Good points. I think lots of the claims are based on hearsay, then resulted in preconception. Then naturally and gradually they become beliefs, or at the minimum opinions are formed and could even progress to be taken as facts. In doing so, people ignore or forget the 'fact' that people do sometimes perceive the same thing differently. That sound vague too but I guess by nature it will be.
One thing puzzles me is the claims that manufacturers voice their products, even products between their own product lines. I would like to know which manfacturers do that so I can email them directly for their responses. And if they really do, by what means do they do the voicing and yet can still claim flat wide band frequency response, ultra high input impedance, ultra low output impedance, high damping factors, super fast response, negligible distortions of any kinds, accurate and transparent?
I am quite sure about one, McIntosh, that won't be telling me about their voicing technique. In fact, their FAQ seem to be saying even their SS and tube gear would sound similar, not directly but if you read between the lines.
Funny you don't hear any debates of the same about loudspeakers and only very little about exotic cables.
It seems that with amplifiers it always comes down to the concept: Two amplifiers that are designed the same will sound the same. Well, duhhhh, right? Two of anything that are identical will be identical.
To me, where the disconnect in concepts is: Speaker quality/requirements/etc. vs. listening habits/volume vs. sources vs. room vs. individual preference/hearing quality vs. amplifier design vs. pre-amp quality. And a whole host of other variables that make up the end result: Actual perceived sound quality.
I could give many examples where to different types of amps with equal power and the same pair of speakers in the same room will sound different (better one way than the other).
- One area where this came up just last night was on the topic of whole house audio. Someone wants to do BG Radia RT-6C in-ceiling speakers and mate them with a Nuvo Grand Concerto system. The Nuvo is 40 watts from a digital amp. It's crappy power for a speaker like the RT-6C, particularly when you give it some volume. Dayton Audio makes a class A/B amplifier for whole house audio that is also 40 watts, but actually gives the speaker (namely the NEO3 tweeter) quality power to perform. It sounds good. If someone wanted to switch to the higher end PD-6Ci, a Parasound ZAMP will give the speaker a lot of quality power (actually overpowering the speaker -NOT a bad thing) to perform it's best. You can hear this difference as you switch between amps and speaker models. But, there's a cutoff. Absolutely NO NEED to use the ZAMP on the RT-6C as it only needs so much to perform its best. The poly woofer will be fine with the 40 watt A/B Dayton Amp. The digital NUVO amp is very thin sounding once the speaker gets up above anything but very light back ground music.
- Another, higher end example, is that there is a dealer near me with a showroom. He used to be one of my installers (wire puller, really) and, honestly, when it comes to understanding equipment.... he struggles mightily. So, sometimes he calls me to ask for help. He has a pair of $13,000 Totem Metal in his listening room. When he first got them he hooked up the following:
Preamp:
Reference Hi-Fi | Audiophile | Premium Sound | P-3000R | Onkyo USA
Amp:
Reference Hi-Fi | Audiophile | Premium Sound | M-5000R | Onkyo USA
CD player:
Reference Hi-Fi | Audiophile | Premium Sound | C-7000R | Onkyo USA
& a Sonos Connect.
THIS SOUNDED AWFUL. Absolutely un-listenable. He, I, and another guy who owns an A/V company thought the speakers were broken. He had another amp on hand so we plugged this in to see if it was the M-5000:
Amp 2:
www.acurusav.com - A2005
Result: Sounded better, but not good. DEFINITELY not like a $13,00 pair of speakers. The sound was ok, but at least not as screamingly bright/harsh.
I then went to my design center and lugged over this integrated amp:
ProLogue Premium Integrated Amplifier
MUCH MUCH better. Night and day. The sound was smooth. There was actual bass coming out of the speaker. It sounded decent. STILL not $13,000 decent. More like $2000 or $3,000, but that was my and the 3rd guys opinion. Not my showroom so I didn't really care.
That Primaluna product line is absolutely unreal. My favorite electronics line currently. We've tried it on several things and it offers great, tight bass control and real power through a wide variety of speakers. It sounds remarkably better than the Parasound New Classic 2250 we have - and I've tried 6 pair of speakers (bookshelf, tower, & higher end in-wall) between them.
NOTE: Before we were done, we hooked the Sonos Connect straight into the Acurus amp (removing the Onkyo preamp from the equation) and it sounded pretty good as a preamp. Not as good as the integrated, but definitely better than the Onkyo.