pp312
Hoping to be taken seriously for once in his life
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- Jul 8, 2001
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Er, I think he was being sarcastic.
This was actually discussed in an earlier thread on this subject and it was pointed out by one poster, correctly I think, that large speaker amp manufacturers have much better scale of economy than small dedicated HP amp manufacturers. In short, Marantz can make a 100W integrated just as cheaply as your average dedicated amp manufacturer can make a 5W HP amp, with just as good components.
Really? Perhaps you could reel off a list of them for us.
Don't use up all the bandwidth though.![]()
Really? Perhaps you could reel off a list of them for us.
Don't use up all the bandwidth though.![]()
NAD
NAIM
Denon
Arcam
Onkyo
Marantz
cambridge audio
Rega
cyrus
Teac
Bryson
oppo
pioneer
Sony
Leema
audiolab
etc.
All have dedicated headphone amps / dacs... Some are op amp, some are discreet amps.
So yes as I was saying pretty much every major brand available in the UK has them...
Thanks for the heads up on these products, as I confess I'd never heard of 95% of them (nor cared much really). I can well guess why they're being produced, however, especially in the case of majors like Marantz, and it's not because they think the headphone outs on their integrateds and receivers are crap. It's because they see a market, and the market is...well, you actually,,,that is, those who believe unless something is dedicated to a purpose from conception it can't adequately fulfill that purpose. Besides, there's lots of money to be made from a small product with few components costing lots of money than a big one with heaps of components costing the same. As I say, this subject of integrated vs. dedicated has come up many times and there's never any sort of meeting ground; indeed a couple of times it's even become acrimonious, which is odd for such an innocent subject. Makes me wonder what people have to lose by believing an integrated can sound as good as a dedicated, and why they fight so hard to reject the possibility.
From my end the subject ends here, but fear not, it'll be back bigger and better than ever. It's inevitable.
I think it cuts both ways. There is no technical reason a dedicated headphone amp couldn't sound better than the headphone jack of an integrated. Or they could sound equally good/bad. I think, and I am sure you would agree every single implementation needs to be evaluated separately. I am willing to bet there will be little difference in general (meaning audible and reliably so), but I don't think we can just assume this is true. I am fairly sure a lovely Conrad Johnson sounds better than a Radio Shack amp. Even if we operate them both in a comfortable range with loads that are comparable and sound pressure matched, I still think it is possible that the circuit design and components can make a difference. Transitively if any of that is true, it is possible that circuit designs could yield audible differences (maybe a Cavaili Liquid Fire amp is very good). I know I'm stretching things, but hopefully not so much so as to be nonsensical..
I'm sorry, but many blind tests have found you in error. Two properly designed amps can not be differentiated in blind testing.
As an aside, for somebody who seems as knowledgeable as you I find it hard to believe you never heard of 95% of the companies mentioned. You would have to be living in isolation somewhere in Papau New Guinea, or be so wealthy that you never saw how the other half lived!
No, I didn't meant I'd never heard of 95% of the companies mentioned, but that I was unaware that those companies produced dedicated HP amps. They seem to have been keeping their lights under a bushel.
I'm glad you think I seem knowledgeable. It means I've been successful yet again in hiding my ignorance.
Thanks for the heads up on these products, as I confess I'd never heard of 95% of them (nor cared much really). I can well guess why they're being produced, however, especially in the case of majors like Marantz, and it's not because they think the headphone outs on their integrateds and receivers are crap. It's because they see a market, and the market is...well, you actually,,,that is, those who believe unless something is dedicated to a purpose from conception it can't adequately fulfill that purpose. Besides, there's lots of money to be made from a small product with few components costing lots of money than a big one with heaps of components costing the same. As I say, this subject of integrated vs. dedicated has come up many times and there's never any sort of meeting ground; indeed a couple of times it's even become acrimonious, which is odd for such an innocent subject. Makes me wonder what people have to lose by believing an integrated can sound as good as a dedicated, and why they fight so hard to reject the possibility.
From my end the subject ends here, but fear not, it'll be back bigger and better than ever. It's inevitable.
I'm sorry, but many blind tests have found you in error. Two properly designed amps can not be differentiated in blind testing.