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I was/am in the same boat.Needed to get a three channel amp.I counted out the Bryston because I am lead to believe it won't drive electrostats.Thought about the new Parasound.I am now thinking of three monoblocks.I am impressed with the Cherries, there is a new review out on them, here is the link:http://www.dagogo.com/View-Article.asp?hArticle=1113However DAC have a brand new amplifier coming out soon which is called the Maraschino.It looks to be quite impressive so I am waiting to see how it turns out.If you must have a three channel amp there are not many of them around.Bruce
They are listed as 91db/w in-room with a minimum 4ohm impedence and a maximum RMS of 300W.Anything over 600w @8ohm is likely useless (that's twice the max rated power, or +3db)Determine the max SPL that you are interested in, compute the required wattage, add in a fudge factor, and you are good to go.Guessing at your budget: I'd get http://shop.emotiva.com/collections/amplifiers/products/xpr5 and run all 5 speakers off it.
Thanks. While there's definitely more power in the Emotiva, I'm not sure the sound would really be an upgrade. My budget can definitely be higher than the Emotiva, and I was actually thinking of getting an Emotiva 2 channel for my surround channels if I got a 3 channel for the fronts.
I spoke to Mr Russell at a HIFi show last year and he told me the five channel Brystons were definately unsuitable for electrostats & recommended either the monoblocks or the super high powered stereo amp.He led me to believe that it was due to the capacitive load presented to the amp rather than the low impedence.If you cannot cope with monoblocks I really suggest you look at the Parasound Halo three channel amp, its a three channel version of their two and five channel amps and has a great pedigree and I thought that it was great value for money.Hope that helps.Bruce
If I were buying a 3-channel ~300WPC amp and price was not my concern: I'd grab http://www.mcintoshlabs.com/us/Products/pages/ProductDetails.aspx?CatId=Amplifiers&ProductId=MC303
You could also get Butler's hybrid 3 channel amp. Gives you a bit of tube sound, but with some SS grip. http://www.butleraudio.com/tdb3150.phpThey also have a 5 channel model:http://www.butleraudio.com/tdb5150.php
Since stereo is the main goal, why not a killer stereo amp, and then add a reasonable 3 channel for center and rears?Just a thought
Ok. Yamaha P-series: only two-channel (and requires manual on/off).McIntosh: Too bigEmotiva: not a big enough name.3-channel + 300w is a tall enough order. Size + brand issues?http://www.parasound.com/nc/5250v2.php
And while I appreciate the Butler recommendations, I'd like to stay away from tubes.