I think it's a great choice for your needs it should pair well with the speakers and delivery what you want.Bought the Marantz PM7000N on discount.
I think it's a great choice for your needs it should pair well with the speakers and delivery what you want.Bought the Marantz PM7000N on discount.
I'm in the have more than you need camp. In our home office/gym I use a pair of monoblocks that do 1kW/ch at 4ohms. They don't even get warm lol. Plus, all wattage ratings are not the same since so many use the ILS (if lightning strikes) ratings these days.That's an even more contentious and conflict ridden conversation than this one, lmao!!![]()
Agreed! You can never have too much power, that's why I suggested he grab that Bryston amp, since it's a killer deal for a very capable piece of equipment.I'm in the have more than you need camp. In our home office/gym I use a pair of monoblocks that do 1kW/ch at 4ohms. They don't even get warm lol. Plus, all wattage ratings are not the same since so many use the ILS (if lightning strikes) ratings these days.
How is this connected? What preamp output on the Marantz?If you have it in the budget, I'd still recommend grabbing that Bryston amp, just because it's an incredible deal. You can use the Marantz as a pre+DAC combo (how I use my Denon) and can add a separate phono stage later on if you feel the urge (which you probably will).
Ewwwww, it doesn't have pre-amp outs... that's not good. That really limits what you can do with it.How is this connected? What preamp output on the Marantz?
Phono stage I get. Totally separate
No worries. I think I will be fine and if this doesn’t cut it I’ll live with it until I hit the pot o goldEwwwww, it doesn't have pre-amp outs... that's not good. That really limits what you can do with it.
My X4200W has a whole family of pre-outs, I just assumed it would have at least front outs:
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Absolutely true at the lower endAudio-video or home theater units are not built for best audio quality, if best sound quality is objective then skip AV and HT units. You will get stuck with AV units if you need more than 2 audio channels thou.
Did you grab the Ref Premier 600M when on clearance for $350 a pair?Probably so, but later when I get “more” speaker.
The mid to upper end units typically have a pretty decent DAC and the SQ is good when piped into a quality amp to feed the mains, provided you turn off all the room tuning voodoo designed for the home theatre stuff. For analogue, particularly phono, a dedicated high quality pre or phono stage is really a necessity, as it's an afterthought on this stuff. My Denon does a fantastic job with digital sources and is convenient for AirPlay. It's phono stage is complete trash, which is why I run a separate higher end pre with a quality one.Audio-video or home theater units are not built for best audio quality, if best sound quality is objective then skip AV and HT units. You will get stuck with AV units if you need more than 2 audio channels thou.
No on the speakers unfortunatelyDid you grab the Ref Premier 600M when on clearance for $350 a pair?
I am also working on improving our TV sound. Just stereo mixdown. Got some clearance Martin Logan bookshelf's cheap and an ARCAM SA10 on clearance for $499. Not convinced about the ARCAM - Logan pairing.
I would prefer a REGA Elicit R, but hey, its for the stupid TV and my Wife watching Britbox murder mysteries with semi-intelligibe dialogue, Lol.
We both have hearing loss so the shelved up tweeter response on the Martin Logans will be beneficial to virtually unnoticeable (when above 10kHz,)
All of the new goodies are still in the box after a month has gone by. Can't get too enthused. Never heard good sound from Toshiba fibre link PCM and it's all I got for S/Pdif. Boo Hoo. Our little but brilliant Samsung LCD display is old and doesn't support a digital ARC.
p.s. Maybe if you are lucky the Marantz phono stage will have discrete FET/Bi circuitry (or HDAM2) rather than the usual one dollar op-amp implementation.
good listening!
If you decide to get a dedicated phono stage, the monolithic one I posted holds its value really well for consumer electronics. They rarely come up for sale used so command prices close to new units. Even 10-15yr old ones are still in the 50-65% of new prices.No on the speakers unfortunately
I probably should have asked on the Marantz phono stage
Sansui 5000 FTW!! I'm showing my age!I'd also mention Denon and Onkyo that have good amps and recievers, Onkyo is updating their line lately with better units too.
If open to buying vintage, Sansui has a few excellent units.
That Outlaw reciever has very good reviews, has good number of inputs.
Yes the 101 were very, very good little boxes, I recall even better than the highly regarded LS 3/5a standard location mobile monitor. I have a pair of their bigger brother, the Reference 103.2 200mm 2-way. The crossovers gave up the ghost - some odd corrosion and shorting. I may just part them out as the hand poured and spun bextrene bass-mid driver is getting impossible to come by.The Brits make (or at least made) great speakers. I have a pair of vintage KEF 101s. They're terrific bookshelf speakers. They were built for the BBC as studio speakers. If you added a sub you would have the complete package.
When I was looking for a sub about 35 years ago I couldn't find one that didn't interfere with the KEFs, so we splurged on the (admittedly huge) Mirage M1s to get adequate base. If we could have gotten a modern sub at that time we probably would have stuck with the KEFs.
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Thanks for the comments. Seems to me the KEF 101s are actually a high quality version of LS 3/5a. They have gorgeous high and mid ranges and not such great bass. KEF 101s along with a high quality sub would be a very presentable combination. That's pretty good going for a bookshelf speaker. You still find them for sale as used vintage equipment.Yes the 101 were very, very good little boxes, I recall even better than the highly regarded LS 3/5a standard location mobile monitor.
KEF Reference 101
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