I just want to give my support of the Boulder 2060. I have a Boulder 2060 and I think it is an amazing amplifier. To my ears it is neutral, revealing, and I get tons of signal. What is not, is forgiving. I think it may have to do with the rest of my system, Analysis Plus cables, Vitus Dac/Preamp, Wilson speakers, and a class A stereo amplifier (the 2060).Â
To my ears the Boulder is the quietest amplifier I have ever used, while it is solid state, I find that it is warmer and more musical than the 1060, and has allowed me to hear deeply into the music, and with well recorded music, transports me to the music hall.Â
Depending on the music, my system renders a sound that is extremely lifelike, from drums that sound real, to a sense of space that is three dimensional and authentic.Â
I have had other amplifiers before the 2060, including Boulder. I had an 865 for a long time and it actually sounded pretty good. The 1060 was quieter and in some ways better and in other ways I preferred the 800 series. The 2060 is another story. I found it to be the perfect amplifier for my needs, properly combining the best of solid state, with the benefits of class A. The bass is tight, the sound of the instruments could fool me into thinking the band was in my room, and it just sounded right.Â
In my second system I had a Viva Solista which was nice, but in the end I decided to sell it to focus on my main set up.Â
Prior to Boulder I had a Naim system. In some ways that system was excellent, but my wife hated the number of black boxes and when I heard the 865 sound better than the Naim my wife was sold. I liked the Naim and it offered a lot of fun sounds, it had PRaT and energy that few other amplifier designs could match. but when I moved on, it was the right time.Â
Before that I had my first proper hi-fi system, a tube system that Andy Singer sold me. I loved it. My now wife hated it. And when we moved from NYC to Chicago I moved to Naim. I will never forget the musicality of this system. When I had a chance to hear those components again, they were not as good as I remembered, but I chose to remember the system fondly because it got me into this hobby-- a way to share in my dad and brother's god given musicality-- and appreciate great artists.Â