British Integrated Amps


I have a great affinity for British gear.  I have owned many British speakers from ProAc, Celestion, Mission, Wharfedale, Tannoy, Mordaunt Short, KEF, Linn & Monitor Audio and they were all very musical sounding.

I had a Rega Planar 3 for over 25 years and much shorter stints with a Linn Basik/Akito arm, Thorens TD125 mkII w/Rega RB303 arm and now an Ariston RD80 SEL w/Jelco arm.

I have also owned several British integrateds:  Onix OA-21s, OA-20/2, OA-60, Creek 5050, 4330, Musical Fidelity B1, Rotel RA870 and maybe a couple others that escape me right now and I now have a Meridian 504 tuner.  

I particularly like the shoebox sized units, I just like the size and shape of them and that they don’t take up a lot of room.

Which British integrated amps have you owned, which were your favorites, which ones were overrated, overpriced and what speakers were you using with them that made them a yay or a nay?

Look forward to your comments!  Thanks!


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In one of my rigs, I'm currently running Linn Basik/Akito>Audiolab 6000a>ProAc Tab 10. Sounds amazing. But really, that's two former Scot companies and one true Brit. I also have a Rega P1 using Mission 737R speakers that I thoroughly enjoy in another system.
Forgive my comment concerning Scottish/British reference...I meant true English company. But really, isn't everything owned by IAG anyway? :)
I hang out quite often on a British hifi forum. The British integrateds that get the most love and attention are usually in the lower price bracket representing excellent value for money.

The Rega, Naim, Sugden, Exposure and Arcam are commonly used by many. I have owned the mid range Rega Elicit, Arcam Alpha 10 and briefly tried the Naim Nait XS. The Rega and Naim are good but not outstanding. Arcam is not so good.

Less common brands include LFD, NVA, Sonneteer and Leema. I have tried LFD Zero LE3, NVA AP70 and currently own Sonneteer Orton. All great sounding amps.

The Sugden Masterclass IA-4 and Rega Osiris are reference level and reported to be a class above the rest.

I have been in this hobby for many years. You really get what you pay for, not all the time but most of the time. There isn’t any doubt that budget or modest gear may sound good or great. However, once you break a certain threshold and get into high end, the performance of each and every component in the system really rewards you with higher listening pleasure.

Excuse the rant. The message to be conveyed is it may be worthwhile to spend a bit more than beer budget for good hifi.