Sound+Image

NAD’s new Masters M10

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It’s a new look for NAD’s Masters Series, its top range which has redefined the company at a new level for the past decade. The new arrival unveiled at CES 2019 in Las Vegas is the M10, a BluOS (Bluesound)-equipped streaming amplifier which uses NAD’s HybridDigi­tal take on Hypex’s nCore amplificat­ion, widely regarded as the best and most musical of Class-D power.

The new glass and extruded-aluminium look has industrial design by award-winning design firm DF-ID, and includes a highresolu­tion TFT colour touchscree­n on the front panel, though there’s also hands-free control of music from any Amazon Alexa supported device or via Siri, plus both a traditiona­l remote control and app control via the BluOS multi-room system, which is further able to link with other BluOS systems (from NAD, Bluesound and DALI) for multiroom operation up to high resolution.

The M10 is rated at over 100W continuous (20Hz-20kHz at <0.03% THD, both channels driven), bearing in mind that NAD has a history of its ratings being on the conservati­ve side. Yet it is relatively compact at 21.5cm wide and just 10cm high.

In addition to all the networking streaming and online music services enabled by BluOS (which includes MQA playback), the M10 has two analogue line inputs, one each optical and coaxial digital, USB-A, two-way Bluetooth with aptX HD, AirPlay 2, Gigabit Ethernet plus Wi-Fi, and a useful HDMI ARC input for playing from your TV. The DAC is a 32-bit/384kHz ESS Sabre DAC, and processing is handled by the 1GHz ARM Cortex A9. The M10 will also include a licence for Dirac Live with the option for advanced users to upgrade to a Dirac Live Full Frequency version.

The M10 is also fully compatible with many of the leading smart home systems including those from Apple, Crestron, Control4, Lutron, and others.

The price is $3999, with arrival expected end of April. More at www.convoy.com.au

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