Onhwy61,
I wasn't trying to put Rowland down, or anything like that, its a great amp. Just to clarify, the side to side imaging is OK, as well as image height. The real problem is with image depth. Its pretty much completely flat; nothing whatsoever. I never considered depth to be that important of an issue for me until I got the 112. When its not there, you really miss it. I thought that there may be an issue with my amp but I've spoken to several people that have exactly the same problem. I don't think all Rowland amps have this issue, just the ones from the 112 era. (112, 12, 10).
If I didn't mention, I still have the amp. The reason I keep it is that it does something better than any amp I've ever heard. High frequencies. When I first got it, I immediately thought it was a very laid back amp. But the more I listened to it, I came to realize that all the information is there, just not the noise. Things like cymbals actually sound like they are supposed to. I do have some other amps that I prefer overall. In my main system I have a pair of Ayre V5's and in another system I have a VAC 30/30. As good as they are, the 112 still does HF's a little better. Thats why I still have it.
Back to the OP's question. The reason I brought up the 112 was that I was a little surprised about him wanting a warm sounding CD player. Both the Rowland and the Arcam are components that are definitely "easy on the ears", for lack of a better description. Maybe even too much of a good thing. I wasn't sure if he wanted to go warmer, or balance it out a little with an Ayre or Cary.
I wasn't trying to put Rowland down, or anything like that, its a great amp. Just to clarify, the side to side imaging is OK, as well as image height. The real problem is with image depth. Its pretty much completely flat; nothing whatsoever. I never considered depth to be that important of an issue for me until I got the 112. When its not there, you really miss it. I thought that there may be an issue with my amp but I've spoken to several people that have exactly the same problem. I don't think all Rowland amps have this issue, just the ones from the 112 era. (112, 12, 10).
If I didn't mention, I still have the amp. The reason I keep it is that it does something better than any amp I've ever heard. High frequencies. When I first got it, I immediately thought it was a very laid back amp. But the more I listened to it, I came to realize that all the information is there, just not the noise. Things like cymbals actually sound like they are supposed to. I do have some other amps that I prefer overall. In my main system I have a pair of Ayre V5's and in another system I have a VAC 30/30. As good as they are, the 112 still does HF's a little better. Thats why I still have it.
Back to the OP's question. The reason I brought up the 112 was that I was a little surprised about him wanting a warm sounding CD player. Both the Rowland and the Arcam are components that are definitely "easy on the ears", for lack of a better description. Maybe even too much of a good thing. I wasn't sure if he wanted to go warmer, or balance it out a little with an Ayre or Cary.