Wow. over a 100 veiws and only one comment.
Thanks for commenting CAB, let me address your post:
I am puzzled by this review. In fact, given what the reviewer did, he likely did the 9B SST-2 an injustice.
Injustice?
Do you mean I did the amp injustice, or you, the reader, injustice by not comparing the amplifier to more amplifiers?
If it is the former, then I am truly puzzled, and confused by your usage of the word. If it is the latter, then I can understand. While it would be most advantages for the reader to hear and read of comparisons to plenty of other amplifiers, in this case it was not possible as I was unable to procure more amplifier samples in a timely manor, nor would I have been able to accurately compare them due to time and logistic constraints. As such I used what I had on hand to make my comparisons.
Maybe next time I will not tell the other manufactures that i have a Bryston amp for comparison...
I have heard the Denon 4308 while comparison-shop against the Marantz 8300. We were searching for our first HT gear set-up then. The Denon 4308 sounded worse than the 8300. The sound was hard, lacks details, mid-range was not rich, micro-dynamics were lacking, general dynamics were lacking, just not a good cohesive sounding amplifier. The 8300 was much better with fuller richer midrange, airier highs and better controlled low end. It was less hard on my ears.
Interesting results. Was your listening session done with your speakers, in your room with your gear and your music? Did you have ample time to audition both products equally and for sufficient length? Your results tell me that you preferred the sound of the Marantz over the Denon.
The 8300 cannot compared against the older 9B SST (not squared). The 9B SST offers beautiful airier highs, dense images, hugh soundstage, with some front to back layering and superb clarity when compared against the 8300. The 9B is seamless top to bottom. Its silent background means our ears never ring. I cannot say the same for the 4308 nor the 8300. The 8300 sounded like a high-quality mass-produced amp while the 9B SST sounded like a high-end performer.
Again, quite interesting. I personally have never found the Denon to be 'noisy', to cause my ears to ring or have a small soundstage. And in my comparisons between the Denon, the Bryston and a Rotel amplifier I did not experience any of the huge differences you mention. Nor have I ever heard those kind of differences in any amplifier comparison done in a controlled session.
This review lost me completely when it says that the 9B is not much different than the Denon's built-in amplifier? In that case, I will point to the pre-amplifier section, possibly poorer upstream components, may be poorer cables? Speaker resolution?
I am getting the feeling that you have mis-intrepted my comments. What I wrote was:
I did not notice a life-changing difference going from the Denon’s built-in amps to the Bryston, nor did I notice a significant output difference.
Now, it seems to me that you read this to be :
there was no difference.
Sure there was a difference.
Was it significant?
No.
Was it astonishing?
No.
Was it an Epiphany?
No.
I have never found such amazing differences between components (other than speakers) in all my years of reviewing and listening. I just simply do not hear these life changing improvements going from Amp A to Amp B that other subjective writers write about. What I did notice was minor, subtle differences.
I must say this, I am glad to hear I did not lose you until the end!

I have compared the 9B to Audio Research VT200 MKII and the 9B equals that amplifier in many areas except in the lowest micro dynamics. The 9B beats the vintage plain VT200 (no upgrades) hands down. How is it possible that the 9B is no different than the Denon's amplifier section?
Again, you took my words out of context.
The ARC VT's killed the Denon and the Marantz in our audition. We did not even exploit balanced connectors because neither the Denon nor the Marantz had true differential set-up so everything was done single-ended.
This is one strange review.
In then end, I enjoyed my time with the Bryston, it powered a full MartinLogan electrostatic 5.0 speaker system without a single issue. Perhaps my reviewing philosophy and personal experiences are just not the same as yours. To each his own, thank you for your frank and candid reply.
Jared Rachwalski