বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩০ জানুয়ারি, ২০১৪

How small can a bona fide high-end headphone amplifier be?

Meridian Prime

(Credit:Meridian)

Meridian Audio may be one of Britain's oldest high-end audio brands. It was founded in the late 1970s, but it was always exploring new technologies. It introduced the world's first high-end CD player in 1984, advanced the state of the art in self-powered speakers, and pioneered digital loudspeakers. The company also developed the lossless compression technology used in many Blu-Ray discs.

So when I heard Meridian was introducing a high-end headphone amplifier, I immediately requested a review sample. When the box arrived, I thought they sent the wrong piece, it was too small to be a contender, but the Meridian Prime is a good deal more compact than the competition's models. It's also a stunning piece of industrial design. The desktop-friendly-size 6.3x2x5.9-inch all-metal chassis is gorgeous; fit and finish are what you'd expect from a high-end brand. The front panel hosts two 6.3mm jacks for full-size headphones, plus a 3.5mm jack for in-ear headphones. The back panel sports a USB input, stereo RCA analog inputs, and outputs that can drive self-powered desktop speakers. The Prime is made in England.

Meridian and Bryston are the only two established high-end brands making headphone amplifiers. Unfortunately, I didn't have the Bryston BHA-1 amp on hand to compare, but the BHA-1 is just an amp, the Prime has an onboard USB digital converter that handles up to 24 bit/192 kHz digital audio. The Prime can be run with the included wall wart, or from your computer's USB port. There's also an optional, upgraded power supply that's the same size and sports the same look as the Prime chassis.

With my Audeze LCD-3 headphones I compared the Prime with my old Red Wine Audio Corvina headphone amp. The Prime's clarity and detail resolution on Moby's "Play" CD far outpaced the Corvina's. The sound was more transparent; the Corvina's richer and warmer tonal balance was sweeter, but the Prime's more immediate, you-are-there sound won me over. The Prime has an Analogue Spatial Processing feature that ever so gently expands the stereo soundstage, I found it worked well on some recordings, but others sounded better with the processing turned off.

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