I second on McIntosh. I’ve been an owner for over 40 years. Various upgrades along the way but 100% reliable and I have always loved the McIntosh sound.
Recommendations for an Amp/Preamp combo excellent musically and very reliable
Hello, having often encountered major reliability problems with components that may be too sophisticated in their design and which have taken too many months to be repaired, I thank you for giving me your recommendations for an Amp/Preamp combo that is excellent musically and also solid as a rock. My speakers are Magnepan 3.7i with 2 Vandersteen subwoofers.. My room is 550ft2. I am looking for a holographic placement of voices and instruments, a 3D soundstage. I want a sound that gives me goosebumps. I do not want the bass to be sloppy. I am looking for a sound that is not tiring after a few hours of listening. My musical styles are very varied from classical music to jazz, pop, world music, rock, blues, rap, hip-hop...Budget is up to $15k and I could consider used equipment. Thank you.
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- 43 posts total
The context of my statement was the Magnepan LRS+ and the Mini (which is the same driver as the OP’s speaker). In this context I like the Wotan over the Sanders Magtech because the Wotan has more bass and almost as clean top end. The CODA #8 is very similar sonically to the Wotan from my audio memory. I do not think I had the #8 when I had Maggies. However, I have the #16 now and I can extrapolate the sound to my old #8. The CODA #16 is the best overall amp I have owned It is almost as clean top as the Benchmark AHB2, similar bass (or more bass) as the Wotan, and a beautiful Class A tone like the KRELL Duo 175XD. I owned all of these amps before. I put the Sanders, CODA #8, and the Wotan about the same level of performance with the Maggies, which are hard to drive. My suggestion to people is to give the Wotan a home trial and maybe have a lot more funds for other gear. I needed 30 days of hard playing before the top end cleaned up on the Wotan. |
- 43 posts total

