the signals yearbook 2015-16 issue 17.1
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ry of turned out to be. Beyond the flur hat an interesting year 2015 has from call a had we ent, mom a in to get product developments which I’ll to do a dealer visit”. Hi Fi Choice Magazine. “We’d like the mess that we always tell nd arou ing dart Our eyes started a n. . . The upshot was that we had customers is a temporary situatio ts. poin e pric e at thre and come up with three systems with week or two to figure things out laps over id many brands as possible, to avo Add in the desire to showcase as ons of some great ally impress the visitor. I had visi actu to previous dealer reports and
ed exposé. out to be the perfect guest. He seem As it happens, Ed Selley turned ly kind y ingl nish asto an us lts and certainly wrote that it genuinely fired up about the resu adm I but le, ilab ava s rint Anthem end. We have re-p piece that has puffed our egos no ure of the cheesed something about the terrible pict do not to l Arcam frai too was my own ego his pockets! off fat geezer with his hands in Chord Co rbook’. Low cost low lly, the 17th and-a-bit signals ‘yea ona noti Anyway, this is, larly, altering only Chord Electronics can update these things fairly regu volume printing means that we -vu, it’s not you. It’s us. Dynavector parts, so if you get a sense of deja ething of a t Linn Products have been on som star a For Interesting year? Focal technology kt Exa The ly. nice ed elop optimisation software has dev ce Spa r thei to allowing roll, kers spea Hutter g available with their own active esses proc has spun forward from just bein er s-ov cros the all Isoblue be driven actively with ax DSM other manufacturers speakers to Klim and rate Aku ik, Maj new top of that, the Kiseki being in the digital domain. On r. And now we atically around the turn of the yea dram e quit d rove imp units quietly Kudos Audio have series 5 too. able DAC Lehmann Audio staggeringly successful Hugo port Chord Electronics followed the er step prop It’s a Hugo TT for, well, table top use. Linn Products g of USB / headphone amplifier with the dlin han d rove bigger power supplies and imp slightly , Lyra forward too, with far better and USB at er bett (it’s o ercutting Hug ilarly, the 2Qute came along und Sim e, the . Dav data of e mention Magnepan n’t confusing enough along cam o. Moj less pure as a DAC). If this was sees 5 201 Just to keep us on our toes, late Melco Audio ty super DAC to replace the QDB76. pret been has r yea either but this Naim are not above confusing us Naim Audio Looking product called the NAC-N 272. ver’ ss-o ‘cro new a is re The ard. forw ight ifier with stra mpl prea e Neat Acoustics , this is a genuinely good analogu or XPS for all the world like a SuperUniti with ble rada upg Ortofon ed below the NDX. It’s also a very good streamer yet is pric too. ates upd had all y er amps have virtuall Notts Analogue 555PS power supplies. The pow s of which are Sopra loudspeakers, the backside al Foc new the e We hav ucts. Dealing PMC ed now proper Naim orientat prod ing the colourful cover, which are grac , Arcam are too) kers spea at (gre Primare with an old friend with Russell K is making contact with three class G es in the two channel world now Rega continuing to reassert themselv any moment. ge and a new all-in-one device due Roksan integrated amplifiers in the ran e to do plac in are s out of room. Plan And we have now officially run , I hope. soon e Mor . ated Russell K plic com ing to be a little something about it but it’s prov Sennheiser right) Alastair (the chubby one on the Something Solid
Sumiko Transfiguration Trilogy Wireworld
Signals UK Ltd., 6 St Mary’s Park, Bucklesham, Ipswich, IP10 0DY tel 01473 655171 + 655172 www.signals.uk.com enq@signals.uk.com We also lurk on facebook and twitter
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nother big event for us in 2015 was the arrival of Melco Audio. Headed up in the UK by Alan Ainslie, who has had a lot of input on the internal design, Melco is owned by Buffalo. Their two high end music servers are built in Japan and are differentiated from other storage devices by not being in any way an IT component, but designed for sound quality, ease of use and configuration. It has always been fascinating to hear how much the music server can influence the audio quality of a UPnP streamed music system. The Melco products are the best yet. Armed with a ‘quiet’ ethernet feed to connect to the streamer, they can simply enhance the quality of another networked server, such as UnitiServe by routing the ethernet through them. Things are better still, purer, less ‘glarey’, even more musical, if the data is located on the internal storage. It’s not golden ear stuff either, one of the easiest demonstrations ever. Our Naim NDS has never sounded so good. On top of that, Melco have worked out an elegant way to connect with verified online Hi Res music vendors and to get the music uploaded straight into the Melco, even if you are buying remotely whilst away from home. If you are more of a DAC person and have so far turned your back on UPnP streamers, you may like the fact that it’s also a High-End Local Player, DSD capable, with a very clean USB connection to your preferred external DAC. It is controllable via third party applications and sounds extremely compelling with, say, the Chord Hugo TT. In fact, the Hugo TT is proving to be a very significant product, bettering the portable Hugo both in overall ability and in the handling of USB signals. The TT also has full sized socketry that allows, easily, for decent cables. The more sophisticated and gutsy power supply gives it greater authority, refinement, dynamics and composure. There is remote control of inputs and volume level, so it is effectively a digital preamplifier, one equipped with a superb headphone preamp too. The core DAC is similar to the infamous Hugo and it retains batteries but, here, they are in place for sonic reasons, not portability. You can lug it around but it’s a bit of a brick! Outputs are on both RCA and XLR sockets, so it’s fully compatible with the full sized Chord components. 2Qute is a tiny jewel of a thing. As with the Hugo and TT, it is available in black or silver anodised finish. Sonically, it’s a little behind the Hugo, in our opinion, certainly when fed with a coaxial signal. It does have some advantages, however, when being fed via USB. There is no volume control either, so levels cannot be tweaked as with the two Hugo products. All offer high levels of value and build quality. They are available for demonstration, too, naturally. We will have Chord’s Dave super DAC too, as soon as it comes out. Gut feeling is that this will be Melco’s best friend, ever. Everyone needs a Dave :)
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ome products are so appealing that the desire to own them transcends need. I know, ‘need’ is hardly what we’re about here, but some things fall into the “I want it, what is it?”category. Here are some examples that spring to mind. The irony is that these are all genuinely good at what they do too. Top left, the Chord Mojo, sibling to Hugo, the portable DAC / headphone amplifier that finds itself wedged on the shelves of audio systems through out the land. Next down, the Sennheiser HDVD800. This headphone amp has an in-built DAC and the HDVA600 does not. Both look similar and are definately cool. Designed to match the Sennheiser HD800 ‘phones, the combination is stunning. They also have the ability to drive the balanced cable for the the 800s, leading to even greater levels of joy. Hugo might be the better DAC but this is the better amp for the HD800s. Bottom left, the Naim Mu-so is already a modern classic. With stylish looks, hewn from solid build, surprisingly capable audio quality and ease of use, what’s not to like? Coloured grill is extra. Naim’s half width boxes have always been cool. Witness the continued demand for the early Naits. When the UnitiQute came along Naim showed that their sense of style was alive and well. If ever a product has hooked people into the concept of streamed audio it’s this one. Using the same form factor and similar styling cues, the Naim DAC V1 has an undeniable appeal too. It’s a lovely headphone amp / DAC that can be used with the matching NAP 100 amplifier below and, come to that, the matching UnitiServe which is not pictured.
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here is a lot of love out there for Chord cables. They’ve come a long way from when they were essentially an adjunct to Naim Audio, being the default cable supplier. One area of concern with any cable is that the characteristics are wholly dependent on the devices with which they are used. Cable companies always describe the characteristics as absolutes. This is not necessarily so! Rant over. There are quite a few Chord cables that have given excellent results with the electronics that we sell. Of the loudspeaker cables, Epic Reference has a tendency to work well across the board. Kudos are keen to demonstrate their mid-range speakers with it on the end of Naim electronics. We have certainly had great results with Arcam, Primare, Linn and Chord Electronics products. On the interconnect front, we have an affection for Signature Tuned Aray with Arcam and Chord Electronics with Sarum Tuned Aray being a mixed experience. At its best in a ‘full loom’ context with both Linn and Naim electronics, customer reactions were polarised from the outset with both lovers and haters. Such is the world of taste and compatibility. One memorable demonstration was where the customer had the older version of Sarum.
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The Tuned Aray product was so wildly better that it was hard to believe it was fundamentally the same wire. This year, Chord have released the Super Aray version of the Sarum interconnects. Seeing our bundle of now outdated cables languishing in the stock room, we had them upgraded. Crikey. It’s the TA upgrade all over again. These are considerably better cables. The owners of the older TA cables have all been very impressed. Our only issue has been that cables are mainly sitting in customers systems either while they await an upgrade or become sufficiently bonded to order one. All the interconnects are definitly more resolving and just plain nicer. The power cables are the biggest surprise, now being in a different league of ability. The prices have risen, most significantly for the mains leads, mind you. Either way, between loans, we have them in RCA, DIN, DIN-RCA, 4 PIN Snaic, Digital, XLR to XLR, Naim 4 pin DIN to XLR, the mains leads and the speaker cables. Demonstrations can be arranged! Top right is another newish arrival, the Silent mount, in this case, for louspeakers. There are a few versions. These were raved about by Derek at Kudos, so we had to try. Now on dem so you can too!
ondon based Trilogy make a collection of properly high end amplifiers. Their 907 phono stage and 933 headphone amplifier have been successes in our hands. At over £2k each, they are at the upper range for products of this type but the 907 is one of our favourite phono stages full stop. A notable 2015 arrival has been the 931 headphone amplifier pictured right in optional Mediterraneo blue. It’s far more modestly priced yet is still one of the best headphone amplifiers available. It also qualifies to join the rarefied products on the left. It’s extremely appealing! All of these components are available for demonstration.
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here is something of an ‘arms race’ at the moment in the world of streamers and, shall we call them, reduced box count systems. Naim need to be up there with the leaders so the past year has seen an unprecedented amount of product enhancements, not least with the Uniti range. The upshot is that all the streamer products now have bluetooth and Spotify access. There are regular software updates and more on-line streaming vendors seem likely to be incorporated too. The high end NDS network player is now alone in not having Bluetooth. For some unaccountable reason, this generates an inward smile with yours truly. On the face of it, the new NAC-N 272 pictured top right is simply a top of the range Uniti. Like its NAC-N172 XS sibling, it needs a power amplifier. It is also hugely well equipped. Unlike the 172 XS, it can accept power supply upgrades (XPS or 555 for the well heeled). Where it really breaks away is in audio quality. The 172 is excellent as a streamer / DAC with a volume control. As an analogue preamplifier, it sits some way below the NAC 152 XS. In all respects, the 272 is a step forward but is also a really good preamplifier. Certainly good enough to make sense of NAPs 200, 250 and 300. What it is not is better than, say, an NDX with NAC282 but then it costs less than the bare NDX let alone the preamp. There are Statement references in there too: the new volume control design is part of the much vaunted Statement ‘trickle down’ of technology. There is definitely something fresh and indefinably different in its sonic signature (or maybe it’s the lack of signature) too. Either way, it’s hitting the spot! For 2015, Naim’s big amplifier story is the upgrade of the power amplifiers. From NAP 200 to 500, the new models now carry the “DR’ suffix.
The NAP 200 DR simply has an improved (Discrete Regulator) power supply for the preamplifier feed. Those in the know will point out that the more serious power amplifiers from NAP 250 upwards always had discrete regulation anyway. From NAP 250 DR onwards, the real change is rather deeper and the output transistors are now devices based on those developed for Statement. The step in performance is quite large. Upgrades will ultimately be available for existing amplifiers but, given the level of disassembly involved, costs are fairly high. All this way and I’ve failed to mention Naim’s other 2015 ‘biggie’, the new Super Lumina Interconnects and speaker cables. It is now possible to wire the entire signal path with these new cables that were designed with the Statement amplifier in mind. Results have been marvelous and a lot of people have felt the gains to be well worth the not inconsiderable asking price. We can, of course, demonstrate as required. We have all the cable permutations. You might notice that lone Statement S1 looming bottom left. As you may be aware, we decided to take tentative steps into Statement territory and now have the S1 preamp on demonstration. Just as the first foray into 500 level ownership is generally the NAC 552 preamplifier, the S1 has the capability to make your system sound a whole lot better. It’s hard to get across just how transformative it can be. With both XLR and DIN outputs, it could suit non - Naim systems too. Certainly with our NDS / 500 / Kudos combo it was like every component had been upgraded simultaneously.
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hord, makers of Hugo, are based in Maidstone, Kent. Since 1989, under the leadership of proprietor John Franks, Chord Electronics has been pushing the boundaries of innovation, creating some of the planet’s finest hi-fi, home cinema and professional audio equipment. Born from the highly demanding world of aircraft avionics, Chord Electronics maintains a commitment to exemplary engineering, cutting-edge technology and exceptional build quality. Designed for high performance over the long term, their products are renowned internationally for the advanced technology which is amongst the best in the world. Chord’s collaboration since 1996 with Robert Watts, a digital design genius with over 30 years’ DAC technology development experience, has produced a number of advanced digital products that are, quite simply, without equal. These achievements have been recognised in the media, too, with magazines and websites from around the world awarding Chord products the highest accolades. Sparkling clarity, unrivalled transparency and huge reserves of high-quality power are trademarks that have become synonymous with the brand. Chord is trusted and admired internationally, and its global customer base includes: the BBC; EMI’s Abbey Road Studios (London); Sony Music Studios (New York) and Skywalker Sound to name but a few. They were a new arrival to us in 2013 but already we feel like old hands. As mentioned above, DACs have come to be seen as Chord’s particular forte for the past couple of decades and it was these, along with the new streamer products, that first piqued our interest. Not to mention the very agreeable approach of Colin Pratt, their sales manager. Their DSX1000 streamer is capable of driving a power amp directly, so our first amplifier purchase was the SPM1200 MkII. The combination is effortless, open and extremely powerful in a very understated way. There is something of the character of passive controllers that we’ve used in years past and adding a CPA 3000 or CPA 5000 preamplifier brings increased authority, scale and vigour that we judged to be positive. Reassuringly, nothing seems to be lost in adding the extra layer. The more expensive CPA5000 brings the most benefits, so we opted for that. A particular Chord strength is in the portrayal of timbre and harmonics and it has the capacity to simply allow you to revel in the sound of a voice or instrument. Timing is very good, but it is not an aspect that is brought to your attention. There is room in world for choice and we do feel that Chord have their own particular and very musical strengths. One area where these products score unequivocally is in power and control. Need to drive some Magneplanar 3.7is? The SPM1200/II is will do it with guts, and to serious levels. To think it’s is only the second power amp up the range, too. Chord also make an rather splendid integrated amplifier. It’s called the CPA2800 MkII and includes an in-built DAC closely related to the 2Qute. Just add, say, a Melco and you have a cracking system. On demonstration of course. But DACs are their special thing. At the top of the page is Dave. Their latest and greatest. It was pictured by Mick Dann at Trinity Park Ipswich September 2015. Production is underway for late November 2015 and, yes, it is very, very good. Another landmark product from a company that kind of does landmarks!
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rcam’s return to form has been gratifying. One of the great names in British audio deserves to be part of the two channel audio firmament. Their new A/V receivers are hitting the spot and all now feature a technology called “Class G” for the power amplification. This was first used in their reference quality A49 integrated amplifier, pictured top, as well as the matching P49 power amp and it’s where matters have become really interesting. There is a C49 pre as well, by the way. These amps are very good. Special, even. Certainly good enough to cause a stir at our audio show where they were first demonstrated in late summer 2014. We were chuffed when the idea was mooted of also launching their brand new audiophile streamer / CD & SACD player at the same show. This was really more a case of dates coinciding, but we are happy to revel in any glory we can get. Now, a year on, the CDS 27 is fully in production. It’s a terrific high value source component. There it is looming from the bottom of the page. The A49 has been joined by the smaller A39 and, in August 2015, by the A29. All of these sport class G technology and are very serious propositions at their respective price points. It’s interesting to note that they have, to some degree, their own characters too. The Audio Show East launch in 2015 was of the new Solo Music. The specifications are pretty impressive, particularly bearing in mind the modest asking price. More to the point, the pre-production example sounded very fine indeed. Arrival is due early 2016 with the closely related Solo Movie (5.1 channels and in-built Blu-ray) due slighly sooner in December 2015. Class G? Funnily enough, yes. As of late 2015 there are very generous allowances for older Arcam amplifiers against new and for any disc player against the UDP 411 universal player. Best you talk to us!
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inn will need no introduction. Manufacturers of probably the world’s most famous turntable, Linn arguably qualify as a religion! They also make digital streamers, amplification and loudspeakers. Besides various flavour of Sondek LP12, we have the electronics at Majik, Akurate and Klimax level. DSM products were introduced a year or two ago and they allow complete integration of analogue and digital sources and allow control via Apple, PC or Android devices. For the Majik this takes the form of a single box audio system (plus speakers). For Akurate and Klimax, the DSM unit is a streamer and analogue preamplifier to be used with a separate power amp. We’ve had particularly good results using Kudos and PMC loudspeakers. In fact the combination of Majik DSM with Kudos C10s was a moment of rare delight, sounding impressively well balanced and lucid. The Akurate power amplifiers can be specified with up to four channels, allowing bi-amplification in stereo. Bi-amping the PMC fact 8 and 12s brings startling levels of proper musical improvement over the single amplifier option. In fact this is true with the Twenty series loudspeakers too. The big arrival of 2014 was Akurate Exakt. The Klimax version of Exakt came out in 2013. This changes the replay process by sending the musical data via CAT5 cable to the speakers where all decoding, DSP and amplification is performed. With this system, the speaker is first set to a flat response (taking account of individual driver variances) and then adjustments made for room characteristics and speaker positioning. All this happens in the digital domain and it is both clever and effective. Late 2014 arrival here was the Akudorik Exakt loudspeakers joined in 2015, by Klimax electronics too. We are impressed! The really exciting element here is that active operation of older or third party loudspeakers is easy to achieve by simply downloading the appropriate crossover information and using an Exakt Tunebox to drive a collection of power amplifiers. Kudos have had the new Super Titan ‘mapped’ and we’ve heard the results. Exakt is already a genuinely large step forward with the Super 10 and 20 models. Revealed in September 2015 were the new 5 series of Exakt loudspeakers with in-built power amplification. They’re a sort of crossover product, marrying lifestyle looks (including an immense range of changeable covers) with proper high end audio engineering. One of the benefits of Exakt is the ability to adjust for less than optimal room placement and this dovetails magnificently with the concept. Both 520 and 530 models are on demonstration.
Pictured is a new 530 in one of the many cloth options. . .in yet another concrete room.
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ega launched their RP8 turntable in 2011. A radical design, using structural foam, it is essentially a skeletal deck designed to sit inside a framework that renders it utterly normal and, visually, unexceptional. Combining the benefits of a purist stripped bare design with the convenience of a lid and domestically acceptable normality says much about Roy Gandy’s approach. Add in the package deal with the impressively open and agile sounding Apheta cartridge (definitely a synergistic match) and they have a sales success on their hands. Running into our Naim 500 system with Trilogy 907 stage feeding Kudos Titans, the RP8 was judged by several listeners to be the best turntable we’d ever had.
ven beyond turntables, Rega are on something of a roll at the moment, having updated their entire range of amplifiers in the last couple of years. Unusually, all of them, even the high end Osiris, are integrated units. Electronics designer, Terry Bateman, may have been busy, but he still finds time to leave cryptic or just plain bizarre messages on the circuit boards. The lovely Elex-R integrated amplifier was launched mid 2014. It comes between the Apollo-R and Elicit-R products. The message on the board extols the virtues of EL34 valves. Is it valve based? Nah. The Saturn DAC (with a CD player chucked in for free) matches both the Elicit and Elex visually whilst the half-width Apollo-R visually matches the Brio (above).
A year or so later, the glass plattered, basic power supplied RP8 is joined by the ceramic plattered, super-complex power supplied and better armed RP10 on a similar ‘chassis. First of all let’s get one thing out of the way: the ceramic platter will not fit on the RP8, the power supply will not plug into it and we’ve not tried swapping tonearms just to see. Sonically, it’s a lot like an 8 but images bigger, is cleaner and is more resolving. By any measure it’s the better deck. The recently revised Apheta 2 has improved things even further. Unsurprisingly, from a company who also make turntables, the in-built moving magnet phono stages in all the amps are of extremely high quality. Moving up a level, and adding access to MC cartridges, the Aria phono stage is brilliant. A superb device, with adjustable loadings spanning MM and MC. The range refresh extends right down to the headphone amplifier (called Ear, naturally) and the sub £100 Fono Mini which has a USB output, potentially handy for those wishing to copy records to digital format. The Apollo CD is terrific value and the top-loading Saturn is definitely one of the best CD players around at the price. Crumbs you even get a free A-USB DAC. Oops, sorry, it’ s the other way around. Beyond the upper level turntables, the affordable tradition is maintained with the entry point RP1, which includes a Rega Carbon cartridge, offering impressive value for money. RP3 and RP6 come further up the range and again, are high value products. The new RX speaker range is definitely hitting the spot with listeners and is always held on demonstration. They work well with other makes of electronics too. With the Couple 2 interconnect and Duet speaker cable, an all Rega system now sounds better than ever.
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or turntables, besides Rega, we have Nottingham Analogue and Linn. Great as the NA decks are, nothing new has happened, so no news to report. Linn, on the other hand, have released the Kore sub-chassis which is manufactured from an aluminum box section and has a bonded alloy arm board. It looks a lot like the keel from outside, forms the basis of a very cost-effective upgrade for existing turntables and we are more than happy to bring joy to your life! All new turntables have a version of this sub-chassis but with the standard, rather than bonded arm-board. For the more adventurous, we have the full Radikal (DC motor / power supply) and Urika (in-built phono stage) that shares the same PSU. On demonstration with LP12 decks that can be specified to any point on the Linn ladder right up to Klimax level. Ooh err. Tiger Paw make some great top plate and arm weight upgrades. It’s a long story, so best discussed, but we can demonstrate and fit these too. Latest versions of the Ekos SE arm have a slightly longer headshell, aiding fitment of non-Linn cartridges. Dynavector, Lyra, Kiseki and Transfigurations all fit and work very nicely indeed. Transfiguration? Oh yes, this has been another new cartridge brand arrival. Having got ourselves into an acquisitive frame of mind, we found it hard to draw the line. The baby of the range, Axia, is more of a direct Lyra alternative than the Kiseki. A little cleaner and more focused that the (cheaper) Lyra Delos, its particular strong suit is bass weight and control. We also have the even lovlier Phoenix and Proteus. Trade-in offer for other brands too, by the way. Turntable matching has, so far, revealed no issues and they certainly suit Linn. As always, we recommend that customers hear what they may be buying, so we are happy to establish the best product by way of demonstration. We remain keen Lyra dealers but the upsurge in turntable interest coupled with some supply shortages has made it important for us to offer a greater level of choice. One of the biggest casualties on the shortages front was the Linn Kandid (pictured above). As relative newbie dealers, we were evidently not at the front of the supply queue. With Kandid now flowing freely we can report that it is chuffing brilliant. Worth both the money and the wait. Truth be told, our traffic in turntable sales in general, servicing and updates for Linn in particular has risen dramatically over the past year or two. Andy should be qualifying for ‘Guru’ status shortly. Doctorates possibly take a little longer. Our cartridge demonstration portfolio is currently: Dynavector, Kiseki, Linn, Lyra, Ortofon, Rega, Sumiko and Transfiguration.
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iseki was a welcome new arrival in 2014. A well-established Japanese cartridge maker that suddenly released ‘New Old Stock” products followed by some differently designed New Stock (NS) ones. Andy fitted the Blue NS to our Nottingham Dais / Ace Anna combination (Trilogy 907 etc.) and we were utterly mesmerised by what we heard. Genuinely breathtaking stuff. with not just detail being dredged out of familiar recordings but real live people playing with spirit and commitment. And on instruments that themselves seemed to have more in the way of harmonics, textures and sheer musicality than we could recall hearing before. On dem for your delectation!
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ussell Kauffman and Signals go back a long way. Back in the days when we were stocking Densen and there was a tie up with Morel in Ipswich, Russell was the man. Even then, Russell was working on a number of loudspeaker designs and an abiding principle was that there should be no internal damping whatsoever. “It just blurs information, stores energy and slows things down”. It was no surprise, then, to find that, twenty odd years later, with his own company up and running, that the Red 50, Red 100 and forthcoming Red 150 speakers are all unencumbered by internal damping. And they’re good too. The Red 100 in particular is a real stunner. Or completely wacky if you opt for the Red / grey combo as we have. OK, let;s grasp the nettle of the looks. Audio design has taken precedence over aesthetics. See it as agreeable honesty. They won’t date! Throughout the range, all content is from Europe, build quality and finishing is to a high standard and there are colour and veneer options too. The smallest and cheapest speaker, the Red 50 is superb. Quite probably the best available for under £1000. The 100 costs only a little more but is far more demanding of set up and positioning. Without the bass hump that is normal with ported designs, these possess unusually high levels of transparency. You can really sense the speed, the lack of blur or confusion. There is clearly some logic in the design ethos. The new Red 150 will continue the tradition, taking over where the 100 leaves off. From a limited time hearing it, we think this will be quite remarkable at the £4k ish asking price. As they say about judging books . . .
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e have been stocking Magnepan for around four years now. The products are called Magneplanar and the model numbers have been just a little bit weird. New for 2015, the MG 12 has been replaced by the MG 0.7 and the larger MG 1.7 by the MG 1.7i. The new numbering is now at least showing some ascending logic. The MG 3.7i is pictured right and it’s fairly large. There is an MG 20.1 above that. All are incredibly thin and fairly tall planar designs, very similar in concept to electrostatics. The major difference is that, as ribbon speakers, they do not require a power source. Up to, say, the 1.7i, they are quite easy to drive too and will work well with most sensible amplifiers. From 3.7i onwards, you do need considerable heft to drive the low impedance load. There have been some surprising successes, though, with even the ‘difficult. 3.7i suiting relatively modest valve amplifiers. The new models are an evolution of what came before but they are all worthwhile progressions. These speakers have frequently sold against more expensive alternatives and there is a refreshing honesty to their delivery. They trade outright slam and bass control for a naturalness and ease that some will value above all else. Mind you, a pair of 3.7is driven a big Chord amplifier can still pack a substantial punch. September 2015 at Trinity Park, the MG 1.7i’s were considered by many to be the sound of the show.
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s mentioned overleaf, PMC products, particularly at ‘fact’ level, have proved very compatible with Linn electronics. The ultra clean ‘lifestyle’ looks of the fact series help their case too. Last summer saw the arrival of the high end fact 12 loudspeakers. Big brother to the similarly styled fact 8 and more accomplished in every way, the 12 is a three way device with PMCs superb dome midrange unit and the two deceptively muscular bass drivers working in parallel. When done well, the gains from a proper three way speaker outweigh the pitfalls of added complexity and the 12 is a very successful implementation of the design. As with all PMC products, the bass loading is Advanced Transmission Line (ATL). Tall, skinny and fairly deep, they offer Scandinavian looks and superb finish. It’s easy to dismiss a product that looks so visually appealing as being lifestyle eye candy. These are the real deal as a very serious speaker. As with all products, compatibility is the key and, whilst they suit the top end 500 series Naim electronics much better than the 8, there is still a sense, certainly in our room, that things are getting a little bit ‘dry’ at this level. Interestingly, we’ve had staggeringly good results from 500 level kit in other places, so it goes to show the need to try. Naim’s slightly looser electronics, such as NAP300, work very well indeed and our experience with Chord (SPM1200/II), Arcam A49 and Trilogy are entirely positive.
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he twenty series has been a particular success for PMC and, by extension, us. Sitting below the fact range, but sharing some of the design both technologically and visually, this range has proved easy to partner and to place. The crisp clean looks and choices of finish have made them easy to home, too. There are two stand-mounts and three floor-standers, a centre speaker and, now, an active sub too. The largest of the speakers is the twenty 26 pictured left. In producing it, PMC have created some serious competition for their own fact 8. As a proper three way design and using their own dome mid-range unit, the 26 offers impressive clarity gains over the rest of the range. Bi-amping with the latest (and much improved) Exakt-ready Linn Akurate DSM into the 4200 four channel power amp had us scratching our heads on what would actually better this system at anything approaching the cost. At our first Trinity Park show PMC played the 21 stand-mounts in their 10m x 10m (and very tall) room. They were being fed by the Rega Saturn R CD player and Brio R amplifier and it was stupidly good. Getting a big well resolved and musical sound from this range is, therefore, is more about quality than quantity. The matching sub-woofer is very good too and we have it on demonstration.
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udos have been a Signals favourite since Derek Gilligan branched out on his own in 2006. Until recently, their T88 “Titan’ was the most expensive speaker that we sold and it is also, in our opinion, one of the very best. Despite fairly controversial looks, it has been astonishingly successful for us, able to work in a wide range of rooms and systems. As with others in the range, the finish is topnotch and the potential to have exotic veneers has added to the appeal. The exciting and sad news in equal measure is that it has now been replaced by the T808 Super Titan. Pictures of the new speaker are restricted to computer renderings and snapshots at the moment, but it would be rude not to give you an idea of what is coming. Preview below! We should have a pair of the new Titans on demonstration before the end of 2015. On the left is the new X3, a compact floor-standing speaker from the other end of the range. X3 made its debut at our own Audio Show East in 2014 and has already proved to be popular choice, effectively replacing the previous stalwart of the range, the Cardea C2. The Super Ten stand-mount and Super Twenty floorstander remain popular too and, along with the new T808, are ready for use with Linn Exakt active digital crossovers. The Exakt arrangement brings a dramatic improvement in resolution, control and sheer musicality and this can now be accomplished at Linn Majik, Akurate and Klimax level. All Kudos loudspeakers, even old models, such as the C30, are Linn Space Optimisation ready. This can bring substantial improvements in room behaviour in more conventional passive use.
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lready mentioned in the Rega section but worthy of their own entry here, the Rega range of speakers have all been revised. Replacing the RS series, the new RX is a proper (upward) revision in all aspects, appearance, finish, subjective build, choice of veneer and audio quality. The only negative is that the price has risen commensurately too. In the past, they have been ignored for being too inexpensive, so even the price hike could help their case. All are on demonstration, so form an orderly queue!
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ocal loudspeakers have made a reappearance at Signals Towers. We had a frustrating relationship with them in the past because, good as they are, they never seemed quite right with Naim. And we don’t half do a lot with them! The great merger of 2012 was between these two brands and the upshot is that the new high quality, but affordable, Aria range most certainly does suit Salisbury’s finest. Not entirely surprising, since Naim was used in the development. Range comprises 906 stand-mount and 926, 936 and 948 floor stander. The future synergy between the brands looks distinctly promising and Focal Utopias are seen as the default choice for demonstrating the new Naim Statement amplification. This has now been joined by Sopra, see back page.
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eat’s Motive range, now in revised “SX” form, really has stood the test of time. All share the same 5.5” doped paper bass / mid driver and (revised) anodised inverted dome tweeter. There has been significant development work and these new products are more grown-up and refined, although perhaps just a little less ‘fun’ than before. Certainly, these changes were felt to remove the need for the previous ‘SE’ version. Their relative lack of placement sensitivity is most welcome. As before, all are clean, dynamic and musical with the sort of mid range resolution that affordable loudspeakers rarely manage to achieve. Reviews of the SX range have been positively effusive, so buyers can be reassured. The matching centre speaker remains available but only in the black oak finish. The largest, the Motive 1, previous runt of the litter, in our view anyway, is the most improved, although its fairly laid-back delivery still polarises opinion.
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o on, inject some colour into your cool but drab concrete euro pad! The new Focal Sopra series - No. 2 floor stander is pictured - is available in orange, red, white, black or walnut veneer. We wimped out and ordered the demo ones in black but, deep down, I think we should have been more radical. Suspect I can predict my wife’s reaction, though. This range, the Number 2 and smaller No. 1 stand-mount, are the latest to have been developed on Naim electronics by sister company Focal in France. ‘See these as Naim products’ was the advice. It’s true too. As with the cheaper Aria series, there is real synergy at play. These sit above Electra and take a great deal of technology from the Utopia range. The Sopra floor standers cost a little less than the cheapest Utopia, the Diablo, by the time you factor in their stands and I’d say the Sopra No 2 is the more complete speaker although the Diablo could well have the edge on absolute resolution. Where the cheaper Electras would tend to prefer that you play around with cables to aid the match with Naim electronics, these fit straight in. Fundamental build quality of the Electras is good but these are noticeably better engineered in areas such as the floor spiking and plinth design. They are also far cleaner, better behaved in the bass and more coherent. At this level, discussing value for money is a thorny matter, but these offer more than you might expect for the outlay. Best have a listen.
tel 01473 655171 + 655172 www.signals.uk.com enq@signals.uk.com