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A few things. First, Roger is very much interested in manufacturing. He has hired a team of people to address these needs. Myself included. We have more RM-10s, RM-200s, and RM-9SEs in stock now than has been the case in a long while. Now that we have a manufacturing arm and someone to run the tube store, Roger can do what he does best and design. There is a new headphone amp coming out this year, and probably a few more surprises. Second, all transformers are now wound in house. With Roger heavily involved in the process. Roger's time and expertise is worth something, and as such costs rise. The operation is now in East Bay in Northern CA. Roger no longer runs the operation out of his house, he leases space. This costs money. The new personnel involved in the process need to be paid. This costs money. I think by now you get the point.Finally, a dealer network is being formed. I don't have to go into details on this. Dealers need to make money too. There are now two versions of the RM-10, although for how long I do not know. There is the original 35 watt MKII that now sports the in house transformers and a new chassis, as well as a 25 watt version with just 8 ohms taps that does not require the user to set the bias. Some of the 25 watt versions may be available for the old price of $3495. I would need to see how many we have left.I hope that clarifies some things. Roger's designs have always been creative and well thought out, reliable, and among the best in their class. They were quite frankly under priced for many years, and some of the pricing had never been updated for many years. For those that got in on the ground floor or found Music Reference or Beveridge gear on the used market relish in the thought you got a great deal.
Thanks Clio for clarifying all of that. I did not mean to pass on any misinformation. I had read that he preferred resistor based volume pots for passive volume control and that the RM-10mkII has 35db of gain which is 10db more than the average amp. I use a Slagle AVC with it and it's an awesome combination. I had read about the ESL-57 being his reference for the amp, which I forgot about, so thanks for reminding me. I was just trying to figure out why the price jumped so dramatically where nothing on the website indicated why? I just gathered from reading interviews with him where he stated he preferred to focus on the "design process" rather than the "manufacturing process", along with his relocation, that he decided to do more personal and custom work. Due to lack of information that is not a giant assumption. As a customer of hi-fi, it does not send a good message to not alter anything except for the price on the website. At least put some indication of a restructuring or news about new product development. I hope that you would take this with some objectivity, as I hope Roger will as well. I try my hardest every day to support California businesses because that is where I was born and live. I would hope that in the age of direct sales, like Schiit, and rapid global competition, that this awareness of the old way of hi-fi is dead, would be beneficial.But I digress, I am glad that you clarified the process and that you are also involved with the resurgence. I read a lot of your posts that convinced me to buy a RM-10, which I thank you for.