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$15,495
If Ncore achieves even a good percent of its promised performance it is the biggest audiophile bargain of all time, and will make its place in audiophile history.
The operative word is "If"Jim
Ray, Cost is one of several reasons I chose Ncore over Aksa. Two Aksa NAKSA 100 channels (two Aksa boards, one transformer, chassis) cost $2k+, same as 3x Ncore amps + 3x SMPS600. I estimate about $4500 for 3x Aksa mono mono blocks. But if I had three NAKSA 100s sitting here now I'd be happy and would never directly compare another amp unless I had money to upgrade. Ncore my be my final amps. Suitable high-performance amps have been the worst thorn in my audiophile journey. If Ncore achieves even a good percent of its promised performance it is the biggest audiophile bargain of all time, and will make its place in audiophile history.
Ray, Yes, I've got one stereo Naksa 100, and it's awesome, fantastic. Being a Trinaural devote, I need three amp channels. I have a 3-ch 120W YBA-designed Audio Refinement Multi-3 with a few barely-invasive upgrades. You probably missed my earlier notes: in stereo the Naksa wipes the floor with YBA, steals/eats YBA's lunch, dates YBA's sister against YBAs wishes, etc...yet, Trinaural is so much superior to stereo, that I much prefer Trinaural-YBA L/C/R over Naksa-stereo L/R (Trinaural bypassed). There are three identical monitors across the front (actually six, two per channel, in a unique ambiance array about which I will post images and describe after I finish the stands) + four distributed sub array. Stereo input/10-speaker 3.1 output! Whoopee! Interestingly, for reasons about which I can only speculate, in Trinaural, Naksa-center/YBA L-R is almost unlistenable, while conversely, Naksa L-R/YBA center works very well, much better than YBA L/C/R. Go figure.
I had a Fisher Tube receiver back in the 70's that I rescued from a Pawn Shop in City of Torrance, CA that had a center channel. It was pretty fun...I had a pair of JBL L100's with the center channel being a JBL L66. For the life of me, I cannot recall the model designation...Jim
I have never in my life spent money like this sound-unheard.
Funny. I've done the same thing. And sold my usual amp as well. This weird behavior has been based, in part, upon my experience with a little ICE 125ASX2 amp. Having owned a much earlier class D amp, the ICE convinced me class D in general has turned a corner. Of course, the best implementations of ICE include custom input stages and power regulation. No one seems to say that the ICE can stand on its own to reach an audiophile standard. On the other hand, that is exactly what folks are saying about the Ncore. That got my attention. And they are comparing it with some very nice amps. If you chat with these folks they will say things like "my buddy has an xxxx (amp I could never afford) and he just bought the Ncore after hearing mine." And "I had a xxx (amp known to cause euphoria in audiophiles) and the Ncore just replaced it." So, yes, do be cautious and wait for the reports to come in. That only makes sense. But let the early adopters do their thing in the face of logic. Phil
Here's what Bruno had to say about attenuators. I don't have a clue what he's talking about, others here will."A pot as the feedback network around in inverting op amp circuit is the cleanest analogue volume control you can make. One I made with a 9mm car audio pot sounds completely transparent and with a decent op amp distortion is unmeasurable at all useful gain settings. For high input impedance, add an input buffer. For balanced input, make that an instrumentation amp. Actually the input circuit is more difficult to get right (as in "inaudible and unmeasurable") than the volume control section." - post 2939, with discussion and Q & A following.
Ray,Check the huge DIY audio thread. Some there think LDRs aren't a great match with the ncore.
Hi, Well, how about this idea of the Ncore amp, and choose your design, such as the Optocoupler discussed in the cheap and cheerful circle. Add one of those babies, the amp, a good source, good speeks of your choice, and you're set for life. That system will be hard to beat at any price.Ray Bronk