An Italian amplifier company's consummate effort
per Constantine Soo's ears:
Audia Flight 100

October 24, 2005
 
     
 
 
     
 
 
     
  Audia Flight 100 Specifications:

Output power: 100 W/8 Ω, 200 W/4 Ω, 400 W/2 Ω
Gain: 29 dB
Input Sensitivity: 1 V rms
Frequency response: 0.3 Hz ~ 1 MHz (@1 Vrms, - 3 dB)
Slew-Rate: > 200 V/µS (@8Ω)
THD: < 0,05 %
S / N Ratio: 108 dB
Input impedance: (Unbalanced) 24, 28, 42, 57 K Ω;  (Balanced) 23 K Ω
Damping factor: (8 ohm) 85
Main voltage: 110-115/220/230 Vac 50-60Hz
Power consumption: 500W at idling, 1400W peak
Dimensions: 18.5 X 9.6 X 21.3 inch (w x h x d)
Weight: 106 lb

Price: $10,995
 
     
 
U.S. Distributor:

Q-USA
462 N Baldwin St,
Madison, WI 53703
voice: 608-237-1726
fax: 608-237-1728
website:
www.q-usa.com
email: info@q-usa.com
Manufacturer:

Audia Flight
Via delle Azalee,
13/E 00053 Civitavecchia - Italy
Phone:
+39 0766 24387
Fax:
+39 0766 392014
website:
www.audia.it
e-mail: info@audia.it
 
     
 
PROLOGUE

I had not reminisced over my earlier days in hi-fi since my encounter with Audio Note’s 300B
designs.  I used to subscribe to the high-power notion and disregarded tubes as
maintenance-ridden and imprecise.  To solid-state amplification designers, that remains a
statement of absolute truth; but my priority developed since then to the point where I believe
even certain truth is not absolute.

Changes in hi-fi fashion at the end of the 20th century depicted a sizeable migration of   
users from solid-state to tube, and accordingly, from mainstream loudspeakers to high-
efficiency types.  Now that we’re in 2005, SET designs have managed to occupy a place in
hi-fi history no less prominent than what the solid-state’s have accomplished.  With both types
continuing to progress in design and performance, the solid-state design remains the one
that has no need for collaborative efforts on the part of loudspeaker manufacturers, while
SETs remain dependent on availability of efficient loudspeaker in order to perform.

Therefore, my preference in loudspeaker also migrated gradually to the more efficient kind
over the years.  No longer would I purchase powerful amplification just to succumb to choice
of speakers requiring considerable output.  Instead, I investigated the sound of efficient
speakers, like the Audio Note AN-E/D, and experimented with their sound as driven by
SETs.  

Over the years, although I have continued to own various high-power solid-state designs, they
only hastened my return to the SET method.  Alas, I have never given up hope on the
transistors, and my Apogee Duetta Signature and Celestion SL700 continue to gather dust.
 
 
BRIEF HISTORY
 
     
 
Audia Flight was founded by Massimiliano Marzi and Andrea Nardini in 1996, two men with
background in professional electronics industry, and a shared objective in creating original
amplification design in the Italian style.  The company is located in the central Italian town of
Civitavecchia near the Mediterranean, approximately 43.5 miles from Rome.

After founding the company, Marzi and Nardini began research and analysis on areas for
improvement in existing amplification design, based on the premise that “a component of an
audio chain must not alter the signal,” and insufficient signal speed could cause “low transient
stability”.

From a research project that spanned from 1994 to 1996, the duo designed a new circuit that
retired the traditional voltage feedback circuitry in their power amplification design.  This new
design utilized current feedback, generating a “high speed response” that could
accommodate reactive speaker impedances simultaneously.

This new topology was introduced in 1997 in the form of the Audia Flight 100 power
amplifier, which has gone on to conquering the hearts of the Italian audio publications.  AF’s
subsequent offerings, such as the preamplifier Flight Pre, and a smaller amplifier, the Flight
50, are also of the current feedback topology and have been received enthusiastically by the
Italian reviewing community as well.

In 2005, Audia Flight comes ashore the U.S. by way of its importer, Q-USA.  This review
explores the marque’s top stereo power amplifier, the 100.  A separate review will highlight
its companion premium preamplifier, the Flight Pre.



INSIDE THE AUDIA FLIGHT 100

The Italian company prides itself on the current feedback topology it has developed, citing the
design’s superior ability in maintaining several performance parameters, namely extreme
trans-impedance linearity, a bandwidth of 0.3Hz to 1MHz, ultra fast and stable signal
propagation, and a slew rate higher than 200 V/μS.  AF points out that conventional “voltage
feedback” designs, also known as the differential design, could only attain transient stability
after several cycles of oscillations when hit by a step impulse signal, inadvertently resulting in
signal tempering and transient impediment.  AF is also of the opinion that use of higher-
grade components in the differential design can not correct the inherent flaws.
 
 
Hence, located in the center of
the unit is the 11lb, modular,
dual 700VA, toroidal power
supply stage, flanked by two
mirrored, modular amplification
channels to the sides.
 
     
 
Measuring 3 inches tall and 7 inches in diameter, each toroidal transformer is rated at
10,000 Gauss and its core plate “autoclave resin sealed and dried in oven.”  One could
expect no less originality from the country that gave us the pizza.  Automatic machine tools
monitor appropriate wiring tension in the coils, and multi-wire technology produces the main
secondary.
 
 
Each channel draws from a dedicated, dual-stage power supply
for feeding all stages up to the drivers, and providing energy to
the power stage respectively.  The dual-stage power supplies
employ a 17,600μF, 8-high-speed capacitor design of discrete
component and NFB design.  The supply of the power stage then
draws from four very-low ESR capacitors of 47,000 μF each,
 
  augmented by a 10 μF polypropylene parallel capacitor.  A logic circuit prevents turn-on
current surges and monitors operational temperatures.

Once, I accidentally turned on the Flight 100 ahead of the preamplifier when connected to the
Audio Note AN-E SEC Signature.  Atypical of like instances with other powerful transistor
amplifiers in which any speaker’s tweeter would’ve been ruptured in smoke, and without a
single decimal of noise, I had not realized my neglect at first and continued my incessant
madness upon the miserable PLAY button.  Hence, the Flight 100, with the logic intelligence
thus bestowed upon it by its creators, has since then worth a few times over its asking price
to me.  

Remember: people have different luck sometimes, so never tempt your loudspeaker’s fate by
trying to reenact my occurence.
 
 
Each of the Flight 100’s output channels employs 16 audio-specific,
aged and computer-automatically selected Toshiba IGBT’s, capable
of delivering a continuous current of 160 Amperes and a 240-
Ampere peak current.  Transient current loss is further reduced with
the provisioning of thin, high-current, 10 mm2 and 5.3mm2 OFC
copper bars, as well as circuit boards with a copper layer 0.1mm
 
 
wide.

Other delicious innards include 1% tolerance metal film resistors,
Philips polystyrene capacitors, Roedenstein polypropylene (except
those in the supply stage), electrolytic and tantalium capacitors and
Motorola transistors.  All PCBs are made with 70
μm wide copper
 
  plus 30 μm wide metal layer, for a total width of 100 μm.

Finally, the all-aluminum chassis is laser-cut and milled by the industrial NC (Numerical
Control) units, producing an effective heat dissipation surface of 18,000 cubic centimeters.  
Front panel labeling is also cut by the NC micro milling, followed by a blue-paint filling
process, and even the labeling on the rear is also laser-cut, not silkscreened.



SET UP & AUDITIONING
 
 
 
 
Speakers of higher efficiencies constitute the pillars of my present reviewing system.  
Respectively, representing the most extraordinary implementations in horn, two-way and the
unique Dual-Concentric™, they are the Acapella La Campanella, Audio Note AN-E SEC
Signature and the Tannoy Churchill Wideband.  All have proven to be consistently exemplary
and reliably non-fatiguing in music reproduction.  Hence, they were the first ones being
rotated with the Audia Flight Pre and 100 amplification system.

Digital front-end included the 47 Lab PiTracer (2004) and the Audio Note DAC5 Special
(2003).  Accustic Arts’ DACI Mk3 and Boelen Electronics-modified EAD Ovation Plus DAC
also partook of the audition.  

Preamplification rotated were the Flight 100’s companion preamplifier, the Flight Pre, and
Audio Note’s $10,000 M5 Phono preamplifier.

Cabling were of Audio Note’s Sogon in digital, analog as well as speaker connections.


Tannoy’s Churchill Wideband had few competition in dynamic scaling and tonal coherency
 
 
via the Harmonix Reimyo SET.  Yet, when driven by the Audia Flight
amplification, the 95dB/8Ω, 15-inch Dual-Concentric™  loudspeakers
asserted a dynamic prowess never before induced, imparting such
rare lucidity and perseverance upon female vocals as to have renewed
my experience with music via the horn speaker.  I have admired
Barbara Streisand’s
Eyes of Laura Mars (Barbara Streisand -
Greatest Hits Volume 2, Sony/Columbia CK 35679) for two decades
since the 80’s, despite its compressed dynamics; but in the most
 
  unprecedented manner, it sounded lively and powerful with the Flight 100.
 
 
Other favorite female singers of mine were subsequently revisited via the playback system,
such as Whitney Houston’s I Always Love You, and Shirley Bassey’s Moonraker.  Also much
appreciated is Jheena Lodwick’s JVC XRCD24 rendition of Eric Clapton’s
Tears in Heaven
(Jheena Lodwick Getting To Know You, JVC Musiclab XRCD24-1012SA).  Hers is a much
more listenable voice to Clapton’s.
 
     
 
The Churchill Wideband’s more petite sibling, the TD10, also displayed an exercise in
dynamic and bottom-end via the Italian amplifier from Hollywood composer John Williams’
Jurassic Park soundtrack (MCA MCAD-10859).  Driven by the Audia Flight 100, the $8k, 10-
inch Dual-Concentric™, bass-reflex speaker’s performance was expanded to the point
where its usual spectral and output capacities had seemingly exceeded what can be
bestowed upon any design with 1-inch tweeter and 10-inch woofer in the known universe.
 
 

Via the majestically resolving AN-E SEC Signature, I’ve never heard a solid-state amplifier to
be as well-controlled and well-endowed as the AF 100.  When recreating the 1722 Petro
 
 
Guarnei violin from the FIM disc, Antonio Vivaldi:The Four Seasons
(FIM SACD 052), I found the Audia Flight an equal of tube amplifiers
in its portrayal of the priceless violin’s subtleties.  The AF gear not
only approximated the $24k Harmonix Reimyo PAT-777’s continuity
and liquidity, but the Italian system’s dynamics, texturing and
transients are unprecedented.
 
 

Then, the sound of the Acapella La Campanella when coupled to the Audia Flight 100 was
one I have not encountered in solid-state amplification, one of lukewarm sentimentality,
intricate intonation, and expeditious, powerful transients, with a slightly lighter tonal intensity
than the PAT-777.  As used to the 300B sound as I am, I find the Audia Flight sound of
indispensable quality to the making of a high-end system.



THE KING OF CONTROL
 
 
 
 
What less efficient speakers need is not just any powerful amplifier, but one with sublime
control of driver behavior, with absolute power to spare.    

It was the other speakers at my household that provided the most blatant testimony of the
kind of misuse I had exercised on them with all amplifiers preceding the AF.  Genesis VI,
Celestion SL700 and Apogee Duetta Signature -- all exceeded their past performances
when driven by the AF100, and provided the most definitive testimonials on the extent of
virtues a transistor amplifier of solid, thorough engineering can offer in pristine, high-output
listening.  

Take the most inefficient one of the group, the Apogee, for example.  At 86dB/4Ω, the
Apogee Duetta Signature is unrelenting in withholding its most superfluous against all
amplifications.  During the days of the McCormack DNA-1 Deluxe, and even with my dual-
mono Reference Line Silver Signature, I thought I had experienced the Apogee’s most
extended in frequency reenactment and its most vanquished in dynamic manifestations.  That
is, until it met the Audia Flight 100.     

The AF100 made me realized that the Apogee never showed me its richest treasure, never
offered me the timbre realism as charged by the Audia Flight; never surrendered its textural
delicacy the way the AF induced it to; never sounded so willing and touching when
commanded by other amplifiers as with the AF, and never filled the room so consummately
with any other amplifiers but the AF.

Likewise for the smallish Celestion SL700, it transcended its Aerolam confinement and
expanded its sonic capacity to fill up the room.

Known for its dynamic potential and an Apogee-like amplifier diet, the Celestion revealed a
persona befitting the title of the classic of the 90’s in British minimonitor design.  For though it
had always performed impressively with adequate amplification offering, such as the EL34-
based, 125 Wpc Music Reference RM9 II, the Celestion transformed into a fiery beast of
unprecedented sonic fullness with a newfound, disproportionate dynamic capacity.  

By pairing the Celestion SL700 to the Audia Flight 100, I experienced the unmistakable
sound of a full-range speaker from the minimonitor’s 1.25” aluminum dome tweeter and the
6.5”, double-surround Kobex driver.  It was not so much a case as the Italian amplifier
pushing hard, as the little minimonitor being sufficiently infused with power of the most
exquisite degree for the first time in a full exploitation of its potentials.

This amplifier has renewed my passion for the SL700, as well as reaffirming the British
minimonitor’s value.
 
 
 
 


CONCLUSION

A solid-state amplification worthy of the presence of all loudspeaker systems at my
residence, the Italian Audia Flight PRE and 100 was powerful enough to drive the Apogee
Duetta Signature to unprecedented finesse, and at the same time possessing virtual SET
subtleties to render the Audio Note AN-E SEC Signature most persuasively.  It offered an
alternate flavor that made a 300B user like me all the happier in this hobby.

Having been a Combak Harmonix Reimyo PAT-777 user for over  a year, I have found
satisfaction in the 300B sound, despite limitation in speaker selection.  Hence, I was
immensely surprised and gratified to bear witness each time the Italian solid-state
amplification drove any of the aforementioned speakers, be it the $40k Audio Note, or the
sub-$4,000 Celestion.  The Flight 100’s supple midrange detailing and superb texturing were
simply unheard of in a solid-state design.  

The fact that the Audia Flight 100 power amplifier was never ruthlessly assertive and was
instead pleasantly subtle in tonal manifestations, and attentive at handling delicate transient
swings, worked to assure me that its massive dimensions harbored a refinement
commensurate to its asking price.  

My first stare at the Audia Flight 100 power amplifier right out of the box was a prolonged
one, the same kind many men have had when they first laid eyes on something so physically
drawing to themselves that they would think of nothing rational but eternal companionship.  

Simplicity is a foremost consideration in all design audio, and a good number of them, such
as 47 Laboratory’s Gaincard integrated amplifier, have met with resounding success.  Yet, in
many a few designs, even the most vigorous implementation in simplicity failed to distinguish
itself.  

Therefore, when it comes to circuit design, I believe the morale of the precedents lies in the
forbearance of a fixated goal, but to tread mindfully with fore- and hindsight.  In this case, the
Flight 100 is a painstaking exercise in simplicity amidst a necessary complexity for the
attainment of power to which its designers aspired.

The dreadfulness of a sizably intimidating and sonically reckless solid-state amplifier is a
prospect that any 300B user, like me, has been seeking to avoid at all costs.  But the Audia
Flight 100 proved its worth among SETs in driving high-efficiency speakers in my household,
at the same time exerted its unmistakable power in vanquishing power-hungry speakers I’ve
known very well.  For its unique assets, the Audia Flight 100 is present day’s safest
investment in solid-state power amplifier.  

To want to own the Audia Flight 100 is to tread dangerously close to succumbing to one of
the most common human flaws of overspending.  Yet, it is mightily difficult to accept the
notion of relinquishing ownership.  

Fortunately, there is the $8k Flight One, an intriguing, integrated Audia Flight amplifier of
direct descent to the $7k Flight Pre and $7.5k Flight 50.  Costing $6,500 less than the $7k
Flight Pre and $11k Flight 100 combined, the Flight One seems to hold great promises, and
we shall see.
 
 


ALSO SEE THE DAGOGO REVIEWS OF

47 Laboratory 4706 Gaincard S
dual-mono integrated amplifier

Acapella La Campanella
horn speaker

Accustic Art DAC I Mk3

Eastern Electric MiniMax
CD player

Tannoy TD10
speaker

Tannoy Churchill Wideband
speaker
 
     
 
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