Without a test printout of frequency response, signal-to-noise ratio, THD+N and one channel un-driven crosstalk measurements, it would be difficult to gauge the price to performance value. You have to know what your competitors are capable of at any price point.
An analogue preamp designer question
Hi everyone,
I'm working on a design of analog preamplifier with a fully mechanical controls. It has decent tactile experience, and very nice to play with. At the same it it has precise controls calibration and parametric EQ instead of generic tone control. The front panel is aluminium milled. The brand is entirely new, it is going to be our first device. The retail price could be something like $2500.
Functional:
- 6 line inputs,
- integrated phono preamp with discreet MC stage, op-amp based MM with a 3-rd order subsonic filter,
- integrated headphone amplifier,
- tape replay support,
- good electronics, should measure really well.
- Dimensions: 435 x 241 x 42 mm (17.1 x 9.5 x 1.6 inches)
Problems found so far:
- absence of remote control,
- slightly industrial look: industrial aluminium profiles on the sides, iron painted top cover,
- headphone controls are unusable when the jack is inserted, too little space.
Please help me find out which direction I should be moving this product for a better market fit, and a successful sales.
Possible options are:
- Go down with the price, instead of $2500 it could be say $900. Of course there will be no aluminium knobs, and front panel, the whole enclosure will be made from iron sheet, possibly knobs will be made of plastic
- Make it less PRO: remove controls calibration, simplify tone control
- Add digital inputs: S/PDIF, Bluetooth, etc
- Change the dimensions, so it is easier to put a turntable on it, or find a furniture
- your option
Thank you for all the thoughts!
Pictures:
See more pictures in the following GDrive folder https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/16WM_ciXyQmUlHIxwDMZ85MbP_raGGvtW?usp=sharing
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- 11 posts total
- 11 posts total