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Musings About Fidelity With The Musical Fidelity
A3.2 CD Player
by Karl Lozier |
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Unpacking the four boxes revealed attractively styled
matching components. My wife commented favorably on the brushed aluminum
front panels; we had grown tired of a continuing parade of blah appearing
dull finished black components. These Musical Fidelity products are
not their most expensive units, but their more expensive line has
some voids now, until new models are released starting within a few
months. They have run out of the little known nuvistors and the "replacement" products
will feature the even rarer trivistor. A trivistor can be described
as a triode tube (miniature size) version of the nuvistors; both
of these tiny tubes are encased in metal not glass. Musical Fidelity
believes they have obtained what is possibly the world's stock of
them, approximately 25,000 units. As they did with their nuvistor
components, they will retain a spare set of trivistors for every
product sold. Enough news about the future; for the present I have
on hand MF's CD player A3.2, the A3.2 preamplifier and a pair of
model M-250 power amplifiers. Musical Fidelity also offers an attractively
matching A3.2 FM tuner and an integrated A3.2 amplifier. I plan to
present one review each month and a final review of all of them used
together at the same time as a system. This month, their newly released
A3.2 CD player steps into the spotlight.
David Solomon, Vice-President Sales and Marketing for Musical Fidelity
USA products, had told me that these products needed a particularly long
break in time. I decided to break in all these Musical Fidelity components
at the same time. I had an extra pair of old, very old that is, Siefert
bookshelf loudspeakers sitting in the bookshelves in our bedroom. So I
hooked everything up to them and basically let all run continuously for
almost 300 hours (many with Purist Audio's excellent System Enhancer Rev.
B burn-in CD) before listening to MF's components, one at a time substituted
in my main system. Though I seldom do any serious listening in my bedroom
I want to mention that I had never heard these Siefert loudspeakers sounding
as good as they did with the entire Musical Fidelity system feeding them;
many years ago they had resided in the built in bookshelves in my family
room. This bodes well for other bookshelf size loudspeakers used with the
MF components. The Sieferts with rather low efficiency manage to go lower
than fifty Hertz, albeit at a moderate listening level.
Let's Play Operation!
Inserting the attractively styled, with the appearance of a particularly
solidly built chassis/front panel, the Musical Fidelity A3.2 CD player
slid easily into place in my main system. It was approximately two inches
deeper than the last few CD or CD/DVD-A players I had reviewed, but still
less than fifteen inches deep. The installation guide/owners manual is
a model of its kind with particularly clear and detailed diagrams and drawings
of even the display area. The display area is a rather brightly lit green
display; the remote control has an on/off button for it. The play button
on the front panel also functions as a pause control; push it once and
the unit plays the CD, push again and the unit is in a pause mode. In the
pause mode the CD continues to spin, but the track does not advance and
the output is muted. Pressed again, the unit continues to play from the
spot where it had paused. If I have not overlooked something, all the bells,
whistles and other features of the last few CD players I have reviewed,
are on this unit or the remote control. All are clearly explained in the
accompanying booklet. If the booklets for some of the Japanese based products
were written half as concisely and clearly as Musical Fidelity's, it would
be a reason for celebration.
I had just finished a number of listening sessions evaluating recordings
for this month's music reviews. That seemed like a good time to substitute
Musical Fidelity's A3.2 CD player for one of the other players I had been
using for those reviews. This done, I was now into my equipment reviewing
mode instead of the music reviewing mode; that is a definite change in
approach and attitude. Remember that I had put in excess of 300 hours on
this MF player before inserting it into my main listening system. During
the first few hours of listening, the same general impressions kept floating
through my mind. I had decided not to continually go back and forth between
players until later on in the review process. These initial impressions
remained beyond the first evening of serious listening.
The MF player continued to give three areas of apparent difference compared
to the players preceding it. First, there was the added fullness or richness
over most of the bass range and it was definitely not a relativity resultant
of balance with the top end. It simply was a particularly full and enveloping
bass range. This even though the power cord used with it was Kimber's Palladian
PK 10 A.C., which uniquely features the most solid and tightly controlled
bass response of any A.C. power cord that I have yet evaluated; in other
words it does not add any bass fullness or richness. The A3.2 player was
doing it on its own. Secondly, it was apparent that the high end and presence
range were a bit smoother than usual. Nothing was being added at any time
to the sense of brightness, frequency emphasis or harshness. A bit of the
opposite was true; on "typical" CDs any sense of edginess or harshness
in the treble range was seemingly reduced with the result that could be
described as a somewhat sweeter high end. There was not as much difference
with the newest offerings from companies such as Telarc as with older CDs.
Thirdly, everything led me to think of the MF A3.2 player as a music lover's
player as contrasted to being an audiophile's player.Most audiophiles tend
to want or prize detail or detailing from the insertion of a new component
into their listening chain. In fact the word hyperdetailing has been coined
to describe excessive amounts of detail. How can there be excessive detail
you might ask? There is a fair number of ways it can happen, starting with
the recording engineer. Let us assume that a given recording is essentially
perfect, that enables us to skip over some possible causal candidates.
Now, starting with our "perfect" recording, we substitute a new component.
The new component has a different tonal balance with a "leaner or tighter" bass
range than the original component that had a particularly full or rich
bass range. That extra output in the bass range affects what we hear. In
addition to a covering-up effect it tends to modulate other sounds in the
mid frequency range for example.
In addition, the tonal balance changes and even if the response in the
upper half of the audible range did not change, we perceive a change. Call
it a form of the "theory of relativity - audio division". So if the component
with the leaner (very lean) bass/lower mid range output is in the sound
producing chain the perceived sound is going to be relatively brighter
and more detail will be heard, whether musically related or more revealing
of flaws. If the musically related detail is noticeably more than the recording
engineer captured and got into the recording, the result is referred to
as "hyperdetailing". As a corollary, many old timers in the audio field
(yes, me included) believed or still believe that a component that reveals
more detail in a recording than another component, without sounding brighter
or leaner in the bass range is the better piece of audio equipment.
Extensions In Listening
Extended listening sessions revealed that this fine Musical Fidelity A3.2
CD player is certainly not perfect but makes quite an effort toward that
goal for its relatively moderate price. The areas where it slightly errs
are a bit of added fullness in the mid and upper bass area and seemingly
an unrelated subtly diminished response in the upper two or two and a half
octaves. Here I do not feel on particularly firm ground. This MF product
features their highly touted version of upsampling (not oversampling).
What all might be happening, in addition to adding 8 bits to the word length,
changing 8 to 16 bits and upsampling to 96kHz, I do not know. There can
be some innovative filtering or contouring taking place. In any event,
Musical Fidelity claims to be smoothing, sweetening and lowering distortions
in the treble range. That appears to be true for the most part from what
I hear. Their similar A3.2 DAC offers a choice of 96kHz or 192kHz upsampling.
There is some debate as to whether that should make an audible difference
as it may not make a measurable one. All this works out fine for most music
lovers. Play one of your older CDs such as Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald,
Tony Bennett or whoever and you'll be treated to a fuller sound with less
irritation from added harshness or digital edginess when you hear the singers
hit their high notes or with massed violins in the upper frequencies. Turn
that listening coin over and there will be some dissenters.Their rebuttal,
with many of the well recorded and produced newer discs, will be something
like, "yeah, but the bass sounds a bit overblown and missing a bit of initial
impact and the high end seems to be lacking that last little bit of detail".
In that infamous nutshell, there you have it. You might find yourself on
the horns of a dilemma. As with most audio equipment, you cannot expect
this Musical Fidelity A3.2 CD player to be everything to everybody, but
there's an excellent chance if you are a music lover looking for a CD player
in the $1K-$1.5K range that this MF player may be the one for you.
Post Finale Addendum
After using only the fine Musical Fidelity A3.2 CD player for a couple
of weeks and becoming very used to it, as if it had become "my reference",
I did some intensive one on one comparative listening sessions. By now
the player had at least 400 if not 500 hours of use. All my above comments
remained basically unchanged in these wrap up sessions. The bass range
is definitely pleasantly elevated to a slight degree and just far enough
into the lower mid-range to add a bit of extra fullness to baritone voices
such as Frank Sinatra. In the high end, say on a typical Sinatra CD or
other early CD recordings, much of the common edginess or harshness is
definitely ameliorated. On top-notch current releases it is also apparent
that a touch of the leading edge or initial transients of many instruments
is slightly blunted. For example the right hand keys of the piano are not
reproduced with the sometimes almost startling percussive impact of the
sound of a live piano, same is true for the almost bell-like sound of some
notes. With the Musical Fidelity player it is almost as if the pianist
had an unusually light touch. Part of the presence range is subtly recessed.
Whatever, it still remains an extremely musical sounding CD player. It
is competitive with or better than other solid-state choices in the range
up to fifteen hundred dollars.There is one or two tubed CD players that
are very strong competition at a slightly lower price point, but any tubed
unit comes with the caveat that you must hunt down some of the very best
NOS (New, Old-Stock) tubes to replace the factory supplied tubes to obtain
that level of performance. That adds to the price obviously and sometimes
it can be a bit of a tough search. As with many CD players the MF does
not play the outstanding, but rare, DAD discs such as by Classic Records.
The more common HDCD beautiful recordings by Reference Records are reproduced
with outstanding quality and beauty even though the A3.2 does not list
having the HDCD decoding chip. If true, then their upsampling process does
an admirable job on its own. I would like to repeat that this is an extremely
musical sounding player for music lovers that are not trying to dissect
all its areas of performance. Audiophile types might look elsewhere for
something that has a unique feature or a certain area of excellent performance
rather than overall musicality.As I was finishing this review and listening
sessions I was starting a session with a new line of low cost interconnect
and loudspeaker cables by Harmonic Technology. One of those neat coincidences
occurred. In respect to tonal balance they apparently matched up very well
in at least that one respect with this MF player. Time constraints precluded
any extended evaluation unfortunately. As usual I ask that you take the
rating numbers listed below with at least a few grains of salt. If my review
has not described the audio qualities to your satisfaction, I've not done
my job and the numbers will probably not fill in any missing gaps. |
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| Tonality |
90 |
| Sub-bass (10 Hz - 60
Hz) |
82 |
| Mid-bass (80 Hz - 200
Hz) |
82 |
| Midrange (200 Hz - 3,000
Hz) |
85 |
| High-frequencies (3,000
Hz on up) |
85 |
| Attack |
82 |
| Decay |
87 |
| Inner Resolution |
85 |
| Soundscape width front |
85 |
| Soundscape width rear |
92 |
| Soundscape depth behind
speakers |
94 |
| Soundscape extension
into the room |
82 |
| Imaging |
85 |
| Fit and Finish |
90 |
| Self Noise |
95 |
| Value for the Money |
88 |
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| Specifications |
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| DAC Architecture |
24 bit Delta-Sigma (Bitstream) with
8x oversampling |
| Frequency Response |
10Hz to 20kHz (±0.2dB) |
| Signal To Noise Ratio |
>96dB unweighted, >105dB 'A'
weighted |
| Total Harmonic
Distortion |
<0.006% 10Hz to 20kHz |
| Total Correlated
Jitter |
<170 pS |
| De-emphasis Error |
<0.1dB |
| Linearity |
<0.2dB down to -80dB |
| Audio Output |
2.14VRMS at 1kHz peak/nominal |
| Dimensions |
17.5 x 15 x 4 (WxDxH in inches) |
| Weight |
13 lbs. |
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