That just about explains your total lack of knowledge, when It comes down to any sort of review or comment. In short is your talking through the back of your head. And have zero knowledge of standard amplification
How would you know that if as you admit to never owning an integrated 2 channel amplifier. Once again your running your mouth off about something you freely admit you have zero knowledge of. Many years ago I owned a Yamaha Z11, While it had countless connections for all sorts of supposed programming, Much of which is never used . It's power supply was basic, and really did struggle with different speaker loads. Maggies where a complete no no. At the time I was running a Pass Labs integratted.Needless to say the Yamaha was returned to the retail outlet post haste, never to return.
The main problem with any AVR is there power supplies, which are cheap third rate units, which are the cause of most failures. It really comes down to cost and high quality Toroidal power supplies cost a lot more, But are far more reliable. And after all you only get what you pay for. There was a Boulder 3060 on AudiogoN the other day the cost was $158.000. There power supplies are massive. Of cause there not really the equal of Gryphon , or MBL. But then what is. |
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No one is bashing integrated amps anyway (I owned them before, still do), but I think people have reasons to believe integrated amps are also a compromised audio device, relative to separate dacs, preamps and power amps. It is also a fact that often enough, even some midrange integrated amps share quite a few parts with AVRs, they just don't tell their loyal customers in their marketing info. The important volume ICs, switches, even opa buffers are some examples, and some of those ICs do determine the so called "sound quality" that integrated amp users thought their amps sounded so much better just because it is "integrated", without the many extras (such as the video section) jammed in an AVR, without knowing enough about the similarities that make them not so remarkable in relative sense, to AVRs. To borrow you saying, "...lack of knowledge...", that to me, is also like ignorance is bliss, so it may be better if users don't know the technical details of their integrated amps, that they more often than not, assume will "sound better" than just about any AVRs. All else being equal, of course integrated amps don't need to make as much design compromise than that for AVRs, and likewise, separated also don't require as much compromise as integrated amps. Just that there are lots of exceptions, so one should not generalize, and I am not saying you do, I am just mentioning some facts.
On the measurement benches, we know for a fact that many integrated measured worse than many AVRs, and before anyone make an false claims, no we are not just talking about SINAD, but other measurements that matter too.