CH Precision I1 Universal integrated amplifier John Atkinson August 2023

John Atkinson wrote about the CH Precision I1 Universal in August 2023 (Vol.46 No.8):

When my wife and I got engaged, we each bought each other a "bubble-back" Rolex watch from an antique shop in San Francisco. Mine was a 1939, hers was a 1940; both watches still run fine, though I am not sure for how much longer, as Rolex no longer services watches that old. My respect for Swiss engineering is based in part on my experience with the Rolexes. So I readily agreed when Editor-in-Chief Jim Austin proposed that I spend some time with the current version of the I1 Universal integrated amplifier from Swiss company CH Precision.

Jason Victor Serinus reviewed the modular, class-AB I1 Universal, which is currently priced at $38,000–$53,000, depending on options, and offers an output power of 100Wpc into 8 ohms, in February 2019. The basic version has one balanced pair and two single-ended pairs of analog inputs, all of which are converted to hi-rez digital and fed to a D/A section capable of handling sample rates up to 384kHz. The volume control is a hybrid type, adjusting the level in both the analog and digital domains. Four optional modules provide additional inputs: a current-mode MC phono input module; a digital input module with AES3, coaxial, and optical S/PDIF inputs, and a CH Link port for use with CH Precision's D1.5 CD/SACD transport; an Ethernet port, which can be used with CH Precision's CH Control Android app; and an asynchronous USB port, to allow hi-rez streaming from a computer. There is also a SYNC-IO module that allows synchronization with an external digital word clock and a USB port for firmware upgrades.

My sample (serial number 0Z0F0904, running firmware v2.1) was fitted with the Ethernet and USB modules. These both accept 24-bit PCM data with sample rates up to 384kHz and DSD data up to DSD256. (DSD data is converted to 24/352.8 PCM before conversion to analog.) A bypass mode disables the A/D conversion and volume control and configures the I1 as a two-channel, all-analog power amplifier.

There has been a major firmware upgrade since JVS's review. Version 2.0 updated the time-domain-optimized "PEtER" spline-filter algorithms with fixed-point processing, reflecting those introduced on the C1.2 D/A processor that Jim Austin reviewed in February 2023. With the new firmware, the I1 is also now fully MQA-compatible, whether replaying streamed music or MQA-CDs from the D1.5 transport.

Most significantly for this Roon user, the amplifier now supports Roon's audio distribution technology (RAAT). At the time of the original review, the I1 wasn't a Roon endpoint. I connected the review sample's Ethernet port to my NetGear NightHawk router with an AudioQuest CAT-6 cable, and the Roon 2.0 app recognized the updated I1 as an MQA decoder and renderer. When a file is played with Roon, the I1 automatically switches its input to the Ethernet port, and "Roon Ready" appears on the front-panel display, with the sample rate shown top left. With an MQA file, the display shows "ORFS" with the unwrapped sample rate (footnote 2); with DSD data, even though the data are converted to hi-rez PCM (this confirmed by Roon's Signal Path window), the display shows, for example, "DSD64." The display also shows the internal heatsink temperature in degrees Celsius and the amount of negative feedback selected (see later). The display can be set to show just the volume.

Once the I1 Universal had arrived, Kevin Wolff, CH Precision's US rep, visited to run through the amplifier's features and lend me an Android tablet with which to run the CH app (footnote 1). As Wolff unpacked the I1 Universal, I was impressed not just by the amplifier's physical appearance but by the attention to detail with which it had been constructed.

For example, in addition to that sculpted front panel with the large, four-color display in its center, the chassis's aluminum-alloy panels join seamlessly with no visible screws. Circular aluminum plates at the four corners of the top panel conceal height adjustment shafts for the feet tipped with hardened aluminum (footnote 3). Height adjustment is performed with a supplied CH-branded screwdriver once the circular plates have been unscrewed with the supplied suction cup. The feet are each fitted with an elastomer ring for when the amplifier rests on a delicate surface, but these can be removed to allow the spikes to dissipate vibration. The small remote control can be attached to the right-hand side panel, which has an internal magnet, a felt pad on the remote's base protecting the panel's finish. The overall impression is of Rolex-like quality.

For my auditioning, I sent network audio data to the I1 from my Roon Nucleus+ server. I also connected an MBL N31 DAC's balanced analog outputs to the CH Precision's balanced analog inputs with Ayre/ Cardas Signature interconnects. (The I1's input gain was set to "0dB.") Loudspeakers were my usual KEF LS50s, these connected with AudioQuest Robin Hood speaker cables. The KEFs sat on 24" Celestion stands that had their central pillars filled with a mixture of sand and lead shot and were spiked to the wooden floor beneath the carpet; the speakers were mounted with pads of Blu Tack. In addition, the stands' base plates were weighted down with bags of lead shot. Though the KEFs are minimonitors, I use Roon's parametric digital equalizer to flatten and extend their in-room low-frequency response to 42Hz, the frequency of the open E string of the double bass and bass guitar. As long as I keep the SPL at the listening position below 85dB(C), the little KEFs offer effective low-frequency performance without noticeable distortion.

All the amplifier's functions can be adjusted by either the CH app on the Android tablet or the large multifunction control knob on the front right of the I1's faceplate. I controlled playback with the Roon app on my iPad mini rather than with the CH app. The volume control setting applied by the amplifier's front-panel knob or the remote control was echoed in Roon's volume window.

The I1 is unique in that its global feedback level can be set between 0% (the default setting) and 100% in 20% increments without altering the amplifier's overall gain. With his preferred setting of 0% global feedback and using Wilson Alexia 2 loudspeakers, JVS found the CH Precision's sound to be "clean, strong, and direct," yet it did not "filter out those intangibles that allow the music to elicit a powerfully emotional response."

Using Roon via my network, I investigated the effect of the feedback settings using a familiar recording, the 24/96 version of Molto Molto, Sasha Matson's recent project for jazz orchestra on the Stereophile label, streamed from Qobuz.

With 0% feedback, the presentation was involving, but the low frequencies sounded somewhat loose. The double bass on Matson's Symphony No.3, for example, lacked some of the control I had been used to. I had found that without global negative feedback, the original sample's output impedance was a fairly high 0.4 ohm in the midrange and bass. With the feedback set to 100%, the output impedance had dropped to 0.11 ohm, and with that setting, the amplifier's low-frequency articulation improved. However, the presentation of high-frequency detail on instruments like cymbals and trumpets started to sound a touch exaggerated. Too much of a good thing too much of the time, I decided.

I ended up with 40% global negative feedback, which, I judged, provided the best balance between low-frequency definition and the unfatiguing presentation of high-frequency detail. (With Jason's sample, I found that with 40% feedback, the output impedance was 0.3 ohm.)

Once I had settled on that feedback level, I embarked on critical listening, first using the CH Precision as a digital processor.

Without a doubt, this amplifier features a first-rate D/A section. Imaging was precise, the soundstage deep when appropriate, the midrange uncolored, the high frequencies clean and unfatiguing. Low-level recorded detail was present in abundance but without the feeling that it was being unnaturally emphasized.

This was the case with both hi-rez PCM like Molto Molto and with DSD-encoded music like The Dave Brubeck Quartet's Time Out (DSD64, Analogue Productions). The reverb surrounding Joe Morello's drums at the start of "Take Five," for example, was well and tangibly decoded by the CH Precision. I intended to listen to just this one track but ended up playing the rest of the album.

As the firmware update enables the amplifier to behave as a full MQA decoder and renderer, I streamed several MQA-encoded albums from Tidal and played some MQA files from local storage. Given the current uncertainty of MQA's future—the MQA company's South Africa–based main investor was looking for an exit and the company went into administration in April 2023; see Industry Update in the June 2023 Stereophile, p.13—there might have been little point in my doing so. Even so, the CH Precision I1 did well with MQA files. Despite the naysaying on the interwebs about MQA, in level-matched comparisons with recordings of known provenance, I felt that the MQA versions offered more palpable imaging when unfolded with the I1. One exception was "Take Five," where even with the level of the drums and piano at the beginning of the Tidal version matched to that of the DSD file, Paul Desmond's alto sax sounded a touch more strident and more forward in the soundstage. (The same master must have been used for both the MQA and DSD albums, as Desmond's familiar clam at 51 seconds into "Blue Rondo à la Turk" was present in both.)

I then tested the CH Precision's analog inputs. I used Roon to send network data to the MBL D/A processor, so that the parametric equalization I used with the I1's Ethernet port would still be applied. The MBL's volume control was set to its maximum.

Hmm. I am well familiar with the presentation of the MBL processor with its minimum-phase reconstruction filter: an excellent sense of drive and low-frequency impact coupled with easy-on-the-ears high frequencies. Fed to the CH Precision's analog inputs, the low-frequency character seemed unchanged, but the upper frequencies sounded slightly thinner and somewhat less involving. Perhaps this was the result of the I1 digitizing its analog inputs?

Only one way to find out: I used the app to turn off the balanced analog inputs' A/D conversion and bypass the volume control. Again, I sent data from the MBL N31, but as the I1 was now operating with a fixed output level, I controlled volume with the processor. That did the trick. The N31's familiar sonic signature returned, but with slightly greater clarity than I remembered experiencing with the Parasound monoblocks that usually drive the KEFs.

JVS's verdict on the original sample CH Precision I1 Universal: "one of the most complete, most neutral sounding, most carefully conceived components I've reviewed." My auditioning of the updated version, even using speakers that cost a small fraction of the amplifier's price, supports what JVS wrote back then. The I1 Universal marries a state-of-the-art, superb-sounding, solid state integrated amplifier with a superb-performing, streaming D/A processor.

This comes at a price, but as with Rolex watches, it appears that is what you have to pay for Swiss precision.—John Atkinson


Footnote 1: The Android app appears power-hungry. If the user doesn't exit the app when they are finished using it, the tablet's battery rapidly runs down.

Footnote 2: Apparently, "ORFS" stands for "original sampling frequency."

Footnote 3: Paired with rods that CH Precision can supply, this system also allows two or more CH Precision components to be stacked while limiting vibration that could impact sound quality—although CH Precision recommends avoiding stacking components for optimal results.

COMPANY INFO
CH Precision Sàrl
ZI Le Trési 6D
1028 Préverenges
Switzerland
(41) (0)21-701-9040
ARTICLE CONTENTS

COMMENTS
RobertSlavin's picture

For an integrated amplifier with a base price of $38,000, I'd say the square wave at 10 kHz is poor.

I'm not sure how many phonograph listeners would be fans of having the amplifier transform the signal into a digital stream and then having the amp transform it again back to an analog signal.

tonykaz's picture

That's how Vinyl Records are made, isn't it?

Tony in Michigan

Bogolu Haranath's picture

These days the vinyl records are made from D to A ....... This integrated amp takes A to D to A ........ So, eventually what happens is, from recording A to D to A to D to A ........ Hope you are following this :-) ........

tonykaz's picture

Ada boy, good catch.

So, Vinyl people double down on digital "DDD".

Tony in Michigan

Ortofan's picture

... the Parasound HINT 6 - along with your choice of an Audi A4 or a BMW 330i.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Come on ........ You should also include, Lexus ES 350, Acura TLX. Infinity lower priced models, Cadillac and Lincoln lower priced models, Mercedes C-class ...... also Volvo and Genesis :-) ........

tonykaz's picture

I was once in a large building where a NEW Audi 4 Series was dismantled down to it's smallest fasteners.

It's impossible to conclude that all the Engineering that went into all those Automotive Systems could in any way equate to an Amplifier. Every part of that Car is designed for and performs at a much higher level then a simple piece of audio Amplification.

Finding ways to defend Audio Gear's False Equivalencies has yet to be done by any Reviewer including the outrageous HP digging to his deepest depths of writing skills.

The Important ( missing ) detail from this Review is where this piece of gear should "Place" on this Reviewers "personal" sliding scale of Value/Price, just like anyone would do with any purchase.

We look to our Reviewers for their Subjective opinions. If they recommend, it should be reflected in their actual purchase ( or long term loan ) because their action is far more revealing than the structure of the concluding comment paragraph. ( isn't it? )

Reviewers are writers on a journey of building an "always better" performing music system, we readership follow along because we admire and approve. Reviews are candid appraisals from trusted authorities. ( or should be )

Tony in Michigan

Jason Victor Serinus's picture

Some reviewers are comfortable assessing price vs. performance and declaring whether something is a good value. I am not. I do not feel it my business to weigh in on anyone else's financial decisions. Nor do I believe that a reviewer has a responsibility to share their personal sliding scale of value/price, assuming they even have one, let alone suggest that others adopt it.

How a reviewer chooses to handle their money is their business, period. When I'm elected President, I'll share my tax returns.

The statement that reviewers "should" only recommend products that they either purchase or borrow long-term makes no sense to me.

tonykaz's picture

Please explain, if you can, what purpose a Review should have.

It seems a Review without judgements is what J.Gordon Holt railed against.

David in today's Audiophiliac Vlog gives his opinion of what a Review should be ( and include ) along with his judgement of the Reviewer's Credibility. ( I've felt Cordesman's many Audio related assessments to be unreliable or completely erroneous, from actually buying his product endorsements. )

Perhaps you feel yourself a Product Presenter, not a Reviewer. No harm in that, my industry employs Presenters to do all our Auto Shows.

The Auto Industry Reviewer Alex Dykes goes Deep into a Car, puts it into Context: tests, evaluates and describes all it's features, places it's price performance ratio. Audio's closest Dykes equivalent have been Tyll, HR & Steve G.

Reviewing is a Responsibility & Commitment, isn't it?

Stereophile is a Jury of 12 Reporting, Reviewing and bringing clarity to all things Audiophile.

Tony in Michigan

ken mac's picture

..our apartments and/or houses would be overflowing. This is a ridiculous premise because a) not all manufacturers will let us hold on to gear, b), we can't afford every piece we recommend, c), while a piece may be great, that doesn't equate that it's better than our reference, which is the final arbiter, at least for me.

spacehound's picture

'Value' is a personal choice. Though I assume those who have made sufficient money to afford such things as this amplifier have not done so by making poor financial decisions.

The 'car' comparison does have a point though. A car is much bigger, which equals more materials, and contains far more components.
Also the car company, usually being large, has to financially support its sport clubs, cafeteria, health schemes, etc. A small company does not have these expenses.

tonykaz's picture

Are you hinting that there is some pathway of rationalization for this little gem to be considered a good financial decision?

More likely, the eventual buyer of this little Amp will be an inheritor of some Captain of Industry's Stock Portfolio & Estate. This thing is destined for a NEW Yacht with a Half Million$ Music System.

Some Audio Gear is designed to be Huberistic.

Hubris is the new and up & coming Class.

Tony in Michigan

spacehound's picture

The whole thing is irrational and still would be even if it was a 'budget' amp.

Because every input goes to the DAC. So the analog inputs have to go through an ADC to be changed to digital first. That's nuts, a sane designer would simply feed the analog inputs direct to the amp circuitry, which is analog.

As for 'rationalisation', we all know that many 'rich' people are rich because they had rich parents. But I didn't want to get into that stuff so I left it at "not making bad financial decisions".

Value.
There sometimes comes a point in some people's lives where cost simply no longer matters, so 'value' doesn't either.

This is what allows manufacturers such as CH to survive. Their customers may have money but there is no evidence that they have more 'discrimination' than anyone else. So they tend to automatically equate high price with high quality.

Meridian do the same. They are tiny to the point of invisibility in the genuine hi-fi world. So they make their money by supplying the 'not quite top flight' car manufacturers with their 'not quite top flight' car audio systems as an extra cost option. Jaguar/Land Rover is an example.

tonykaz's picture

...is showing us Audio gear that the Super Rich choose from.

From me, I'd describe this thing as Mid-Fi for the children of the top 1% and even then I still can't grasp a concept understanding, I'm feeling like Alice in Wonderland.

It must be good, it got 4 pages.

Tony in Michigan

tonykaz's picture

...equates to Smugnorant.

Tony in Michigan

ps. the construct "smugnorant" is Open Sourced, as far as I know.

tonykaz's picture

"Down Memory Lane"
Another piece of superb Journalism that captures our entire Audio Hobby Trajectory with accurate insights and correlations.

One hell-of-a-piece of Storytelling.

Tony in Michigan

ps. I met him and Tyll in 2011 fully well realizing that I'd met two Greats, you only meet guys like this once in a Decade or so.

Ortofan's picture

... Empire turntable - and bought records instead of speakers at E. J. Korvette.

Speaking of XAM speakers, that must be where the concept for the first WAMM speaker originated:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d36gtE7DOlg

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Mark Levinson HQD loudspeaker system is somewhat similar ....... They were kinda reviewed in Stereophile by JGH :-) ..........

es347's picture

..may attract some folks but for that amount of moolah one can own some very good separates. Re comments relating to cost comparisons between cars and audio equipment, it’s tough sledding to justify say a $150K amplifier or something like the MSB DAC to goes for $90K. Do I chastise the guy who buys one...not at all. How someone spends their $$ is their business. But if I’m forced to choose between a D’Agostino amplifier and the BMW i8 I’m going with the car..

spacehound's picture

$38,000 'base' then another $3,000 for a USB port and another $5,000 for an ethernet port.

That's approaching the price of my Mercedes SLK55, made by a company with a 130 year 'provenance', a known good reputation (though maybe not entirely justified), and the car has the world's most efficient V8 (and excluding $100,000 plus 'supercars', one of the most powerful).

These two guys are just 'serial company founders'. No provenance at all, and their several companies are almost unknown in the hi-fi world.

On top of that, it's a stereo amplifier, which is hardly rocket science, but it won't work at all unless you have the Android app, Android being known for its 'stability', they say. In near 40 years of writing operating systems (and a few other things) I have never known anything LESS stable than Android, and even worse, Google are talking of discontinuing it and replacing it with something else.

And just HOW many are born every minute? :)

tonykaz's picture

Our Man in Europe.

Our insightful Corresponding Journalist.

'serial company founders' bringing us another, Gift ? , keep us in suspense no longer.

Who are these CH people? What success have they enjoyed and who are the intended owners of their products?

Should we anticipate the Curtain being pulled back?

Tony in Michigan

ok's picture

..save for electronics modern cars have not actually been evolved any more than amplifiers or speakers have done for the past seventy years or so. Any preposterous vice that applies to hi-end audio applies also to luxury cars minus the plus that the former are for the most part aftermarket consuming- maintenance- tax- free and thus of considerable resale value. It is hard for big money to be spent in a meaningful way, but big money has to be spent one way or another anyway.

georgehifi's picture

"For an integrated amplifier with a base price of $38,000, I'd say the square wave at 10 kHz is poor."

If that's the output section of a linear class-A/B there is something not right, as it looks much more like the output of a dac's test square wave, not a linear amp, as I've never seen ringing on square waves of the leading and trailing edge of a linear amp!!! (somethings doesn't seem right)

Cheers George

John Atkinson's picture
georgehifi wrote:
If that's the output section of a linear class-A/B there is something not right, as it looks much more like the output of a dac's test square wave, not a linear amp . . .

As I explain in the measurements, the shape of the squarewave is due to the CH I1 in its default mode digitizing its inputs.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

spacehound's picture

It leads me to wonder if measuring with 'square' waves on a box that digitizes its inputs is worth doing at all.

A square wave, by definition, has rise and fall times of zero and so includes all frequencies. This of course is impossible in practice.

And in actual practice the 'almost a square wave' which is as close as we can get will break the Shannon/Nyquist sample rate theorem (it's not a theory, being a theorem it's actually true).

So all such a measurement can do is show the shape of the inbuilt DAC's output filter. So what's the point?

georgehifi's picture

Thanks JA, sorry didn't read that bit.

So it can be fed an analog signal without digitizing it when not in default mode? Did the 1k and 10k square waves look normal then?

Cheers George

John Atkinson's picture
georgehifi wrote:
So it can be fed an analog signal without digitizing it when not in default mode? Did the 1k and 10k square waves look normal then?

Yes, in bypass mode, which is how JVS compared the I1's digital performance with that of the dCS Rossini fed into one of the CH's analog inputs.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

RobertSlavin's picture

I have a few concerns with this review and with this product.

Concerning the product: Not only is the phono input signal digitized by the integrated amp but all analog signals are digitized. This is indicated in the Analog Inputs section of the Specifications section on the amplifier on the company's web site. Also, Mr. Atkinson indicates it by saying in the measurement section when he says that the digitization affects the "analog input" squarewaves.

I am skeptical of the wisdom of this approach to amplification.

I could not find in Mr. Serinus' review the fundamental point that ALL analog signals are digitized by the l1. The digitization means that any signal from a phonograph, tuner, reel-to-reel, cassette deck, or even CD player without a digital signal will be digitized. This should have been made clear in the review.

Maybe I missed the point in a review of a complicated product but surely this is one of the most fundamental things to say about this amplifier and, at best, the point is not prominent.

In the review we learn of the amp's abilities to handle phonographic signals only through Mr. Serinus' friend Gary Forbes. Mr. Forbes only listens for one day. The last sentence of the second paragraph of the section on the phono amplification performance suggests to me that Forbes prefers the sound with the l1's internal clock to that with the Scarlatti clock. However, the last sentence of the third paragraph says the reverse. I wish this could be clarified.

Mr. Atkinson says Serinus compared the l1 with the Rossini using a bypass mode. Maybe I missed it in this review of an admittedly complicated product, but I failed to see this explanation in the review.

The fact that this poor squarewave was an artifact of the digitization of the signal doesn't change my concern about it.

Jason Victor Serinus's picture

Some writers repeat their statements over and over to ensure that readers don't miss them; I prefer to state what I have to say once, as clearly as possible, and trust that readers who care about a product as complex as this will take the time to absorb everything in what, online, amounts to an unusually long four-page review. Note that the copy was actually considerably longer than this before editing.

What you believe is missing is definitely in the review. Here are four quotes that address your points:

1. Nonetheless, the I1's optional phono stage operates mostly in the digital domain—as is not the case in CH's P1 phono preamplifier ($31,000), which operates exclusively in the analog domain, and which our Michael Fremer uses with CH's X1 power supply ($17,000).

The analog gain stage that the I1 dedicates to its phono section is identical to the analog gain stage in the P1. "The I1 has a digital heart, including the phono stage," Pasche said. "The phono stage is also current-based rather than voltage-based, and is far more suitable to lower-resistance MC cartridges that deliver a lot of current." The I1's phono signal path is: input connector->analog gain stage (the most important stage of the signal path, which raises the signal from cartridge level to line level)>A-to-D conversion to 384kHz>digital signal processing via a choice of RIAA, eRIAA, EMI, Columbia , Teldec, and Decca EQ curves>DAC and power amp.

2a. Although neither manual nor website offers instruction in how to operate the Control app, it's extremely easy to use once someone's shown you how. (Bless you, Ralph Sorrentino.) Whenever I wanted to reconfigure the I1 to connect an external clock, switch between the I1's internal DAC and my Rossini DAC, or activate volume bypass to let the Rossini control volume, change inputs, etc., I grabbed the Android tablet and succeeded, without pain.

2b. To switch between the I1's DAC and the Rossini DAC, I had to move an Ethernet link from the MacBook Pro to the Rossini DAC, then switch inputs on the I1 from USB to Analog In XLR, ensure that the I1's volume control was set to Bypass, and select the appropriate audio zone in Roon. I did this so many times that I got the entire procedure down to under 90 seconds.

2c. Once everything was correct . . .
Ultimately, I found that the best way to get a handle on the CH I1's sound was to compare the sound of its DAC to that of the dCS Rossini DAC, using the I1 for amplification, bypassing the amplifier's A/D converter. Note, however, that by the time you read this, the Rossini's software will have been upgraded to v.2. If the difference between Rossini v.1 and v.2 is anywhere near as great as that between v.1 and v.2 of dCS's Vivaldi DAC, some of the conclusions that follow will no longer apply. Then again, CH Precision might also issue a downloadable software update by publication time. Meanwhile, I had to start somewhere.
---

Questions have been raised about my failure to make a judgment call about digitizing analog signals. I was 100% certain that readers who object to such a process would make the judgment call on their own, without even hearing the product. Multiple comments have now demonstrated that I was correct.

jason

RobertSlavin's picture

The passages Mr. Serinus quotes do not address my concerns.

1. None of them make clear that ALL analog signals, not just phono signals, coming into the l1 are normally digitized. This is a fundamental point about the l1 and should have been made clearly and early on in the review. There is a lot of discussion of the technical features of this amplifier but what is perhaps the most important thing isn't mentioned.

2. Mr. Serinus does not make clear what the "bypass mode" is. Does it just leave an analog power amp section? Or does it introduce an analog pre-amp line stage?

3. Which mode did Mr. Forbes prefer when listening to a phonograph -- the 1l with internal clock or with the Scarlatti external clock? The passage in the review suggest one and than the other.

John Atkinson's picture
RobertSlavin wrote:
The passages Mr. Serinus quotes do not address my concerns. . . None of them make clear that ALL analog signals, not just phono signals, coming into the l1 are normally digitized.

This was addressed in the review when I wrote "There is nothing in the manual about changing the sample rate for the analog inputs, nor do the front-panel or Android-tablet setup menus offer options for this."

RobertSlavin wrote:
This is a fundamental point about the l1 and should have been made clearly and early on in the review.

With such a ridiculously complex product, yes, this should have been emphasized but it was discussed in the review, as was the fact that Bypass avoids the digitizing of line-level input signals.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Pass labs INT-250 integrated amp, 250 WPC/8 Ohms ........ Weighs 105 pounds ...... All analog ...... $12,000 :-) .........

MikeSTL's picture

Probably sounds every bit as good as this overpriced and overcomplicated product. Pass, simple and sweet sound.

spacehound's picture

...buy an amplifier. If you want a DAC buy a DAC.

Don't buy a box that mixes the two. DAC technology changes much more often than amplifier technology does and how often do you hear this BS about "We will supply improved DAC modules as the technology improves". It rarely happens and if it does it still locks you in to that manufacturer. Also you are left with the original module which, unlike an older separate DAC, won't be any use for anything else.

And anyway, taking an analogue input, such as phono, using an ADC to digitize it, then feeding it into the DAC section to get it back to analogue for the amplifier section is moronic.

MikeSTL's picture

Separates have been preached to us for the last 30+ years. Now that the older audiophiles are moving to smaller digs, suddenly integrateds are acceptable? Marketing. I agree. If yo7 want an amp, buy and amp. A pre, buy a pre. A DAC, buy a DAC. So on and so on.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

$52,000 integrated amp, which can do soo many things may be a better value than, $48,000 phono stage :-) .........

spacehound's picture

$48,000 for a phone stage, $100,000 plus for a pair of their monoblocks.

It's complete nonsense.

MikeSTL's picture

Products in this price range have always been nonsense.

spacehound's picture

Or Soulution.

What is it with Swiss audio? It is all extremely high-priced yet although Switzerland is a wealthy country the labour costs and the overall cost of living, though high, are not vastly higher than the rest of northern Europe (including the UK) or the USA.

Are they in a price cartel (which I believe is not illegal, or maybe not policed, in Switzerland) to con the rest of the world into thinking there is something 'special' about their audio products so they can make their ludicrous prices acceptable "because they are from Switzerland"?

And leaving aside the digital inputs on this particular amplifier, amplifier design has been extremely well-understood for a long time, and achieving near-perfection in amplifiers is not especially demanding. So much so that you quickly come to a point where not just the 'law of diminishing returns' kicks in, but where you get no extra returns at all for the price you have paid.

I suggest that had the reviewer been 'blind' to the amplifier (just put it behind a small screen, such as a coffee table on its side, no need for anything more sophisticated), he would not have been honestly able to say it was 'better' than a 5,000 - 10,000 dollar Naim or Pass. (Note that I am not suggesting an 'immediate' and direct blind comparison here as done in a 'formal' blind test with swap-overs and such, just hiding what amplifier it is.)

Ortofan's picture

... you should look at even lower priced units.

An Absolute Sound reviewer summed up his evaluation of the $900 Yamaha A-S801 with the statement that "for lots of people who just want a good hi-fi to play their music on, a hi-fi may be a once-in-a-lifetime purchase. For those people, or for anyone who wants good sound with lots of flexibility at a reasonable price, the Yamaha A-S801 integrated amplifier would be my top recommendation. It may be the only hi-fi electronics purchase they will ever need."
http://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/yamaha-a-s801-integrated-amplifier-and-yba-11-bluetooth-wireless-adapter/?page=3

At $1,600, the Denon PMA-1600NE won a Hi-Fi Choice comparison test by surpassing amps from Arcam, Hegel, NAD, Technics and Yamaha.
https://files.hifiklubben.com/4a500a/globalassets/tester/denon/2017/pma-1600ne-hfc-group-test-verdict.pdf

Why hasn't Stereophile tested these amps?

funambulistic's picture

The Yamaha A-S801 has excellent test results ( https://www.audioholics.com/amplifier-reviews/yamaha-a-s801-amplifier-review/yamaha-a-s801-measurements ) and sounds fantastic to my ears. A while back, another reader and I suggested the Yamaha R-N803 receiver for review, but JA said Stereophile does not review receivers (which is not true: https://www.stereophile.com/content/outlaw-audio-rr2160-stereo-receiver for example) and directed readers to Sound & Vision. Perhaps he thought we were referring to a HT receiver...

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