I have just replaced my Ayre AX5 Twenty with an LFD NCSE III.
I thought the Ayre would be my last amplifier, and it really is a superb piece of engineering and a fabulous sounding amplifier. But the plain looking LFD at half the price sounds more musical to me and is a better match for my BBC style Graham speakers.
Of course, aside from the plain looks, there is no remote, no balanced connections, the power output is only 70 watts, and you won't impress your audiophile buddies. It's not for big speakers or big rooms, and if you like a big, airy, hyper-detailed sound you may still prefer something like the Ayre.
But the LFD is the real thing. It is sweet-toned, dynamic, rich sounding and with sympathetic speakers in a smallish room it sounds more musically engaging than anything else I have heard.
I thought the Ayre would be my last amplifier, and it really is a superb piece of engineering and a fabulous sounding amplifier. But the plain looking LFD at half the price sounds more musical to me and is a better match for my BBC style Graham speakers.
Of course, aside from the plain looks, there is no remote, no balanced connections, the power output is only 70 watts, and you won't impress your audiophile buddies. It's not for big speakers or big rooms, and if you like a big, airy, hyper-detailed sound you may still prefer something like the Ayre.
But the LFD is the real thing. It is sweet-toned, dynamic, rich sounding and with sympathetic speakers in a smallish room it sounds more musically engaging than anything else I have heard.