The Vincent, Musical Fidelity, and Krell amplifiers should all sound very good and have plenty of power.
Overly bright is what I would expect to hear from Denon or Onkyo or Pioneer; that is what I always hear when a friend is unfortunate enough to have one of those amps or AVRs.
That Denon amp may be rated to put out 90 watts per channel to an 8 ohm RESISTOR on a test bench (which is plenty for your speakers), but when driving actual SPEAKERS the distortion will be far more than one wants to listen to. Better-quality amplifiers such as Musical Fidelity and Krell have much more robust power supplies, which allow them to drive the inductance and capcitance of real speakers with much lower distortion. That is why they cost a lot more.
There are lots of integrated amplifiers that are well-designed and are only rated at 50 watts and would sound great driving your speakers. On the other hand, I can show you amplifiers and AVRs that can deliver 150 watts or more to an 8 ohm RESISTOR and still sound like crap driving most speakers.
Power is not the issue. Shopping for an amplifier by looking at power ratings is foolish, because they do not tell you how much distortion will be there when driving real speaker systems. There are no specs for that, and that is what counts.
I am selling one of my homes, as I am retired and downsizing things in general.
I have already sold off some speakers and other gear, but I do have a Musical Fidelity M3i that I am going to put up for sale. I will let it go for $950. It is an excellent amplifier, like new, and according to independent laboratory tests will put out approximately 100 watts per channel at either 4 or 8 ohms.
I have used it with KEF, PSB and Vandersteen speakers and the sound quality has always been excellent and the power way more than needed.
That should suit you perfectly, and save you a good bit of money.
Check out my ad on the AVS Forum Classified section or send me a PM if you are interested in it.
I took the Peachtree home for the weekend and it sounds very good. Lots of punch, wide soundstage, imaging and good detail. I'm leaning this way as I like to buy locally...any comments?
Ok, maybe throwing some options out there would help...
Vincent SV 236 MkII integrated, 150w at 8 ohms, I found a demo for sale
Creek 5350, 120w at 8 ohms
Musical Fidelity M3i, 80w or so at 8 ohms
Krell S-300i, 150w and on sale for $1,795
a Rega or Naim? A lower power Simaudio?
the Primare 32i?
I have heard that SF speakers are demanding and I should be looking at an amp with over 100w, is this a good recommendation?
That's a lot of cubic feet in that room. So yes, 100 wpc at least.
I like the Vincent.
The Toy sounds excellent w/ Rogue Audio gear. Happy Listening!
The Vincent, Musical Fidelity, and Krell amplifiers should all sound very good and have plenty of power.
Overly bright is what I would expect to hear from Denon or Onkyo or Pioneer; that is what I always hear when a friend is unfortunate enough to have one of those amps or AVRs.
That Denon amp may be rated to put out 90 watts per channel to an 8 ohm RESISTOR on a test bench (which is plenty for your speakers), but when driving actual SPEAKERS the distortion will be far more than one wants to listen to. Better-quality amplifiers such as Musical Fidelity and Krell have much more robust power supplies, which allow them to drive the inductance and capcitance of real speakers with much lower distortion. That is why they cost a lot more.
There are lots of integrated amplifiers that are well-designed and are only rated at 50 watts and would sound great driving your speakers. On the other hand, I can show you amplifiers and AVRs that can deliver 150 watts or more to an 8 ohm RESISTOR and still sound like crap driving most speakers.
Power is not the issue. Shopping for an amplifier by looking at power ratings is foolish, because they do not tell you how much distortion will be there when driving real speaker systems. There are no specs for that, and that is what counts.
I am selling one of my homes, as I am retired and downsizing things in general.
I have already sold off some speakers and other gear, but I do have a Musical Fidelity M3i that I am going to put up for sale. I will let it go for $950. It is an excellent amplifier, like new, and according to independent laboratory tests will put out approximately 100 watts per channel at either 4 or 8 ohms.
I have used it with KEF, PSB and Vandersteen speakers and the sound quality has always been excellent and the power way more than needed.
That should suit you perfectly, and save you a good bit of money.
Check out my ad on the AVS Forum Classified section or send me a PM if you are interested in it.
I have found several amps:
the Vincent for $1800 on the net
Krell s300i for $1800 on the net
Peachtree grand integrated x1 locally for $2000
I took the Peachtree home for the weekend and it sounds very good. Lots of punch, wide soundstage, imaging and good detail. I'm leaning this way as I like to buy locally...any comments?
I would vote for the Krell, but if you like what you have, you might as well keep it.
Thanks for the replies! I pulled the trigger on the Grand Integrated X1 and am very happy with it!
u will dig that amp. Plus it's a DAC and a headphone amp too, nice.