GreenLeo
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But I want the DAC of the Isabellina. Is the AMB Gamma 1 DAC as good as the Isabellina?
Originally Posted by GreenLeo /img/forum/go_quote.gif But I want the DAC of the Isabellina. Is the AMB Gamma 1 DAC as good as the Isabellina? |
Originally Posted by uberburger101 /img/forum/go_quote.gif Was that a serious question? |
Originally Posted by GreenLeo /img/forum/go_quote.gif I know nothing about the AMB Gamma 1 DAC and actually very little about other DACs as well. So that question is a serious one. However, I know that the DAC of the Isabellina is very good from the reviews. Hence I don't mind if nobody replies to the question. |
Originally Posted by sbulack /img/forum/go_quote.gif I received the Walnut iMod/iPod Amphora I had pre-ordered back on April 24, along with a pair of ALO-modded HFI-780, which I had used for about 200 hours as HFI-780 before sending them back for the transmutation into ALO-780. Now, at about 3 weeks of use (roughly 16 hours per day over the past 19 days - roughly 300 hours) the performance from each (the ALO-780 and the Amphora), and from both together, has reached a level where I am regularly experiencing pieces of recorded music with which I am well and intimately familiar in new and deliciously unfamiliar ways. One aspect of this is the Amphora's uncannily organic presentation of timbre (vocal, acoustic, and (perhaps strangely) electronic). In listening to music through the Amphora, it does not have the kind of sound which imparts a feel of a machine reproducing a recording made by another machine. Rather, it has the kind of sound which imparts a feel that I am somehow tapping into someone else's vivid memory of a musical performance. Later, I will attempt to give a breakdown of the components of the sound through the Amphora which have this interesting effect on me. One of these is easy, it's the wood case. The Amphora does not look like an audio amplifier - it looks like a very special keepsake box one might find in a grandparent's attic - filled with their most treasured memoribilia. The effect is to emphasize the human aspect of the music - the composer, the performers, recorders, producers, and me, the listener. It emphasizes the communication aspect of the music from person to person. It's a subtle effect and a very powerful one in drawing me, the listener, quite a bit more intimately into the music and into the expressed perspective on the human condition for which the sound is the intuitive delivery medium. Another thought that I have of the iMod/Amphora is that it meets a need that I was starting to see myself potentially having in the future - that of a superlative-quality listening rig that I could conveniently take with me and run in a long-term care facility, should that become necessary. Imagine trying to take a more standard rig with DVD player, DAC, tube amp, VD Nite IC, VD Nite PC's... Forget about the inconvenience, the facility would likely not allow it to be set up there for its space or for concern that it would be a fire hazzard (such a concern being warranted or not). The Amphora and iMod, all run from batteries, only needing a recharge from standard wall-warts, would much more likely be allowed at such a facility - and be runnable by me. And the very closed nature of the ALO-780 would be welcome in such a setting (both by me and my care facility roommate). Along those lines, the Amphora is the amp which got me to start reaching for my Shure SE530 as my listening instrument of choice for particular pieces of music. With no other amp has this happened at home before. Prior to this, the SE530 were used pretty strictly as work-friendly phones. With the Amphora, they're fully-in-play as a listening instrument which gets me the most into pieces of music which benefit from their particular strengths. Both ALO-780 and Amphora are still improving toward their optimal performance, so it's still too early for a reliable comparative review with my other equipment - but their performance has already reached a point where I can say, by experience, that they have each separately and both together shown themselves to be very worthwhile additions to my selective collection of musical listening instruments - enabling me a fuller, richer discovery and enjoyment of the music that I love. |
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Originally Posted by Gazza /img/forum/go_quote.gif The Amphora SE looks fantastic although I have to say I'm a bit annoyed the option wasn't made available when I ordered my Amphora as I would have happily have bought the SE instead. |
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Originally Posted by Jian /img/forum/go_quote.gif Hi guys,Thanks for those great reviews! I come to a stage of deciding whether to buy the vcap doc or the imod amphora. Well it is quite a lot money for me, so I need some encouragement from your guys. Digging through all the posts, I can see that amphora is a step forward from my P51 or other portable amps. Thing is, amphora should be by all means a desktop headphone amp! And with its price tag, which worth one and a half of SOLO SRG or black cube linear or rudi nx03, almost as expensive as nx33 or m902, three times the price of xcan v8p, should this step be big enough for me rather than pick up a vcap doc+one of those amps I listed? Is there anyone compare the amphora to any of those desktop amp rivals at that level? amphora is really really a tempting choice, and I'm still waiting for the comparison promised early in this post between amphora and solo! For me, I really don't want to see NOVO and NX02 should be in the same class with amphora~~~~!!! |
Originally Posted by Jian /img/forum/go_quote.gif Thanks. Surely sq wave xl is a great amp, though I've never have a chance to listen to it. |