![]() |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
Hi guys,
I was auditioning some lovely Mcintosh amplifiers this weekend and came across a sales guy commenting "Mark Levinson amplifers are just overrated peice of yuppy trash". I know that all the top-of-line Lexus models carry MLs. But car stereo systems don't mean much to me. High-end 2-channel home audio does ;-) Any comments would be very much appreciated. Cheers Max |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
On 14 Jan 2007 14:36:54 -0800, "max graff" wrote:
Hi guys, I was auditioning some lovely Mcintosh amplifiers this weekend and came across a sales guy commenting "Mark Levinson amplifers are just overrated peice of yuppy trash". I know that all the top-of-line Lexus models carry MLs. But car stereo systems don't mean much to me. High-end 2-channel home audio does ;-) Any comments would be very much appreciated. Cheers Max Are you looking for genuinely good performance or just bragging rights? If the former, buy pretty much anything that takes your fancy; buy on the basis of offering you the right kind and number of inputs, and power to suit your needs. If your room or speakers are particularly dire you might want to include a set of tone controls. The result will be indistinguishable from the best of high end amplifiers, and a great deal better than a good number of them, which have put cosmetics before design competence. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"max graff" wrote in message
oups.com Hi guys, I was auditioning some lovely Mcintosh amplifiers this weekend and came across a sales guy commenting "Mark Levinson amplifers are just overrated peice of yuppy trash". As if Mcintosh would never sell any of their seemingly less overpriced products to any yuppy with the coinage and the desire. I know that all the top-of-line Lexus models carry MLs. A simple case of branding by Harmon International, who own the name. Mark himself has lost the rights to both his name and his sexy wife, the author. But car stereo systems don't mean much to me. High-end 2-channel home audio does ;-) What means more to you, sound quality or bragging rights? Any comments would be very much appreciated. Well, these are "any comments". ;-) |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
Arny Krueger wrote:
"max graff" wrote in message oups.com Hi guys, I was auditioning some lovely Mcintosh amplifiers this weekend and came across a sales guy commenting "Mark Levinson amplifers are just overrated peice of yuppy trash". As if Mcintosh would never sell any of their seemingly less overpriced products to any yuppy with the coinage and the desire. I know that all the top-of-line Lexus models carry MLs. A simple case of branding by Harmon International, who own the name. Mark himself has lost the rights to both his name and his sexy wife, the author. But car stereo systems don't mean much to me. High-end 2-channel home audio does ;-) What means more to you, sound quality or bragging rights? Any comments would be very much appreciated. Well, these are "any comments". ;-) In my view, both the statements in the Subject line are true for most "high-end" equipment. As Don said, as far as sound quality goes, almost any modern piece of electronics will sound the same when you don't know the brand. Buy on facilities and looks, as hopefully you'll be living with it a long time. Having said that, high-end equipment isn't just about performance, looks and build-quality come into it a great deal. ML equipment, as is Krell, MF, Audio Research etc etc are very well built, perform superbly, are well engineered and therefore are "good". They have achieved Brand values that allows them to charge premium prices which other brands can't. I remember years ago Sony, Technics, JVC and others had a "premium" range selling at similar prices to other High-End brands and which I'm sure was just as good, but very few shops carried them and enthusiasts shunned them. Their Brand just couldn't carry the price. So the earlier advice seems sound. There's nothing wrong with ML, and they are well built etc, *but* performance-wise, you can get the same for a *lot* less money. S. |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"Bob Latham" wrote in message
There you go. Now tell me I'm an idiot without a clue and all amplifiers sound the same and the dealer stitched up my mate. Actually, if that's what you're going to say, save yourself the bother. As usual Bob, you've missed the point of 1,000s of posts on the topic. Your error was not that you were ignorance of the well-known fact that all amps sound the same, because that is not a well-known fact. In fact your statement about amps sounding the same is a straw man that you regurgitated so that you could premptively dismiss anybody who disagreed with you on the grounds that good amps probably don't sound all that different. No, the problem is that you base a far-reaching claim on so-called listening tests that were probably utter crap. They appear to be utter crap because there is no indication of proper level-matching, no indication of any checks to see that the amps are proper representatives of their make and model, and above all, no indication of any bias controls. Speaking as someone that has done more level-matched, bias-controlled comparisons of audio products, over a longer period of time than almost any living human, I'm here to say that good amps just might sound a little different under certain critical circumstances, but that the kind of differences you have listed out are no doubt due to the slapdash means you seem to use to compare amplifiers. Garbage in, garbage out! |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"Bob Latham" Right so at the demo I had no way of knowing what the gain of the amplifiers were and so we employed a sound pressure meter and a 1kHz CD test tone. I'm sure the sound levels were within a db or perhaps at worst 2db. ** A TOTALLY crap test. You are NOT sure of such an error margin with a ****wit test like that. In any case, even + /- 0.5 dB level error will sway a listener's opinion. But having done all of this, what are you supposed to do? ** Use basic scientific method - of course. That is the only way humans have EVER learned a single damn thing about anything. YOUR idea of " science " is the same as witchcraft and black magic. Easy or see you goofed off majorly in all the hard science classes. ****WIT !! ........ Phil |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
Phil Allison wrote:
"Bob Latham" Right so at the demo I had no way of knowing what the gain of the amplifiers were and so we employed a sound pressure meter and a 1kHz CD test tone. I'm sure the sound levels were within a db or perhaps at worst 2db. ** A TOTALLY crap test. You are NOT sure of such an error margin with a ****wit test like that. In any case, even + /- 0.5 dB level error will sway a listener's opinion. But having done all of this, what are you supposed to do? ** Use basic scientific method - of course. That is the only way humans have EVER learned a single damn thing about anything. YOUR idea of " science " is the same as witchcraft and black magic. Easy or see you goofed off majorly in all the hard science classes. ****WIT !! ....... Phil I just realised that Phil's posts make far more sense if you picture the old South Park bus driver while reading them. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ms._Veronica_Crabtree :-) -- Nick |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"Serge Auckland" wrote As Don said, as far as sound quality goes, almost any modern piece of electronics will sound the same when you don't know the brand. Buy on facilities and looks, as hopefully you'll be living with it a long time. Having said that, high-end equipment isn't just about performance, looks and build-quality come into it a great deal. ML equipment, as is Krell, MF, Audio Research etc etc are very well built, perform superbly, are well engineered and therefore are "good". They have achieved Brand values that allows them to charge premium prices which other brands can't. I remember years ago Sony, Technics, JVC and others had a "premium" range selling at similar prices to other High-End brands and which I'm sure was just as good, but very few shops carried them and enthusiasts shunned them. Their Brand just couldn't carry the price. So the earlier advice seems sound. There's nothing wrong with ML, and they are well built etc, *but* performance-wise, you can get the same for a *lot* less money. The demise of 'famous names' in the face of steep competition isn't restricted to hifi gear. I believe it's the inevitable consequence of manufacturers try to retain a significant percentage of the available market without fully understanding the radical changes needed to be able to keep up ('parts bin/existing designs' thinking for a start). The question is are companies like ML and Krell in a healthy position? If so, I don't see any problem - not everyone is impoverished scum and not everyone wants their converted lofts/penthouses/yachts sullied with the *cheapest* kit that'll get the job done.... (Unlike me, but then my kit isn't trying to be *furniture* or trying to impress anybody other than by its *sound*....) Having said that, I am nearing the end of my own 'audio quest' and have proved I can get a pretty good sound from fairly basic kit and some homebrew - any changes in the future are likely to be of an 'upward' nature to kit that has a degree of 'aesthetic appeal', some twinkly bits and mebbe a few nice, blue LEDs.... :-) Remotes are good also.... |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"Bob Latham" wrote Okay, I know I'll regret this but...... In October 2004 a guy at work asked me about a surround sound amplifier. He already knew I was a Kef,Meridian,Arcam kind of guy and so was not surprised when I suggested the Arcam amp. Not the P7/AV8 that I have but one more in his price range. Now being less convinced that all amps are perfect and sound the same I did suggest he listened to it before buying. I arranged a demo with a dealer that I used for 20 years and they agreed with me that the Arcam was very good. We turned up on the Saturday morning and listened and it sounded fine. Then the dealer said we have a Denon in the same price bracket, it has more bells and whistles though. We tried that. I think all 3 of us were surprised by the result. The Denon was quite a bit more punchy and dynamic than the Arcam, so much so that we needed to check both amps had the same settings and configuration and *volume* which we set with an admittedly cheap and nasty sound pressure level meter. Dave (work guy) and I would each have put money on taking home the Arcam but no, the Denon lives at his house. No suprise there - Denon make some nice amps (I've got one) and offer far better 'bang for your buck' than certain pricey English makes from what I can see of it. One major appeal to me is that the Denon's phono stage seems to be pretty good (for SS) - better than the dull and weedy NAD and ProJect cheepie standalones, IME...... |
Mark Levinson - are they good or just over rated
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Bob Latham" wrote in message There you go. Now tell me I'm an idiot without a clue and all amplifiers sound the same and the dealer stitched up my mate. Actually, if that's what you're going to say, save yourself the bother. As usual Bob, you've missed the point of 1,000s of posts on the topic. Your error was not that you were ignorance of the well-known fact that all amps sound the same, because that is not a well-known fact. In fact your statement about amps sounding the same is a straw man that you regurgitated so that you could premptively dismiss anybody who disagreed with you on the grounds that good amps probably don't sound all that different. No, the problem is that you base a far-reaching claim on so-called listening tests that were probably utter crap. They appear to be utter crap because there is no indication of proper level-matching, no indication of any checks to see that the amps are proper representatives of their make and model, and above all, no indication of any bias controls. Speaking as someone that has done more level-matched, bias-controlled comparisons of audio products, over a longer period of time than almost any living human, I'm here to say that good amps just might sound a little different under certain critical circumstances, but that the kind of differences you have listed out are no doubt due to the slapdash means you seem to use to compare amplifiers. Garbage in, garbage out! Ay oop, mind yer backs - Arny's trying to wipe his recently-endowed 'slapdash' bogey off....!! :-) |
All times are GMT. The time now is 04:24 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk