Review: H2o Audio Signature Monoblocks


- REVIEW -

H2o Audio Signature Monoblock

Retail Price: $5,500.00 per pair

It was late July or early August and I was stuck in a hotel, on business travel while I was surfing A’gon and the other “audiophile” websites when I happened upon the Apogee user forums. There was quite a bit of buzz going on about a new startup company, H2o Audio. Henry Ho of H2o Audio had been building large class A amplifiers for many years at this point, trying to create the perfect mate to drive his Apogee Scintilla’s. Well from what I was able to garner from the Apogee website, Henry had been tweaking an amplifier using the B&O ICE module. Henry had come to a point where he felt he had created an initial stereo amp that achieves much of what he wanted. This amp went out to a few members of the Apogee users group on a trial basis. There was enough positive response to pique my interest. At this point I emailed perhaps five or six members that have had experiences with the H2o. After much email exchange and a few phone calls I had learned the modestly priced H2o stereo amp had replaced VTL 450 monoblocks, Pass Labs X600 monoblocks, and gave Reference Line Silver Signature monoblocks a run for their money. Now this was a $2,000 retail stereo amp at startup pricing. I did take this information with a grain of salt, as I am inherently a bit skeptical on new products. What intrigued me most is more than a few people replaced their tube amps with this amplifier. I have always preferred the sound of a good tube amp. In what respect you ask? In my experience tube amps almost always seemed to portray the “organic” feel and texture to instruments better. After many emails and phone calls with owners of the H2o I was intrigued enough to give Henry a call and chat a bit. I will also say I am very happy with owning Quicksilver V4 monoblocks at this time. The *only* issues where the heat produced, and perhaps not the last bit of control in the bass. With that being said, even though the H2o amps had a trial period after purchase I was not about to sell my V4’s to “experiment” with another “flavor.” Henry and I arranged a weekend in which I drove up to Richmond, VA with my First Sound Presence Deluxe Mk. II preamp and about 46 CD’s with me. (Just the necessary CD’s for demo!) I got into town quite late in the evening, expecting to go over to Henry’s house early in the morning. Now for those of you who have spoken to or met Henry, you already know he is a gentleman in every sense of the word. Henry insisted I come over that evening to get an initial impression of the system. I had listened to his system with an Adcom GFP-750 preamp (I think it was that model) as well as Henry’s Fire preamp he is building. We ended up inserting my preamp into the system in which Henry had set up with the standard H2o monoblocks. I was truly astounded. I may have made it through 8 or 10 of my necessary 46 or so “test” CD’s and I was talking to Henry about build time. I was also intent on making sure there was still the “trial period” as all the feedback I have heard, as well as his system was with Apogee speakers. I had Meadowlark Nighthawks at home… 4 Ohm load, 91 db, etc… not the same monster of a speaker to drive. The H2o also has an extremely high damping factor (1600 if I recall correctly) in which was a concern of mine. After speaking with Pat McGinty of Meadowlark Audio, he put to rest any worries about damping factor, as he said with a correctly designed speaker, the higher the damping factor, the better in general for bass control. I had been told by a couple of the H2o owners that Henry also had a “signature” model of his monoblocks that aren’t advertised… Of course I had to ask how much better they were than the standard monoblocks I was currently listening to and enraptured by. Well the reply wasn’t 5% or 10% better, but “a substantial and significant improvement” from Henry. I placed my order that evening, actually morning, as we listened well past midnight and into the morning. Thanks again for the great hospitality if you read this Henry!

About six weeks later I was placing my brand new H2o Audio Signature Monoblocks into my listening rig.

After verifying all of the cabling was correct I put Patricia Barber’s Modern Cool album in and let it play. I gave Henry a call to let him know, I am not certain these amps will work for me, they are just a bit bass heavy. Henry assured me I have the trial period to get used to it, and not to make any critical decisions until the unit has broken in. Well, it wasn’t but 30 minutes later I was calling Henry back to inform him his amps were not bass heavy. After swapping albums to Gerry Mulligan Quartet – Dragonfly and my next thought was, “where did the bass go?” and then I noticed the piano notes drifting off with subtle decay… This was the first 30 minutes or so with the new, unbroken in, H2o Signature Mono’s in home. After the second call to Henry, feeling a bit embarrassed, I promised to let the amps break in and then make a judgment. What was becoming crystal clear, even with unbroken in new amps were these amps were true to the material that was being fed through the system. Hours and days, days and weeks had passed… the treble and high frequency extension was the first to settle down during the break in process. Next after about 500 or 600 hours (in my rig) the bass seemed to stabilize, more muscular and with supreme finesse. This is not easy to put into words, however at 600 hours the midrange sounded good, perhaps even very good. However, the midrange was still ever so slightly recessed. I was considering swapping cables, and actually making some calls. I left town on a business trip and came back a few days later and the midrange had fleshed out beautifully. It was hard to comprehend that much of a change occurred this late in the game… there was about 780 hours logged at that point.

Overall, I have had the H2o Signature Monoblocks in my system for about 10 weeks now. I truly wanted to give them enough time to go through the break in process. I feel the last bit of break-in, in my system, was right around the 800 hour mark. That landmark was reached about 5 to 6 weeks ago.

I have had the intention to write a review on these amps since I brought them home. I have tried to bring myself to write a “review” of these amps at least a few times in the past couple of weeks. For those of you who know me, and others who have read a bit of my ramblings, I am usually not at a loss for words…

However, painting a sonic landscape that these amps provide has seemed evasive to me. One word keeps coming to mind… actually from the first track played when the amps were brand new, to the next track, to right now listening to background music. The word to me that best describes these monoblocks is “chameleon.” I have heard phrases in the past that “the amp just gets out of the way and lets the music through” as well as “the amp doesn’t impart its own sonic signature on the music, you only hear the music” – well both of those phrases hold true with the H2o Signature Monoblocks. However, I also feel the H2o Signature Monoblocks take it a step further… by stating I feel the amps are “chameleon” like or in character evoke a different aura in itself. Well let me state I have had amps that have “just let the music through” or have “gotten out of the way” with no signature. Those amps all DID have a signature looking back on them. One that just let the music through was very musical indeed. Anything you played upon it was musical, a poor recording, a good recording, it was all musical. I have owned amps that “got out of the way” and were transparent into the recording and the details… that again was the amplifiers perspective on the material being played.

Why I am having difficulty here describing the H2o Signature Mono’s is the fact of their “chameleon” nature. What I have determined with these amps, it IS the music, the material that you feed the system. In my opinion these amps DO allow the music to show through. You have the emotional context of the artist recorded with these amps. There are recordings that offer all of the above… those recordings we all have that you can hear a pin drop, are pristine in sonics, but almost seem rehearsed and unemotional. If that is how the material was recorded, I seem to think these amps portray that. Just the opposite is true, the dynamic shifts and subtleties, both micro and macro, occur in spades with these amps, many times within a given song. The opposite end of the spectrum is also present, if you put in say Keb Mo, where there is rhythmic drive, naturalness, musicality and also the presence. These amps will have the pace and timing and drive with the ebb and flow of the music if that is how it was recorded.

The more I write – the more I am beginning to feel this isn’t a “review” as I don’t feel worthy of putting all of the audiophile adjectives into perspective here. I will try my best to convey a bit more of my experience with this product and can leave it at that.

I can honestly say for the first time in my audiophile life I have sold a tube amp from my system. I had the remorse. In the past I would sell the solid state amp and go back to tubes… That remorse went away for the first time not having a tube amp in my system. That in itself speaks volumes to me, if not others, for I have always preferred “tube” sound over solid state. Now, there may be more “air” with some tube amps than with the H2o Signature Mono’s but other than that, in my opinion there is no drawback.

Audiophile attributes top to bottom: The treble is as accurate as I have heard on a solid state or tube amp in a home based system. I say this taking into account when the volume is played at moderate to higher levels, the best performing amps in my comparison tended to have a slight “grain” or almost “veil” in the treble crispness and clarity. With some amps, I would never have said that, until I have had these in my system.
The midrange is true to the recording. I would say it is similar to a tube amp in the regard of the overall speed and liquidity of this amp. The H2o Sig. Mono’s in my system equal or bests some great tube amp electrostatic systems I have had in the past with all of the benefits.
The bass is what is recorded. It is not only accurate but extremely well controlled and defined. Depending on what you are listening to and how it was recorded will be easily detected with these amps. No matter the volume, whether playing very low, or at quite high volumes, these monoblocks have power and control over the music to the extent it seems effortless and natural unforced as the music emanates from the speakers. Dynamics and organic texture is also apparent at low listening levels. You will not have to “goose” the volume up to a certain point to make the music come alive.

Overall I would state the H2o Signature Monoblocks are not only “chameleon” in nature to the program material being fed, they also posses the following qualities… The absolute speed and liquidity coupled with the finesse and stygian control of the woofers, all taken into account with the organic, natural portrayal of the instruments all add up to some of the best sonics I have heard in both the tube and solid state camps. There is such an effortless and natural, organic feel to the music… yet as I write this I can put in another cd and state how dynamic and well paced these amps are…

The H2o Signature Mono’s run cool to the touch, even after 33 days of constant playing during break in. They are rated at 250 wpc into 8 ohms and 500 wpc into 4 ohms. I have some photos of the H2o Signature Monoblocks under my virtual system “Sonic Oasis” here on Audiogon. The amps are approx 13” wide x 13” deep x 7” tall. The case is full aluminum (8 gauge I think – very thick) and black powder coated. The faceplate is anodized aluminum which can be ordered in silver or black. There is one solo Blue LED on the front of each amp when power is on. There is a removable IEC for the power cord. The Sig. Mono’s have dual sets of binding posts on the rear of the amp, as well as both single ended and balanced inputs which can be switched externally with a toggle switch. Each monoblock is approx 50 lbs. or so.

Again, this review mirrors my experiences, in my system, and is based upon my opinions. I hope this helps shed some light onto this new startup company’s product. The website is:

www.iceh2oaudio.com

The website is under construction so don’t expect much. I am not sure if Henry has a dedicated phone line as of yet, if you wish to contact him there is email contact on the website, or shoot me an email and I can give you his number. I am in no way affiliated with H2o Audio. I am an extremely satisfied customer – both with the product and how Henry runs his company. At the time I ordered, there was a two week trial/satisfaction period after purchase. Anyone in the market for an amp in this price range would be doing themselves an injustice not to look into this amp, in my humble opinion. Soon there should be reviews coming out in 6moons as well as another I am not certain of.

Amplifiers I have owned in the past include (but not limited to… in case I leave one or two out): Bryston 4B, McCormack DNA-1 Deluxe, Music Reference RM-9, Sonic Frontiers SFS-80, Cary SLM-100 monoblocks, McCormack DNA-2 Deluxe, Quicksilver V4 monoblocks. I know there are others I am leaving out, however these are the amps that have had extended stays in my systems.

Associated Equipment:

Meadowlark Audio Nighthawk speakers
Synergistic Research X2 Resolution Reference FX biwire speaker cable
Electraglide Mini Khan Plus power cords on H2o Sig. Monoblocks
Synergistic Research X2 Resolution Reference interconnects (single ended)
First Sound Presence Deluxe Mk. II preamp ( NOS Siemens 7308 gold pin tubes )
Electraglide Ultra Khan II Statement power cord on First Sound Preamp
Electrocompaniet EMC-1UP CD player with spider clamp
Electraglide Mini Khan Plus power cord on Electrocompaniet CD player
Everything *except* First Sound preamp is run through BPT
BPT 3.5 Signature balanced power conditioner
Electraglide Ultra Khan II Statement power cord from BPT to wall
FIM 880 wall outlet upgrade
All components *except* H2o’s and speaker sit upon Zoethecus
Zoethecus z.5/r shelf with z.slabs under all components
Ridge Street Audio Designs cable lifts
Eighth Nerve Room Pack – wall treatment
audiofankj
A pair of stereo amps for the scintillas? Are you going to bi-amp or are the stereo amps bridged?
Long, thank you so much for selling me your Chenin. It is really incredible looking. I would have bought the mono signatures but Henry told me that a pair of stereo amps would be better for the Scintillas. I would say that Muralman1 is definitely the closest thing to a deity when it comes to Scintillas. It was reading his many posts that got me interested in them. Vince, you have been elevated! Bob
I second to Bob, The Chenin and H2o is a match made in heaven!!...get the Scintilla, and you're a God..:-)...I'm not a God yet, but someday I will be when I can find me a pair of Apogee Scintilla..:-)

Bob, are you a god?...I think you are arent you?..:-)...You otta get the H2o Signature mono block and then you'll be a God of the Gods..:-)..heheheheh
Essentialaudio, I don't doubt that. I should mention, for general information, the H2O has self protection installed. The exterior has thick plates all sides.

The rest of the system may be getting a hit, but compared to conventional amp systems, digital gives nothing away to these systems when it comes to clarity.

For some reason, it appears cables are especially vulnerable. We tried wide variety of cables, and without fail, the multiple shielded cables produced the best sound.
Muralman1, shielding may help but won't stop back EMF from digital gear that can get into the rest of the system.
Hey guys, pardon my preaching..... but..... the reason I am stressing the importance of employment of multiple SHIELDED power cables on ALL associated components, is because it is the nature of "digital" to pollute AC lines. A conditioner won't help there. You need to block the garbage.

I know it sounds good now. I had never heard better. Believe me, there is more better to come. Hearing the increased dynamics, and clarity, after feeding the H2O with shielded power cords, it only made sense other components could benefit from a similar treatment. Yes, in spades!

The Belden cord just made changing three cords affordable.
I have the same combination Bob! A very worthwhile investment eh! Thank God for the Chenin's 600 Ohm output Z. You will never notice that the ICE H2O's input Z is lower than 10k isn't it?

regards
I finally have put the 850 hours of break-in on my s-250. I mated it with a Supratek Chenin preamp and the combination is just awesome. It does nothing but make music! Happy listening, Bob
Muralman1,

I am using Virtual Dynamics Power 2 on mine and I am very satisfied.

cheers!
I have just replaced all my component power cords with double shielded ones. The amount of improvement was simply awesome. What I had was the best I had ever heard. Now, I've pushed the envelope beyond all expectations. I made them myself using bulk Belden cords, and Marinco plugs. The cost was about thirty dollars a cord.
My H2o stereo unit is pretty much broken-in and I can say that it sounds dramatically different than it did out of the box. The stereo amps definitely take time to shine! Bob

I second the motion! The change is nothing short of revelatory.
Metamorphosis at it's finest is a superb analogy!

Thanks to Henry for creating an exciting product. I was thinking negatively about my decision if I made a right choice buying this amp. After 200 hours on mine, I keep getting "surprises" how good it sounds at the moment compared to when I first heard the amps. I listen to my system everyday, and it gets better and better. First thing I noticed was that treble becomes sweeter and gradually forming its real character like a sculpture making its real form. Then the bass, which at first was already decent, increases in weight, definition, and clarity. The outstanding detail becomes more revealing. For example, when Ray Brown moves/slides his fingers on the strings of his cello, you can actually hear the resonance of the fret board along with it. I can hear this sound before but it is not as clear and defined.
All through out, I never had a problem with thinnest and glare. I am using the amp with a Magnepan 1.6QR and if the amp is bright (harshness) the Maggie will sure let you know.

Also, I want to point out that Henry e-mails me time and again just making sure that I do not have a problem with the amp plus getting my personal impression of it as it incorporates in my system. He mentioned in one of his e-mail that "if you have any complaints or problem with the amp, I want to know about it and prefer to hear any negative comments about the amp just as much as I want to hear praises about them. Also, I like to let you know that if anything happens to the amp at all, you can count on it that I will be here to support it fully..."

Henry is a true gentleman! Over the phone when I am about to order my amp and through out my other inquiries from the time the amp was delivered to me up to the present.

I know that I made a fine decision owning this product after all. Fortunately!
My H2o stereo unit is pretty much broken-in and I can say that it sounds dramatically different than it did out of the box. The stereo amps definitely take time to shine! Bob
OK. I have the Shunyata Snake Bite. It is definitely their entry level cord. Never the less, they cleaned up the "air," giving a blacker background. The sound is even more easy. That is something that surprised me. Dynamics picked up some, and tonality shifted downward, something good.

I'm going to experiment with further shielding, using copper, and aluminum foil.
Thanks for the tip, Audiofankj, but.... Do you have an SO? I'm lucky to get away with $100 cables, let alone $2500. Besides, I am saving my pennies for a good transport. ;)
Muralman1 - You may want to hold off on the Shunyata Sidewinders... I have owned them and the Taipans (next amp cord up from sidewinder). The Taipans are very fast and dynamic as well as clean, however a bit on the cool side in respects to body in my experience. For about the same price range used look for some Electraglide Mini Khan Plus cords for the H2o's. They have all the strengths of the Taipans, however add more body, palpability and liquidity - especially in the mids and vocals. They are also a bit more quiet as well as a larger soundstage (deeper and wider - not much difference in height). That is my humble opinion for what its worth... happy listening!
Hi, I took my H2O monos over to a friends place, where we tried four pairs of power cords. In that system, Shunyata Sidewiders took easy honors over the others, one pair being Cardas. I will be getting Shunyata Snake Bites tomorrow. I will post my findings.
Hey Bob,

Yes, my experienced during the first few days (less than 100 hours or so) mirrored what you had posted as the amp goes to its "breaking in" phase also. It gets better over time which make me wonder how good can it get after say above 700 hours or will the change still be audible if theres any?
The Dynaco PAS 3 is a good preamp (my brother used to own a modified one) but is no match to your soon to be H-Cat preamp I'm pretty sure. In fact you might say later on that you had never heard your H2O yet until the H-CAT arrived.

I will try other cables per your observation on how cable sensitive the S-250 is. At the moment, I am using 47 Labs OTA cables terminated with Cardas SRCA and very happy with it.
Amandarae,
I have found the amp to be amazing now that it is on the way to breaking-in. I was very close to purchasing a Chenin but opted to try the H-Cat preamp which should be here next week. I have found the amp very cable sensitive. I had always been somewhat of a cable skeptic but that has been erased with amp. Anyway, I will report my findings of the H-Cat and the H2o after the H-cat has a chance to break-in. It should be a quantum leap over my old Dynaco PAS 3! Bob
I also have the H2O S-250 for almost a month now (thank God there was money left after the renovation). I have it driving my MG 1.6QR with astonishing results using a Supratek preamp.

I tried it also on my vintage Bozaks and MLTL Fostex 167E speakers and very happy with the results. Yes, they are overkill with the Bozaks (Rhapsody and Symphony) especially for the single driver speakers (S/N is 94dB) but I do not care. The amp is so clean and a "detail" champion in all the speakers I have compared to the other amps I tried.
My 300B SET amp powering the MLTL which is a perfect match for me enable me to compare how good the H2O in low level application and so far the 300B is now getting its well deserve rest.

I am not implying that the S-250 H2O is "the amp to get" even for Single Drivers, I am just relaying my experinced with it being use in such applications.

The H2O will power my main speakers (1.6QR for now) no question and the next speaker I am going to have. With the H2O, I am very happy that my investment or my impulsive venture (bought it without auditioning it because it has a trial period)materializes to a result that exceeds my expectations. In my system, I can hear immediate feedback when doing some tweaking (say, turning the VTA a quarter turn, changing interconnects terminations, etc.) which I can only attribute to how good the amp gives detail of
of almost every info in the music (because some of them I cannot hear but I can only feel) as compared to the amps I have currently and had before. I know this because I have been tweaking my system every chance I can get and very familiar how they respond before the amp came.

I believe that preamp plays a very big role in getting the real character, performance wise, of the H2O. Because of its low input impedance compared to most amps, the ability of the preamp to drive this type of load should be considered very carefully before judging how the H2O sounds.

Nevertless, the amp is a keeper for me. Henry Ho, the creator of the amp, is a very nice person to have conversation with. So support is there if you need it.

I am not affiliated to Henry or to any of his business dealings. Like most of you, I am just an audio nut.

cheers
Actually it is the H-CAT preamp that I am purchasing. What I can tell you is that interconnects are very important with this amplifier. I had the Audio Metallurgy top of the line interconnects (that I won on auction recently)last night and the amplifier just was beautiful! I am talking to the Audio Metllurgy people today because I also had a bit of hum. That very well could have been the result of using my old Dyna PAS 3 preamp. The amplifier just opened-up and was amazing. I never stay up late due to my job but was up until after midnight last listening. The amp sounds great on the 4.5's and the H-Cat designer uses the Vortex screens as his reference so the 4.5's may be staying put! I am awaiting two pairs of Apogee Scintillas and had planned on selling the 4.5's. Bob
Bob, I'm considering this amp to use with my Von Schweikert VR-4 HSE speakers. When you update your comments next week on the H2O, would you also include your observations of it with your VSA 4.5's. I'm hoping that it will have the same synergy found between the VSA speakers and the Spectron M3. BTW-The CAT preamp. sounds like an exciting and logical addition to your setup. Thanks in advance for the help. Lloyd Friedley
I am now about 300 hours into the break-in of the stero H20 and my experience is mirroring Audiofankj. Every couple of days I come back to the amp and it sounds more and more like the amp that was reviewed. I will write again next week when it has had about 500 hours of break-in. Bob
Well it seems that introducing the H2O to my system (and comparing to my Levinson) is not destined to be. After a number of email exchanges with Henry, it seems that my AR SP9 (tube output) preamp, which has a recommended load of 60k-100k ohms with minimum of 20k, just isn't going to mesh well with the low 10k ohm input impedance of the H2O.

As much as I was looking forward to the H2O, I'm not too inclined to swap my preamp in order to do so. A couple years ago I had Great Northern Sound upgrade the SP9 with their Ref Mod which did wonders for it. It would be extremely hard to consider parting with it.
Welcome back Audiofankj. It seems you had a fantastic New Years.

You made good points about the Scintilla. Henry's Scintilla were housed in a very large room, with a high ceiling. The best I have heard Scintillas was in a listening room designed, and built by Keith Yates. Check out what Keith has done with his room acoustics talent: Yates. http://www.keithyates.com/

In my own case, my Scintillas are housed in a plaster, and board 'n bat paneling 17' by 21' room. The 10' high ceiling is broken up by intersecting beams. It isn't a dedicated audio room, but it works well.
Wow - talk about some activity on the thread... the wife and I left the country and went to Europe for New Year's and just got back and am catching up...

From what I remember, the mono versions will have greater seperation, more dynamics, and better control of the lower bass regions than the stereo version. The Signature takes the monos a step further with overall refinement, micro & macro dynamics, as well as increased finesse, and delicacy - if that makes sense - again from what I recall...

The Apogee Scintillas are amazing speakers, however, keep in mind, room interaction is *very* dependent as well as room dampening/correction ... that is the case with all speakers, but multiplied with the Scinnies...

Happy New Year & listening to all...
thanks Vince...Although I am very heppy with my speaker and current setup....I sure love to hear the Scintillas with the H2o someday....Henry loves the Scintillas!!

Long
Hey Long,

I' pretty sure someone bought that pair of Scintillas. They changed ownership last year. Scintillas come up for sale so seldom. Good luck.

Hi Vince,

I'm using it with Sony SSm9ed. I want to get the apogee Scintillas now...where can I get a pair in excellent condition?..there's a pair for auction but he wouldn't ship it to me..

Man, everything that you and Kirk(mr Audiofrankj) says about the signature H2o mono amp are way better than I could ever imagine!!

Long
I am intending to match-up the H2o with the H-Cat line stage. It should be a knock-out with the Scintillas.
Long, good to hear from you. I would love to hear the Chenin matched up with the Signature. What speakers are you using?
For what it's worth, I did get a response back from Henry today about a possible Signature upgrade for the S-250. His response was...

"Yes the Stereo can be upgrade later also but it will be down the road."

I take that as a technically-possible-but-not-anytime-soon response which does address my remaining hesitation about the S-250 vs the M-250.
Probably the space snafu. Never the less, the S-250 is a marvelous amp, and an outstanding bargain. We all loved the prototype when it came through here last year.
Hey guys, I just wanted to let you all know that the H2o signature mono are breaking in and it sounded beautifully with the Chenin....Everything sounded so real!!!..it's unbelievable

Long
I asked Henry before I bought the stereo amp and he said that he didn't plan on having the Signature version in stereo. Bob
That is a question I have been meaning to ask Henry. The only drawback, and it may be a big one, is the stereo unit carries two ICE modules, whereas the mono carries one. Henry may be using that space to house some portion of the Signature mono's extra goodies.
Yes I did, and more recently started wading through all the posts out on the Apogee site. Do you think Henry will ultimately offer a Signature upgrade to the S-250? That is the one aspect of the Monos that is keeping me on the fence between the two.
Your welcome. Did you read the reviews at the H2O site? They are all written for the S-250, I believe.
Henry's response to a similar question is that the Monos offer more focus, bass dynamics and separation -- which I certainly don't question... Mostly, I'm seeking insight on how much of a difference to determine if I should pop for the stereo S250 or hold out until I can swing the Monos. Opting for the Signature Monos is beyond my budget but I do like the idea of being able to upgrade the Monos to Signatures down the road. Any idea if Henry is considering a Signature of the S-250?

While I do understand that Henry offers a full money back trial period of two weeks, there is the cost of shipping both ways coupled with my patience in breaking in a new amp (not to mention my wife's ;-). So if I'm going to do it, I want to believe there is a high probability of keeping it.

Thanks for the feedback, Murlman1. That S-250 is mighty tempting...
Mdconnelly, here is my short take. Remember, there is a money back trial period allowed.

(Henry), forgive me for saying this, but I see little reason for getting the monos, unless you need multiple amps. There use to be reason to, because he used the extra room in the monos to add fast firing caps. Since he has elongated the chassis, the extra room of the monos is just extra room. Of course, the monos will exact a bit of advantage due to complete separation of the channels, or so they say.

On the other hand, the Signature's performance is a cut above the S, and M models, when it comes to attack. You'll have to contact Henry to find out why.

I'd like to read your comparison of the Levinson vs. the H2O.
Can anyone compare the S-250 H20 with the M-250 (or Signature)? I'm very interested in trying one of these to compare to my Levinson 331 amp using my Aerial 10T speakers. I have no doubt that the M-250 & Signature are a step up from the S-250 but my budget is far more aligned with the S-250.

So, I'm looking for a real-world comparison of what the M-250's offer that that the S-250 can't. Any and all insight is greatly appreciated!
Zaikesman, not that I'm aware of, except a cut short comparison trial at last year's New York Rave. I know there has been a lot of interest in Rowland ICE amps vs. H2O ICE amps. As the H2O gets around, we are seeing more feedback.

BTW, The H2O will be featured at the HE show in NY.
Muralman1, you mention some comparo's - any feedback vs. the ICE Rowlands, or the Spectron digital amps?
Baranyi, did you get your Scinnies? Paul is getting his re-ribboned Studio Grand back tomorrow. I'm taking my H2O Signatures over to his place.
A maddening problem!!!! My H2o was just delivered to my office and I can't wait to hear it. The problem is that I have two residences (house and an apartment) and the house is where my stereo system is located. This apartment is where my wife is now and much closer to the ultrasound appointment that I need to be at tommorow at 2PM. The easy solution would be to spend the night at the house (1 hour from my wife at the apartment.) and join her tomorrow for the appointment or she could come out to the house tonight. The problem is that it is supposed to snow 9 inches tonight and the house is in a rural area!!!! This is driving me crazy!!! Bob
Joe, have you tried other Signal Cable products such as the speaker cables. I am in the market because I should get Henry's amp on Monday and really need to upgrade both speaker cables and interconnects. I have been looking over Audiogon and these seem to be well regarded. Bob