I attach the paper I refer to on this post.
I read that paper iirc someone linked it on ASR way back. Let's consider the following:
- The paper claimed the AV40 was rated 2 V XLR, their manual says 1 V unbalanced, 2 V balanced, so that's true.
- It also mentioned the output was designed to match their power amps, so I took downloaded the manual of their P49 power amp that is rated 200 W,, 8 Ohm, and the specs say:
Arcam’s P49 power amplifier represents the pinnacle of Arcam’s audio engineering. We set out to incorporate everything we have learnt i...
www.arcam.co.uk
"Continuous power output, per channel, 8Ω
- Both channels driven, 8Ω,20Hz-20kHz, 0.2% THD - 200W
- Single, 4Ω, at 1kHz - 400W
Inputs
- Nominal sensitivity for 200W / 8Ω - 1.15V (RCA), 2.3V (XLR)
- Input impedance - 10kΩ
- Frequency response 20Hz-20kHz +/- 0.05dB
- Signal/noise ratio (Awtd) 50W / 8Ω - 110dB"
So you can see that it is almost true, 2.3 V vs 2.0 V is 15%, but you can see that while it is almost true, that really wouldn't not allow any head room.
Denon, and Marantz, rated their pre-out 1.2 V, unbalanced of course, see specs below from the AV8805's manual. I used Marantz as example only because then you can see the unbalanced/balanced outputs:
So you can see that while D+M also specified 1.2 V/2.4 V, similar to Arcam's 1.0 V/2.0, yet the Denon X8500H's SINAD peaked at 104 dB at 1.45 V but have almost no degradation at 2 V.
So based on Arcam's specs, they have a valid argument about the test voltage of 2 V unbalance, 4 V balanced being too high for their design. However, if you don't want your power choice limited to Arcam's, for example if you want to use ATI's power amp. As ADTG mentioned, the gain of the ATI amps (the class AB ones) are typically 28 dB and you would need about 1.6 V unbalanced to drive their 200 W amps to their rated output. Or even if you prefer Arcam's power amp, you may want to some healthy headroom, say at least 2-3 dB for peaks, then I would suggest you avoid Arcam's preamps.
Now, take a look of what they said in that paper.
Below is the part that I thought was a little sad to read:
First of all, Amir used similar setup to measure several Denon, Marantz and Yamaha devices and they didn't suffer (or as much) in SINAD due to the grounding scheme.
Secondly, if Arcam knows, and obviously they do, that under some conditions there would such a ground loop that would result in higher noises, why didn't they do something to prevent it from happening? It really isn't that hard to do, there would be some cost involved, but at their price point, they should do it without any second thoughts.
Anyway, I am not going to do a point by point on their paper, suffice to say I would accept most of their explanation and believe if used carefully, the AV40 can do a good job for sure. I do wish Amir and Arcam would work out the difference, but some reason it didn't happen with Arcam's despite the fact that Amir's company is a dealer of Harman, that acquired Arcam in 2017.
For peace of mind though, even if its price is the same as the Denon, I would not pay the same for less. Less, in terms of a little bit worse in measured performance and the ability to choose from a wider range of power amps, as well as less in terms of headroom.