for an upper-end closed headphone, which is to say that it wasn't a bass monster but still had good extension and quantity, at least that I could tell. It was definitely promising enough that I'll probably end up buying my own pair eventually.

 
In general, how does the Z7 compare to something like the HE-500? I love mine but they're pretty heavy and uncomfortable, and I'm not sold on what I've read about the HE-560 and the HE-400i.
 
Also, how good was the Z7's soundstage? Was it anything like the venerable CD-3000's?  I've been wanting to go back to Sony ever since selling mine years ago (their only problem was the anemic bass and somewhat hollow sound)...
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 1:58 AM Post #193 of 441
In general, how does the Z7 compare to something like the HE-500? I love mine but they're pretty heavy and uncomfortable, and I'm not sold on what I've read about the HE-560 and the HE-400i.  
Also, how good was the Z7's soundstage? Was it anything like the venerable CD-3000's?  I've been wanting to go back to Sony ever since selling mine years ago (their only problem was the anemic bass and somewhat hollow sound)...

 
I have no idea in relation to the HE-500, I'm not familiar with its sound (I've heard it before but only briefly at shows). The Z7 was relatively light and comfortable though, something I can't say for either the HE-400 or HE-500. The Z7 soundstage reminded me somewhat of the Fostex TH600/TH900—unusually open-sounding for a closed headphone. I'm not familiar with the CD3000 either, I owned that headphone 8 years ago. The only thing I remember about it now is that it was trebly.
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Oct 15, 2014 at 2:10 AM Post #194 of 441
   
Kunlun, they were indeed there.  I got a chance to check them out at their press event.  As I'm dead tired, I was going to post about them later.  But just for you...
 
XBA-Z5 > Beck's Already Dead (DSF):  Tight and visceral mid-bass that is not the slightest bit loose or muddy, complemented by some very impressive bass extension for IEMs.  Together, they provide a wonderful anchor for what is clearly a mid-centric signature.  Vocals take center stage with surprising clarity, exhibiting an uncanny balance whereby detail is not sacrificed, nor is fatigue allowed.  This held true even on some revealing tracks that are prone to sibilance (Emilie Claire-Barrow's Like A Lover).  Highs are sufficiently well-extended and presented such that only trebleheads would have reservations.  Overall, I am very enamored with these in a way that I have not been with Sony for a looooonnnnnggg time.  The source I used was their new DAP.
 
EDIT:  I believe HiFiGuy528 also auditioned them at some point and liked them as well.

 
Didn't like the Z5, LOVED it!  Used my iPhone 6 with it cause I was getting ready to pack up the booth.  If I had more time I would have used the AK120II in my backpack.  I was blown away by how amazing the Z5 sounded.  The resolution was beyond anything I heard without any hint of sibilance.  Low frequencies are well defined, not boomy or muddy at all listening to electric guitar.  Sony could charge $1499 for the Z5 and I would still buy it.  At $699, it's a no brainer!
 
Oct 15, 2014 at 5:16 AM Post #195 of 441
Morning everyone!
 
The RHA Team have made it safely back to Glasgow!
 
We wanted to stop by this thread and say thank you to everyone who came along and checked out the T10i at our booth, and also offer a massive thanks and congratulations to Jude, Warren, Joe and everyone else who had a hand in organising an amazing show (again).
 
We love getting feedback from the community, so if you did manage to stop by and haven't posted any impressions yet, please let us know your thoughts.

Best,
 
RHA
 

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