I have wall mounted Revel M20's and components in my basement system.
The BDP-95 and Yamaha RX-A820 are wall mounted on adjustable arms that will not hold an anvil.
It is very important that the system not interfere with the pool table
The Yamaha RX-A820 has been an interesting product and it has permitted me to make some observations:
- Changing the Amplifier setting from 6 ohms to 4 ohms has an observable negative effect on the sound quality at a low volumes where power should not be an issue.
- Turning the volume up after a point the system sounds compressed. Distortion is likely to have increased but it is the compression that is noticeable. The speakers cannot be rules out though.
- Listening to CD's via the HDMI is no match for the analog outs of the 95
- The Pure Direct mode sounds much better than enabling any processing even when all settings are Large/Flat
Of course, this is all subjective
Since I am running out of space in my main system. I am considering selling the RX-A820 and BDP-95. The BDP-105 would be moved to the basement and directly drive an 2 channel amplifier.
Size is not an issue but weight is.
I have auditioned the AHB2 driving the Salon2's and it is a great amp. My first impression was that the upper end was incredibly clean and detailed. I did like it better bridged but the session was short and there is 6 DB more gain so that could be the reason.
The AHB2 may not a power house and you can buy very good amps with more power for less but it could well be a reference piece used to compare others. It certainly has enough power for my application.
The ATI N-Core amp is another option but I do worry about the high-frequency noise. Class-D seems to required filtering before measurement to remove it.
I don't like amps that show excessive artifacts when playing two tone tests. I've seem some pretty bad ringing for inexpensive and expensive amps.
If the AHB2 was 2K, I'd have one already.
Now, back to the OP;s question. SEAS could want and absolutely prestine amp to drive their speakers. They could have a small space. They may want a really low noise floor. They could get amps for free and co-market. It could be all these or other reasons. This Benchmark article has no bearing on my reasoning.
- Rich