Preamp suggestions for Atma-Sphere Class D Monoblocks


As I impatiently await the arrival of my Atma-Sphere class-d monos, I am writing to solicit opinions from experienced members on this site. Balanced inputs and outputs as well as the ability to connect a subwoofer are important. Headphone amp would be nice but not critical. Ditto for built-in phono. These are some of the tube and solid state units I am considering (not necessarily exhaustive):

  1. Atma-Sphere MP-3 mk3.3
  2. Cary SLP-05 (ultimate edition, if I can find a pristine used pair at a good price)
  3. Modwright LS-100
  4. PrimaLuna EVO 400
  5. Supratek - Champagne or 6SN7 Cabernet - I have no idea what the difference between these two are and the website is not helpful at all
  6. Anthem STR
  7. Benchmark LA-4/HPA-4
  8. Bryston BR-20 (or one of their purely analog variants - BP-19?) - I am hesitant to bundle streaming and dac into a preamp
  9. NAD M66
  10. ?

I will initially use the Bel Canto DAC2.8 as a dac and preamp with an Auralic Aries G1.1 as the streamer. My speakers are Totem Acoustic Forest Signatures, sub is a REL s/510 that I seldom use. I am unsure whether I can use the speaker level connections with the A-S monos (my current Bel Canto Ref510S class d amp has a chassis grounding screw to which I connect the REL’s ground wire).

Philosophically speaking, I have owned a wide range of equipment over the years - everything from "measurements above all" type gear (a full Benchmark stack), a few tube pieces (PrimaLuna, Tavish Design, Rogue), Class A amplification (Pass Labs XA-30.8) and a completely active Genelec 8351b based system. I seem to be slowly but surely gravitating towards subjectively great sounding gear, regardless of how they measure - the Totems are a case in point. However, I don’t want to find that I have moved too far in any one direction. At the end of the day, I value realism and emotional connection more than the ability to deconstruct the music but I don’t want to listen to a sloppy system that homogenizes everything. I’m sure this is all clear as mud! It is however, a reflection of where I am at the end of 28 years of being on this hamster wheel. All thoughts and suggestions welcome. Thanks in advance.

Ag insider logo xs@2xsrama

@srama The MP-3 has no problem driving the class D to clipping, if that's what you mean. It supports +4dBm which is far more Voltage than most power amps need.

The MP-3 has no problem driving the class D to clipping, if that's what you mean. It supports +4dBm which is far more Voltage than most power amps need.

Thank you, that's all I needed to know!

I second the Audio GD HE-1 XLR....10 tubes...it’s own regenerative power supply to optimize the current from the wall plug...nothing under 10K can touch it for soundstage....musicality...life like imaging and just plain sweet with my Class D Amps. Aavik and Peachtree. Call wally @ underwood hi-fi. $4500...a steal in Hi End!

@atmasphere, I just realized that the MP-3 comes with ONLY balanced inputs. My external phono stage only has single ended outputs - can I use a simple rca to xlr cable or do I have to select the version with optional single ended inputs?

Also, does the preamp support connection of a subwoofer through one of its outputs?

 

 

 

 

I just realized that the MP-3 comes with ONLY balanced inputs. My external phono stage only has single ended outputs - can I use a simple rca to xlr cable or do I have to select the version with optional single ended inputs?

Also, does the preamp support connection of a subwoofer through one of its outputs?

@srama The MP-3 like the MP-1 has two single-ended inputs, Monitor 1 and Monitor 2.

You can also order it as a line stage only or with its balanced phono section which works with LOMC cartridges. So the phono input is balanced and the EQ is handled in the differential domain so as tubes age the EQ stays rock solid on the curve.

There are dual balanced outputs. I use the second set to drive a set of Jensen subwoofer transformers that convert from balanced to single-ended for my subwoofer amp. The Jensen transformers are optimized for low frequency operation so unlike most transformers, do not rob the bottom end of any impact or extension.