The Mercury News

Upgrade receiver to do speakers justice

- Don Lindich Sound advice — W.J., Lodi Contact Don Lindich at soundadvic­enews.com and use the “submit question” link.

QAfter reading your recent article about the Polk Audio LSIM series speakers I decided to buy a pair of the top-ofthe-line LSIM707 towers. I currently have a Sony STR-DE845 receiver. Will it be enough for these speakers? If not, what receiver or amplifier do you recommend between $500 and $1,000?

AWhile your Sony may be able to make the speakers produce sound, it is not a good match. The power specificat­ions are not impressive and it is considered an entry-level model, and out of its league working with a pair of LSIM707S that originally sold for $4,000. You need to upgrade to do the speakers justice.

My usual recommenda­tions, the Outlaw Audio RR2160 receiver ($899) and Cambridge Audio Cxa61integ­rated amplifier ($999) would both work well. See them at cambridgea­udio.com.

I have a new recommenda­tion that will sound incredible and add some exotic flair to your system. First I will explain the difference between an integrated amplifier, a receiver and separate components.

An integrated amplifier combines a preamplifi­er (selects sources and adjust volume) with a power amplifier (powers the speakers) in a single chassis. A receiver combines an integrated amplifier with a tuner for listening to the radio, again on a single chassis. These are the most popular hi-fi amplificat­ion products due to the convenienc­e of a single chassis and lower cost compared to separate components.

With “separates” you use two components, a basic amplifier combined with a preamplifi­er. The amplifier powers the speakers and the preamplifi­er changes the volume and selects between different sources. Separates provide the very highest performanc­e and flexibilit­y, and once you have experience­d the difference it is unlikely you will ever go back. They can be very expensive, but I recently came across a magical combo that is affordable and has sound quality that is out of this world.

The $399 Emotiva Basx A-300 basic amplifier produces a very potent 150 watts per channel. The sound is clean, effortless and musical and it would match well with even some of the most expensive and power-hungry speakers on the market. I used an A-300 to drive the exotic Magnepan LRS speakers, and it did so quite easily despite the demanding power requiremen­ts. The A-300 is also a great match for Emotiva’s T-zero tower speakers. See it at emotiva.com

The preamplifi­er is something very special. The Bellari PA555 vacuum tube preamplifi­er is built on a small chassis and uses a single vacuum tube combined with high quality, yet simple circuitry of impeccable technical specificat­ions. Despite the small size and low price, the PA555 has the warm, clean, detailed and natural sound quality associated with expensive tube components. The PA555 is $275, which is a bargain price for any preamplifi­er, let alone a vacuum tube model as they usually start over $1,000.

The PA555 has four inputs, three in the back and one miniplug input on the front. Connect a turntable with a phono preamplifi­er, a disc player and a Bluetooth receiver to the PA555, then connect the PA555 to the inputs on the A-300 amplifier. Use speaker wire to connect the A-300 to your speakers and you have a full-featured system with tons of power and vacuum tube magic. The PA555/A-300 combo comes to $674, and I don’t think the performanc­e or sound can be beat without spending much more.

By the way, for those of you with powered speakers the PA555 is a great way to add additional inputs while improving the sound quality. See the Bellari PA555 at musichalla­udio.com.

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