Hi All,
Thought you might be interested in this. These are measurements taken from a recent April 2007 review in a very prestigious German magazine called STEREO.
Bryston 14B SST Power Amplifier
Once more an overview of the power output:
613 watt sinusoidal per channel into eight ohms, 2 x 1437 watt momentary into four ohms at an output impedance of only 14 milliohm. With this the amp can accommodate any loudspeaker. On top of this Bryston succeeded in pairing high output with minimum distortion: .0017 to .0006 percent distortion between 50 milliwatt and 1 decibel under full output. Intermodulation distortion is barely higher: .003 to .0043 percent.
Very high signal-to-noise ratios from 99 and 79 dB. (5W/50mW) complement the positive impression. The channel separation is an exorbitant 90 dB. at ten kilohertz, and that with both powerhouses in one cabinet. How do the Canadians accomplish this?
Bryston BP26MC Preamplifier
With the distortion measurements our analyzer primarily spit out zeros. Hence with .03, .3, and 1 volt output distortion amounted to .0027, .0003, and .0002 percent.
Even with intermodulation distortion under the same conditions hardly more could be obtained, i.e. .0065, .0012, and .0011 percent. Superb!
The unweighted signal-to-noise ratios of 95 and 74 dB with .3 and .03 volt are impeccable. For the phono stage with .3 volt it was still 81 (MM), and 58 dB (MC). All input values are appropriate for their use.
High channel separation of 70 dB, very minute tracking differences of the volume control potentiometer from .3 dB down to -60 dB. We measured damping between input and output signals at 81 dB. The idle power consumption is about 15 watts, and the output impedance 72 ohms.
Impressive
james