October 4, 2009: Part 2
All prices in US dollars unless otherwise noted.
Wadia was playing a prototype of their new 971 reference CD
transport (estimated $10,000 to $15,000 when available at the end of 2009). According to
Wadia's John Schaeffer, this flagship disc spinner features several important technical
advances The 971 incorporates what Schaffer says is a "huge" buffer that stores
the digital data after it is read from the disc. The DAC the 971 is connected to then
controls the clocking of the data from the transport for what is reportedly very good
jitter rejection. The 971 also features two user-selectable dither options and a
power-factor-corrected power supply. [www.wadia.com]
The RC2000S preamplifier is the newest product from the
Jaton Corporation. This full-featured linestage is notable for its internal
digital-to-analog converter and unique method of signal processing: the RC2000S derives a
dedicated subwoofer channel from incoming analog or digital signals and allows the
listener to drive a powered subwoofer from the
LFE output on the rear panel. The RC2000S also has two sets of main outputs making
biamping loudspeakers possible without a splitter. Jaton estimates the price will be $1500
when available next month. [www.jatonhp.com]
Do you like your loudspeakers big or really big?
Frances Focal displayed their flagship Grande Utopia EM right next to the Utopia III
lines newest member, the significantly smaller Maestro Utopia. Whereas the Grande
Utopia EM costs $180,000 per pair, the Maestro is only $50,000 per pair. The
Maestro is a three-and-half-way design featuring two "W" 11" woofers, a
6.5" "Power Flower" midrange, and a 1" pure-beryllium-dome tweeter.
The Maestro is said to deliver bass down to 25Hz (+/-3dB) and is available now.
The Dynaudio Consequence loudspeaker was originally
introduced back in 1984. The speaker was reborn in 2009 in a similar form factor but with
wholly updated technology and design elements. This 2009 Consequence Ultimate Edition
costs $70,000 per pair and is a five-way design that is configured a bit differently than
most speakers. At the top of the multi-module cabinet structure are two compound-loaded
12" drivers (which is why you only see one woofer), and below them are the midbass,
midrange, upper midrange, and tweeter drivers, in that order. Its not everyday that
you see a tweeter that close to the floor, but, then again, that's what helps to
make the Consequence a truly unique design.
Germanys Valvet introduced their compact monoblock
power amplifiers, the A3.5s ($4990 per pair). These little "bricks," as the
company calls them, are rated to produce 50W of class-A power. The power supply consists
of a 300VA transformer and 100,000 microfarads of capacitance for plenty of headroom.
Synergistic Researchs new Galileo product line may
well be the most expensive cables in the world and were the topic of several conversations
around RMAF -- at these prices, they garner an opinion of one sort or another from just
about everyone. One run of speaker cables consists of many individual cables and a
couple components. Most obvious are the Galileo
"boxes" that contain Synergistic's proprietary active-shielding technology,
then there are the cables that run between the boxes that Synergistic calls
"strings" and then more cables run from the amp to the first box, and then from
the second box to the loudspeaker. These "actively shielded" cables are priced
at $40,000 for a pair of speaker cables and $25,000 for a pair of interconnects. If you
get one set of speaker cables and two sets of interconnects, which is the minimum number
of cables for most systems, that's $90,000! Not for the feint of wallet, thats for
sure.