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Equipment Reviews more reviews »
February 2010
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Musical Life Conductor MK II turntable, GamuT Phi 7 speaker & D200i solid-state stereo amplifier


Gary Lea

Page: 2

 

Musical Life Conductor SE tonearm

Next came the arm mounting. I installed both arms but quite honestly after making sure that both operated correctly most of my listening was done with the 12” arm. Set up was relatively simple and straight forward. The arms are nicely machined and attractive units, and about as nerve wrecking as I have ever encountered. Part of this nervousness was my lack of comfort with an arm held in place by a top mounted magnet connecting to a small ball bearing affair. The arm wands on the two that I had were made of ebony. The counter weighting was easily adjustable, but at one point I bumped the arm and it simply detached from its magnetic bearing and dropped to the platter. Thankfully, I did not have an expensive cartridge on it and the stylus cover was protecting the suspension. It was one of those odd and surreal moments that make you throw up in your mouth. Clearly, caution is to be used when the only form of attaching the arm to the arm base is a small magnet. Other than that one misstep, there seemed to be no problems.

The arms tracked beautifully and seemed to be totally lacking any of the fidgety and finicky accoutrements that many arms have these days. I tried a number of cartridges in the arm and it seemed to deftly handle them all. The only one that seemed to give it any trouble was the 16 gram Goldnote Baldinotti. A wonderful cartridge but it does not suit every arm. The Koetsu Azule and Vermillion both worked extremely well along with the Dynavector 17D3 (yes I know it is an inexpensive cartridge but it is also quite good and showed itself well in this setup, so never judge a product strictly on price). Mounting the cartridge is very straightforward although the instructions for the arm are non-existent. Speaking of that, Tom was able to get me some poorly translated instructions, but this is something that any manufacture wanting to market high-end components in any country but their own needs to invest in a good copy writer and translation software to provide proper instructions. To not do so at these price points is absurd.

The sum total information available from the Musical Life website is included below. I would say minimalism is a core competency for them.

 

The Conductor is the state-of-the-art turntable by Musical Life. Only selected materials with highest manufacturing precision are used. The highlights of the Conductor are: substantial mass, smooth running, concealed motor unit, 100mm high POM (Polyoxymethylen) platter and the extremely complex construction of the plinth. This is manufactured from a 100mm high Slate stone and brass in a complex labor-intensive process. Besides the enormous expenditure of time required in manufacturing The Conductor, no machines in existence can work on this material as precisely and cleanly as the human hand. Therefore, more than 60 working hours are necessary to manufacture a Conductor turntable. This expenditure of time might be singular to turntable manufacturing, and serves to illustrate the uniqueness of the Conductor. Perfection hand made in Germany!

 

I would agree with them that this is an exemplary turntable and certainly to be considered if you are looking at the ultimate statement of mass as a way to end all external vibration from finding its way to your stylus. Be sure you have a rack that can handle the weight and also be sure you have a lot of friends handy to help you schlep the thing and get it set up. Great sound, ultra chic looks and it is environmentally friendly to boot!



GamuT Phi 7 Loudspeakers

 Gamut Phi 7 speakersThe speakers that came along for the ride were the GamutT Phi 7. A tall slender drink of water these are! Very attractive and rather room-set-up friendly. They came in a beautiful rosewood finish.

This speaker incorporates the knowledge gained during the development and refinement of the L series, and then brings it down to a lower price point. Blessed with four 15 cm (roughly 6.15 inch) inch woofers, one mid range of the same size as the woofers and a 1.5 inch radiating ring tweeter, the speakers are roughly 49.5 inches tall by 7 inches wide and 13 inches dep. They come with a pretty interesting foot arrangement. The stand feet swing out from the unit to give the speaker a four point stand. It is a nifty idea. The narrow baffle is intended to enhance sound dispersion in the upper frequencies. This is a very elegant looking speaker and very WAF friendly. To quote the manufacture, “The tall baffle with the woofers distributed over its height gives an excellent acoustic coupling to the listening room and assures maximum control over resonances generated in the listening room itself.

They are roughly 89dB in sensitivity and are primed for a 4 ohm load. This should make it a pretty friendly and easily driven speaker for a number of amps and the GamuT i200 that came with the package seemed a pretty good match. I ran them in for a few days without paying much attention to them. After three days I decided to do some measurements. From 20 kHz on down I found some interesting drops along the way. I had heard of another reviewer claiming that between the 4 kHz range and 20 kHz there was approximately a 5-6dB drop. I did not see this in any of the measurements I took. I did notice a slight drop of 2db at around 500Hz and another 1 db drop at around 4kHz but other than that they were pretty flat all the way through and this could have been a room anomaly. I am not sure what caused someone else to see such a difference but I am sure it must have been something really out of the norm. I cannot say the Phi 7s are totally neutral, I am not sure anything is ever totally neutral, but I can say that they were close and extremely pleasing and easy to listen too. The bottom-end rolled off steeply around 45 Hz which I will attribute to the rather slender cabinet dealing with 4 woofers, a midrange and the tweeter. For the bulk of the time I had them I had them well out in the room and away from any reinforcement and in when pulled closer to the back wall there was a bit of a change. The midrange and highs were very smooth inducing absolutely no fatiguing.

Overall the speaker was well integrated and most likely voiced to accommodate the cabinet shape and size. What really struck me about the Phi7 was how utterly natural the high frequencies sounded to my ears. It was well integrated and lacked any hard edge without being overly laid back. That is a tough hat trick to pull off. The speaker overall had a great coherency and continuity. The midrange was tight and up front and not as warm and smooth as I have heard in speakers like the Von Schweikert VR4, but then again these are not in the same price range.

One thing the Phi 7s did in spades was to create a wide and open soundstage and completely disappear from the room. They were also incredibly rhythmic and toe tapping inducing. I expected a bit more in the bottom-end and perhaps I did not get them broken in as well as they could be. I did find that with more than usual toe-in the bass seemed tighter, more musical and slightly deeper. This is a speaker that can comfortably be placed near a wall or a corner without creating booming bass. I tried this by pulling them back and it did enhance the bass but at a slight cost in the sound stage. I think these would be incredibly good with a subwoofer to take you to that 20 Hz mark.

The fit and finish is first rate and as I said the cabinet shape and the quality of the veneer lets it blend in well with most any décor and still deliver very dynamic, highly rhythmic sound. I would like to try these in a home theater setup. That would be something. All in all, I enjoyed my time with the Gamut Phi7. According to the manufacturer, they are designed with home theater application in mind and would most likely serve that utilization rather well. This might be the perfect speaker for the audiophile who has to get their two-channel thrills out of a family-centered theater system.



Gamut D200i Solid State Stereo Amp

Gamut D200i stereo power amplifierThe amp that Tom provided with the speakers and turntable was the GamuT D200i. Rated at 200 watts per channel, with a dual mono design that utilizes two power transformers and two pairs of large power supply capacitors, the Gamut D200i brings lots of power and dynamics to your system. Plus, it does that with an elegant design and small foot print.  At 17” by 17” and 6” tall this amplifier is not about girth, width or compensation for certain body parts. It is about delivering 200 watts of class A power in a foot print that works well with any rack and a clean and classy look. I will say this: it is heft and weighs roughly 70lbs.

From the front the amp looks somewhat plain but there is a one inch wide cutout on the front panel with a blue LED and the ON/OFF switch set into the recession in the face plate. Again, there is an elegant look and feel. Heat sinks run the entire length along both sides and in the back the setup is straightforward and easy. There are single-ended and XLR inputs, two pairs of WBT outputs, with an IEC power cord receptacle smack dab in the middle, which I rather like. According to GamuT the idea of using 32 transistors makes an amplifier sound more like a choir than a single, clear source. To combat that in the D200i they use a single massive transistor per channel capable of handling up to 500 watts of power. The use of a single transistor allows Gamut to tune them to “sonic perfection”, as they say. The whole point is to combine the fluid softness of tubes, and the sheer power of mos-fets.

This is a titan of an amp. Upon firing up the unit you will hear a series of two clicks or pops. That is normal and it is the way of the amp letting you know it is ready for battle. It does the same thing when you turn it off, albeit a bit quieter. This amp has everything you may want. It has tremendous strength, incredible dynamics and the ability to produce music that simply channels whatever comes through it without adding any of its own personality or sound signature. Not as warm and laid back as tubes, and certainly not harsh and edgy like many other solid-state amps but rather neutral, very neutral! Did I tell you that the D200i is neutral? This is an amp that is capable of moving your foundation when cranked to the hilt (something I no longer do but I can still tell that it will do it). I ran Joe Satriani’s “Flying in a Blue Dream” through it at pretty substantial volumes and the clarity and control were simply great. No distortions or grain, just the music as Joe laid it down on the tracks. At the intro is the sound of a conversation that actually came through an amp during the recording session, and it was decided to leave it in. When I played the same track again at lower volumes you could still hear all the detail of that conversation and the delicacy of the acoustic rhythm guitar.

On some older jazz with Art Pepper and Chet Baker, the sounds of brass were never harsh and never produced that effect that comes from someone scraping their nails down a chalk board. What it did do on these tracks was give you all the delicate detail of brushes on a snare drum, the ever-so-light tapping of the head of a drumstick on a 20-inch ride cymbal and the decay of that sound. A truly stunning delivery to be sure.

I wish I had been allotted more time with this amp to truly flesh it out more but during the time that I did have it and was able to run a few different speakers with it, I found it tireless and never fatiguing. I am not sure exactly how they did it but GamuT has a real solid-state gem on its hands and when the time comes for me to buy another amp, I may well investigate the D200i as the amp. If one is that good how would two be strapped and used as monoblocks?

Overall the time spent with all three components lightly discussed here was a bit too short to really dig into the more long-term performance issues; but I think it is safe to say that the quality and the sound of these components all warrant serious investigation if you are in the market for speakers, amps or turntables and I know Tom Vu has a vast array of pieces from all the manufactures sampled here. Check him out and get familiar with GamuT and that amplifier technology. You will not be sorry that you did!

 
 
 
 
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