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But to the engineers at DIYaudio, the LDR is anything but a transparent device. Even with a perfect level controlling adjustable power supply, the LDR is an inherently high distortion device.
Are there not always early adopters for anything and are they always wrong? The only reason I see to be skeptical about these Ncores is if you have a spent a lot of money on amps, especially recently. Because now you are permanently locked in. They might say skepticism, I would say denial. Clearly, if you've read what's available so far, including that thread, and the now several credible user reports, it is not hard to draw the conclusion that these are what they are. I honestly feel very bad for people with very expensive amps, and for whom money is a critical issue, because as word continues to get out about these, and it is reasonable to assume that reviews will continue to be in the same vein, those people will not be able to re-sell their old amps for anything close to what they think they should get. Give it six months. It's pretty painless for me, I'm moving up from a Virtue Two. But certain others commenting here, sure, they're skeptical as hell. I'm skeptical as to whether they realize it's very likely possible their $10,000 amps just became a $1000 amps, or less, overnight. There is the diy aspect to it, and that is probably somewhat a saving grace.... For the time being at least.
Class D will find its way into the main stream and will be a viable product and will augment what is already established and rooted.Jim
Not everyone wants to assemble their own DIY Ncore amp. I wonder what are legal liabilities for a store that buys and assembles DIY Ncore for sale? $3k for two state of the art mono blocks seems like a reasonable price. Maybe a couple hours of assembly total. IIRC two of Dusty's CI Audio 200W pre-Ncore Hypex based monos are about $4k.
Not everyone wants to assemble their own DIY Ncore amp. I wonder what are legal liabilities for a store that buys and assembles DIY Ncore for sale?
...If the Ncore matches and beats top of the line, nobody in their right mind will pay huge dollars for an amp. Common sense...
Even if these new Ncore amps were perfect they would not be appropriate for everyones system for the simple reason that virtually everyone has a combination of non-linear components. The hoped for final result involves a series of haphazard zigs and zags that ends in a system one is satisfied in listening to. If the amp IS closer to a straight wire with gain some people with a more linear combination of gear may find it a big improvement over what they are currently using. For other people it will reveal everything that is wrong with their up stream components. Non-linear amplifiers will never go out of style because the rest of the chain up-stream from them will always contain a mix components with their own set of problems that need to be compensated for in some way.Scotty
Someone is still green behind the ears. But weren't we all at some point!Jim