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Thanks for the heads up. I read the review and it was complementary, saying the Mk.2. bettered the original version.
Congrats on the review. FWIW, I didn't read the wordy verbose syrupy comments by M.Fremer except for the conclusions The most important part of the review in my opinion, were the measurements And from that standpoint, it's very well designed as should be expected from Roger. It's also very sanely priced for a product of its caliber. Kudos!Anand.
'The CJ amp measures well for a traditional tube amp.' And double the tubes (as well as over double the cost!) for only 25 more watts/channel I also very much appreciate all the info you put into your Manufacturer Comment.Thanks and congrats on the review!
RogerEver thought about monos of the same design?Mark
Thanks for your comment. I do try to expand on the review rather than the usual "gee, thanks for your nice review"I was pleased to see the Conrad review in the same issue. The reviewer had a lot of problems from failed tubes and difficult grounding. Upon thinking about it, has CJ ever broken any new ground or do we have just another tube amp here?
Most of the vintage c-j amps I've heard are traditional circuits with some boutique parts mixed in. Nothing special. I was a little shocked at how much they want for the monoblocks tested in the magazine. RM-200 has pretty much the same power level and looks nicer too! For half the price.
The RM-300 is a mono amp, 300 watts each all hand wired, all tube driver. I usually don't think of monoblocks till the power and weight get to the point where splitting in two chassis makes sense.
Can you use KT-120 in the RM-300?