Budget integrated amp?


Friend's amp is having issues and he asked me what was "good...for around $1000 new". Like me he is deep in the middle of the Pacific, actually deeper than me because he is on the Big Island of Hawaii, out in the desert/volcano area. I suggested the Schiit Ragnarok 2 which I have only read about but is on sale and has both good writeups and a 5 year warranty and is American made. Also, the Marantz PM6007, a few Rotel amps I read about that are on deal at Crutchfield (which ships to Hawaii free) and the Outlaw RR2160, which I have heard at another friend's. He is an older boomer like me and wants something like his old Marantz 2252B. I told him that those dont exist anymore. For those of you who might have head some of these am I giving him good ideas and have I missed anything substantive. He is not oriented to used and is on a tight budget. He is running both a CDP and an iFi streamer. Suggestions?

joekapahulu

@akg_ca  while it would be beneficial to know the speaker, the op has given us some important information to consider. He has been using a Marantz 2252B and would like to replace it with something similar - which does not exist anymore. Well, we know the 2252B is on the warm side of neutral, great build quality, and about 52 watts. My suggestion of Musical Fidelity M2si took this profile into account. It was not a blind offering as you lectured above. The MF M2si has very good build quality, the controls are metal and not plastic, it is slightly on the warm side of neutral with a touch of richness in the mids and bass with very sweet top end; and is around 76W into 8 ohms.

I'm in the Yamaha camp. Loved the Yamaha integrated amps I've owned. Probably also the easiest to get given the friends location.

Aloha, I live on the Big Island and am much more familiar with the realities of owning electronics in this environment than most. The combination of heat, humidity, volcanic emissions and salt are not like anything anywhere on the mainland. Thing corrode and fail here that would never have those issues in other areas. For that reason alone I would avoid the smaller esoteric brands. They simply lack the resources to design and test in these extremes, and in addition, service, if needed means shipping to the mainland - a couple hundred dollars anyway. That all said, I would put my money on a Marantz. A PM7000N, which is a 60/90 W/ch streaming amp with superior build quality and a full feature set, including phono, analog, digital, Ethernet and WiFi, as well as bass management for proper subwoofer setup. This is available for under $1000 from Crutchfield or Amazon, so you  anavoid the hefty freight bill. Sound Quality wise, Marantz is one of the few mainstream companies who tunes their gear by ear, selecting compnents for sound quality. Marantz house sound is slightly warm, with solid bass, good dynamics and a notable lack of midrange and high end harshness.  Or, read the reviews from Absolute Sound or What HIFi or any of the othe magazines who listened to it and awarded it top honors. I know your friend has a streamer already, he can keep it or compare it to the Marantz and sell it to offset the other costs. My second choice would be the NAD 368. It has a bit more power, but lacks a few other features..

You don't mention what speakers he'll be driving, but either will drive al.ost anything on the market, maybe not quite as loud .like 2-3 dB less) as a 100-200 w amp.