Electrocompaniet AW180 Monoblock Power
Amplifier No ordinary muscle amplifier.
Reviewed By Dick Olsher
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here to e-mail reviewer.
Matti Otala may not be a household name, but in
the early 1970s he created quite a buzz in audio circles by focusing
attention on Transient Intermodulation Distortion (TIM) in transistor
amplifiers. That proved to be the catalyst for Electrocompaniet's
development and successful launch of a TIM-free 25-Watt solid-state
amplifier in the mid 70s. Rather unceremoniously named "The 2 Channel
Audio Power Amplifier," it nonetheless literally redefined transistor
sound. Riding the wave of their Otala series, Electrocompaniet established
a significant international presence, which was re-energized in 2004 when
Mikal Dreggevik, a savvy entrepreneur, purchased it outright. Mikal cares
about music and aims to adhere to Electrocompaniet's avowed goal of the
closest approach to the original sound; hence, their slogan: "Closing
the gap to the master." In what is a refreshing change from the paradigm
of "designed in the West and built in the East," production takes
place near Stavanger, Norway, combining operations with Westcontrol, a
sister company and an avionics defense contractor engaged in development,
prototyping and manufacturing of electronic components.
Technical Details
The AW180 is a Class AB push-pull amplifier,
certainly a rational choice for any high-power amplifier able to sink 650
W into a 2-Ohm load. The output stage uses bipolar power transistors and
is biased such that the first 7W are Class A. Design wise, the AW180 is
half of an AW600 Nemo monoblock, which consists of two AW180 amps bridged
together. Its styling is modern rather than traditional, featuring a thick
Perspex front panel, no handles, and a top-mounted power indicator. The
power switch is located on the back panel together with the input and
output connectors. Only a balanced XLR input connector is provided.
However, using an XLR to RCA adapter the AW180 can be made compatible with
single-ended preamplifiers. Don't bother with mass market adapters, I
highly recommend the Cardas Audio adapter (XLR male/RCA female) with the
rhodium over silver plating. Ergonomically speaking, the biggest annoyance
involves the binding posts, two pairs bunched together making it difficult
to finger tighten connections. Why not use Cardas binding posts in a
product of this stature? In my estimation, these are the best sounding
posts in the business, or as a minimum, deploy hex-shaped posts that can
be tightened with a nut driver. The busy back panel includes a balanced
connection to an additional amplifier for bi-amping.
TIM is often taken as an indictment of
negative feedback (NFB); nothing could be further from the truth. The
culprit is excessive feedback (say greater than 40 dB) which can cause
transient overshoots and clipping due to insufficient slew rates. NFB
reduces the input sensitivity of the amplifier and is typically expressed
as the ratio by which gain is reduced. For example, if the gain of a
voltage amplification stage (without NFB) is 100 and feedback from the
output terminal reduces the effective gain to 5, that's a ratio of 20 or
40 dB of NFB. The problem with NFB is that it isn't always precisely
180-degree out of phase relative to the input signal. Application of
feedback over a loop that includes several gain stages (global feedback)
is risky due to phase shifts with increasing frequency, potentially giving
rise to high-frequency instability and oscillation. However, the answer is
not to throw NFB out the window. It is an essential design tool for
linearizing a gain stage and thus minimizing harmonic distortion. I dare
say that the mythic notion of a "straight wire with gain" would be
impossible without judicious application of NFB. Electrocompaniet's
research has shown that local feedback applied around individual
amplification stages is sonically preferable to global feedback. Hence, no
global feedback is applied to the AW180's first gain block, which uses
FETs at the input and bipolar transistors the rest of the way.
It was also Matti Otala who first called
attention to the real-world peak current demands of conventional multi-way
loudspeakers. Say the nominal impedance of your loudspeaker is 8 Ohm.
Otala's simulations showed that for several hundred microsecond bursts
it was possible for such a speaker to draw almost seven times more current
than expected. In other words, for short periods of time the speaker could
approximate nearly a 1 Ohm load due to "the simultaneous parallel
excitation of several drivers of multi-way system, by the summation of
cancellation currents originating from the energy stored in the mechanical
and electrical reactances of the circuit, and by impedance transformation
effects in the crossover network." Later work by Benjamin indicated only
a factor of two increase in current draw from such effects, but the fact
remains that your speakers may be greater current hogs than you realize.
Therefore, current delivery into low impedance loads is an important
design consideration, which I'm happy to report was not overlooked by
Electrocompaniet. The AW180's maximum peak current delivery is in excess
of 100 amps, and that goes a long ways toward explaining its superlative
performance with the Analysis Audio Omega loudspeakers. As you might
expect, the power supply of each monoblock incorporates a massive 650 VA
toroidal transformer and a 60,000 micro farad capacitor reservoir bypassed
with polycarbonate and polypropylene capacitors.
In my view, an important amplifier design
goal should be minimal load interaction. And that can only be achieved
through a high damping factor, implying a low source impedance. The AW180
sports a source impedance of 0.008 Ohm! That translates to a damping
factor of 1,000 relative to an 8-Ohm load and guarantees good behavior
even when driving difficult loads. The MartinLogan Summit X is a case in
point. The impedance of its stat panel is capacitive in nature and
decreases with increasing frequency, reaching a minimum of 0.8 Ohm at 20
kHz. That makes the Summit a prime candidate for amplifier-speaker
interaction, especially when you consider that the average tube amp
exhibits a source impedance of around 1 Ohm. Several tube amps rolled off
the Summit's highs dramatically. One amp in particular managed a
whopping -10dB at 20 kHz. The AW180, on the other hand, was unperturbed by
such a load.
The Sound
My first impression was in the context of the
DALI Helicon 400 Mk.2 loudspeaker, a moderately sensitive 4-Ohm nominal
load. Although the Helicon can be driven fairly well by a 50 wpc tube amp,
the AW180 demonstrated that more power is a good thing in this context. My
notes are pretty explicit: what a monster of an amp! It allowed the
Helicon to glide effortlessly from soft to loud. Its exceptional transient
speed relative to that of a typical transformer-coupled tube amplifier was
most welcome. Speed of attack coupled with deliciously resolved transient
decay resulted in the impression of exceptional clarity - no fuzz or
veiling to speak of. There was plenty of low-level detail being retrieved,
and in particular, treble nuances were nicely resolved. Harmonic textures
were smooth and grain free. Bass lines exhibited iron-fisted control.
Check out Mari Boine's Radiant Warmth
CD (Antilles 314-533-520-2). The lead track, which interestingly enough
was recorded and mixed at Rainbow Studio in Oslo, features ferocious drum
accompaniment. The end result with the AW180 in the system could only be
described as visceral impact – magnum force!
As with any inherently neutral amplifier,
it was impossible to divorce the AW180's sonic performance from that of
the associated preamplifier. It let the preamp do the talking, or should I
say, the editorializing. I experimented with several tube preamps. That in
itself should come as no surprise since I had been advocating the use of
tubes ahead of solid-state power amps for many years. The reason, to
paraphrase Pablo Picasso, is that solid-state preamps are useless; they
give you details instead of feelings. The flavor of each tube preamp shone
through. With the Mystère CA21 line preamplifier, outfitted with 7AF7
Loktals, the presentation tilted a bit towards the romantic. Harmonic
colors were more vivid, image outlines more palpable, lower midrange
warmth left intact, and most importantly, the music flowed with greater
emotional intensity. Enter YS Audio's Audio Experience A2-SE balanced
preamplifier. The presentation could now be characterized as rhythmic,
fast, clean, and pure. The A2-SE, however, did not fatten up the lower
midrange and lacked the Mystère's textural density. It should be noted
that the A2-SE sounded far better feeding the AW180 from its balanced
versus its single-ended outputs. The best match for the AW180 in terms of
harmonic textures, timbre authenticity, and a wide dynamic palette turned
out to be the Air Tight ATC-2. This particular line preamp has been in
house for many years but has only recently been tweaked by rolling in a
pair of Mullard box anode CV4003/12AU7 triodes. Rounding out the tube
complement is a 5751 Sylvania gold pin.
My plan all along was to mate the AW180
with the Analysis Audio Omega planar magnetic/ribbon loudspeaker for a
definitive assessment. Its preference, or should I say appetite, for high
current drive is a well known fact. This therefore would appear to be a
perfect setting for a high-power amplifier to strut its stuff. And I had
already evaluated several amplifiers in this context, including the
Spectron Musician III Mk.2 Class D monoblocks rated at 800 watts per
channel into 4 Ohm. In addition, I was most curious about a head-on
competition with the far more expensive Lamm Audio M1.2 Reference
monoblocks. The game was afoot! It became clear that relative to the M1.2,
the AW180's color temperature was a bit lower. It sounded a bit cooler,
and in addition, textures were not quite as smooth. But when it came to
scaling the dynamic range from soft to very loud, the AW180 was king.
Macrodynamics were absolutely riveting. While the M1.2 did well revving up
from soft to loud, it couldn't keep up with the AW180 – it just did
not have that last gear. The AW180 laid out a powerful orchestral
foundation with a thunderous low end. Romantic classical music never sound
so convincing. The soundstage was exceptionally solid with excellent image
focus. Factoring in its textural purity, low distortion signature, and
transient clarity, the inevitable conclusion was that the AW180 had
vanquished all previous contenders. I suspect that similar loads, e.g.,
Magnepan, would also benefit from being partnered with the AW180.
Conclusion
With the AW180 you firmly cross the Rubicon into
muscle amp territory. An American automotive analogy would be a sleek,
racy, Corvette. Think mind-blowing dynamic headroom. But this is no
ordinary muscle amplifier. Its sound is also pure, fast, always in
control, and it is able to deal with current-hungry real world loads.
Planar magnetic aficionados need look no further. Keep in mind that the
AW180 will sink or swim based on the associated preamp. It needs a dose of
tube warmth. Once you cater to its needs, rest assured that its
performance is more than competitive with far more expensive gear. I
suspect that this is one amp I'll be unable to walk away from. Highly
recommended!
Specifications
Type: Solid-state monoblock amplifier
Power Output: 180 W into 8 Ohm; 350 W into 4 Ohm; 650 W into 2 Ohm
Output Impedance: (20 Hz to 20 kHz) < 0.008 ohm
Input Impedance: XLR (balanced) 110 kOhm
Input Sensitivity For Rated Output: 1 Volt
Maximum Peak Current: > 100 Amperes
THD (measured at 1 kHz half power, 8 W): < 0.001 %
Noise: 90 µV (400 Hz to 30 kHz); 100 µV (10 Hz to 30 kHz)
Dimensions: 215 x 288 x 470 (WxHxD in mm)
Weight: 48.4 lbs.
Price: $4800 each
Company Information
Electrocompaniet Inc.
97 Linden Street
Oakland, CA 94607
Voice: (510) 291-1222
E-mail: msales-usa@electrocompaniet.com
Website: www.electrocompaniet.com