| The Bel
Canto eVo4 Amplifier |
|
Could This Be Real,
Or Am I Only
Dreaming? |
|
Dan Dzuban |
|
10 October
2002 |
Specifications
Output
power:
@ 8 Ohms 120
W x 4 or 360 W x 2
@ 4 Ohms 200
W x 4 or 500 W x 2
Bandwidth: 1Hz - 80KHz
-3dB
THD and Noise: Less than
1% THD at rated power
Damping Factor: >100,
below 100Hz
Gain: 23dB
Input
Impedance: >100, below
100Hz
Inputs: XLR & RCA
Idle Power Draw: 65
Watts
Dimensions: 17.5"W
×
14.5"D
×
4.5"H
Weight: 40lbs (18Kg)
Price: $3995
Address:
Bel Canto Design, Ltd.
212 3rd Avenue North,
Ste 345
Minneapolis, MN 55401
Email
info@belcantodesign.com
Telephone: 612-317-4550
Website:
www.belcantodesign.com
What a
Wonderful World We Live
In
Imagine a
world where Krell made
vacuum tube amplifiers.
Effortless power. Bass
with extension and slam.
Transparent and detailed
treble. Yet, with a
midrange shimmering with
harmonics and presence,
and a soundstage
billowing with air. And
what if in this dream
world a dealer was
willing to sell you this
amp for 75% of its
retail price. This is
the Bel Canto eVo4 in a
nutshell-and it's not a
dream.
Publisher Clement Perry
has been raving about
Bel Canto's eVo series
of amplifiers for quite
awhile. Indeed he was
one of the first to laud
their ability to combine
the best of transistors
with the best that tubes
had to offer. Before I
moved from Connecticut
to Los Angeles, he and I
spent some time jamming
with his monoblocked
200.2s, and this is
exactly what I heard as
well. World-class
clarity and an organic
rightness just not heard
in transistor
amplifiers. I also
alluded to the
performance of the eVo4s
in my recent review of
the
Quad ESL-989s,
but even with both
mentions, the eVo4s
deserve a review of
their own. Perry claims
that the 200.2s run in
monobloc are a steal, so
you could imagine where
that leaves the eVo4 at
about 2/3s the cost of a
pair of 200.2s.
Technicalities
First, I
should mention that I
auditioned the Bel Canto
eVo 200.4, which is the
predecessor to the eVo4.
The difference between
the two is simply a
restyled face panel and,
well, a new name. Since
there is no real change,
and since the 200.4 face
panel version is no
longer made, I will
refer to the eVo4 from
here on out. Perry
already went into detail
about the technical
aspects of the eVo's
Tripath digital
technology, so I shall
refer you to his
review for the
nitty gritty. It is
worth reiterating that
the build quality of the
eVo4 is impeccable; a
half-inch thick
faceplate and a
heavy-duty chassis with
nary a rattle. It was
kind of ironic (or
perhaps reassuring) that
an efficient digital amp
that did not require the
usual size transformers
or capacitors could be
so heavy and solid.
There were XLR inputs,
especially solid RCA
inputs, and there were
knurled metal speaking
binding posts.
The eVo4 is a four
channel, 120 Wpc
amplifier. I imagine
that it could be used in
a variety of home
theater situations,
since two or all of the
channels can be bridged.
I can also see it being
used in situations where
speakers need to be
biamplified. However,
its real value is in its
ability to match the
capabilities of Perry's
bridged 200.2s at nearly
$6,000, for only $4,000.
In addition, the eVo4
incorporates an updated
circuit design over the
200.2, which gives it a
much larger power supply
per channel. Thus, by
Perry's reasoning, you
not only get the
performance of a $20,000
amp for $6,000, but you
get it for $4,000, and
you get the increased
performance that comes
with a larger power
supply, and you get it
in the convenience of a
single chassis. (I'll
leave the theoretical
sonic downside of having
a single chassis versus
dual monoblocs to
someone else to
explore).
Also, it is worth
reiterating Perry's
assertions that the eVo
sounds better bridged
than in stereo, because
I believe this is the
heart of what makes the
eVo so special.
Typically when an amp is
bridged, its distortion
doubles along with a
theoretical quadrupling
of output wattage. Bel
Canto chose to run each
stereo pair of channels
out of phase with each
other so as to minimize
the power supply demands
and to maximize power
efficiency and
performance. In stereo
mode, one of the output
wires is reversed so
that the channels are
brought back to proper
phase alignment. I don't
know if this has
anything to do with the
digital nature of the
amp, but few designs
incorporate this
principle. When bridged,
however, the unit
becomes balanced bridged
(AKA differential
bridged, AKA balanced
output), meaning that
not only is the output
wattage increased, but
also one channel is
driving the positive
lead of the speaker
while the other channel
is simultaneously
driving the negative
lead of the speaker. My
understanding is that
this is different from
standard bridged
designs, which drive the
positive and negative
slopes of the signal
waveform, but not the
positive and negative
speaker terminals. Like
the out of phase power
supply, very few other
designs have used this
method either. Sumo
amplifiers used to do
this, and Krell and some
Mark Levinson designs
use it as well. I can
even remember a few
years back that MIT and
Spectral had some wiring
mechanism which allowed
Spectral amps to be
balanced-bridged via
speaker cables, and they
made some pretty lofty
claims about the
resulting sound
improvements. I also
noticed that REL
subwoofers have a
separate
balanced-bridged
speaker-level input on
their pricier model
subwoofers. I don't
understand why this
setup isn't used more
often, because the
results are spectacular.
The Sound
After
hearing Perry's
monoblocked eVos, I was
curious to hear how the
eVo4 would mate with the
purity and transparency
of the Quad ESL-989s.
After a couple of days
of 24-hour playback, I
was ready to give the
pairing a listen. I
initially ran two
120-watt channels of the
amp into the Quads.
Clarity, detail and
overall very good sound.
At that point though, I
couldn't help but to
wonder if hypothetically
the two channels of the
eVo4 in my listening
room were instead the 2
channel eVo 200.2 at
roughly $3,000, would it
be worth nearly double
the cost of the Quad 909
amplifier I was
comparing it to? Tough
call. In direct
comparison, the Quad 909
was not clearly
outclassed by 2 channels
of the eVo4. No, they
did not sound
identical-with the
Quad's midrange
emphasis-but voicing
choices aside, I
probably could have
lived with the $1,500
Quad 909 if I were short
on cash. (Did I just
pose the hypothetical
"…if I were short on
cash")? With a bit more
money (Now there is a
hypothetical!), I
probably would have
sprung for the 200.2.
However, when I bridged
the eVo4's four channels
into two balanced
bridged channels, the
differences were not
subtle. In fact,
hypothetical financial
situations aside, I felt
I would beg borrow or
steal to keep this amp.
That said, I did all the
rest of my auditioning
in balanced bridge mode.
What I first heard was
an immense opening up of
the soundstage. The
soundstage became much
larger and all
encompassing. The
soundstage was cavernous
from front to back, and
side to side. The
interesting thing is
that although the
soundstage got bigger,
the individual sound
sources did not
significantly enlarge.
The net result is that
there was simply more
space between
performers. There was a
massive amount of air
within the soundstage.
There was certainly
treble purity and air,
but I have heard airier
treble. But to me, this
seemed to be the proper
amount of treble
air-contrasted with the
artificial injection of
air that I have
sometimes heard in
audiophile designs.
Although this
soundstaging prowess
seemed to be a spatial
phenomenon, it
contributed to the
clarity of the
presentation. With the
performers more spread
out, it was easier to
focus on the musical
details of each
instrument-kind of a
"decongestant" for your
sound system. This
worked to great effect
on Joe Ely's Letter
to Laredo [MCAD
11222]. This album
epitomizes Tex-Mex and
you really feel as
though Ely is singing
the blues in some
cantina in Mexico. I
can't really say I am a
fan of this genre, but I
really love this disc. A
plethora of instruments
such as a plucked
Spanish guitar,
woodblocks, cymbals and
multiple drums come from
deep within and
throughout the
soundstage. The decay of
the instruments' notes,
as well as Ely's voice,
hang in the air like the
smoke in the bar room in
which he is playing. Ely
himself is authentic, as
was his performance, and
so was its replay.
To put this in
perspective, I had
another amp come through
my listening room that I
was unable to formally
review. That particular
amp derived its clarity
from the starkness in
which it portrayed the
performers within the
rest of the soundstage,
and in that sense it may
have been more
"transparent" as we have
come to use the term.
But the eVo sounded more
lifelike. In terms of a
video analogy, that amp
got its clarity from an
increase in contrast,
whereas the eVo got its
clarity from just plain
moving you closer to the
screen. Indeed, the
perspective of the eVo
was a bit more forward
than I was used to. With
the increase in
soundstage came the
feeling that the
soundstage increased in
all dimensions-including
moving closer into the
room. Although I felt as
though I was in closer
proximity to the
performance, the
soundstage's increase
was balanced in all
directions, so I
generally did not feel
as though the
perspective was now too
upfront. In fact, I
would say for the Quad
ESL-989s, it was just
right.
"Just right" also
describes the depiction
of harmonics by the eVo.
In bridged mode, the eVo
brought a tube-like
richness to the harmonic
presentation. I never
felt as though harmonics
became euphonic
colorations, but rather
that they added
dimensionality without
subtracting clarity. I
would call this
presence, and this
trick, my friends, is a
tough job to pull
off-let alone for solid
state. This was an
intensely musical amp
that not only presented
a remarkable soundstage,
but also fleshed out the
individual performers
with its dimensionality.
In that sense, this amp
really did sound
tube-like. Once again,
not because it was
colored or deviated from
tonally neutral in any
way, but because it had
a richness that
contributed to the
performers sounding more
organic, more real.
Combined with a
completely smooth
presentation that lacked
any kind of harshness or
edge, this was one
musical amp, not because
it glossed over any
details or somehow made
recordings sound better,
but rather because it
somehow made instruments
sound more real and
performers more present.
As with the
Audio Harmony Six
that I previously
reviewed, all of my 80s
compilations sounded
more lifelike with the
additional harmonic
textures and lushness.
But unlike the 'Six, the
eVo4 did not make
already rich recordings
like Sade's Love
Deluxe [Epic
EK53178] sound overly
so. Similarly, the eVo
added an organic realism
to Joe Ely's Letter to
Laredo without making
this intentionally stark
recording sound lush. I
should also mention that
I have heard k. d.
lang's Save Me from her
Ingénue disc
[Sire 9268402] too many
times to count, since it
was one of the house's
reference tracks when I
sold high-end retail.
The opening slide guitar
never swept me away the
way it did through the
eVo.
The bass presentation of
the amp also sounded
more real than I have
heard elsewhere. It was
not tube-like, but much
more in the
deep-but-controlled
solid state mold. It was
pretty heavy on impact,
certainly deep, and
never boomy, but it was
not the tightest I have
heard. However, it was
definitely in the realm
of subjective preference
rather than objective
right-or-wrong. In fact,
I cannot say that this
choice in bass voicing
by Bel Canto was wrong,
but just that it was
rich without being
overly so. Once again,
for my tastes "just
right." It also seemed
"just right" for the
Quads as well; they once
had what I thought was
about a 50-70 Hz hump,
but the eVo tightened
this hump down to almost
non-existence. Yet, the
Quads retained rhythmic
drive (or rather they
portrayed the eVo's
rhythmic drive) and did
not sound overdamped or
dry. The bass richness
combined with depth and
impact to sound again,
well, real. On Joe Ely's
Letter to Laredo,
the first track opens up
with some heavy bass
chords, and although the
bass did not become
overwhelmingly boomy as
I have heard it
portrayed other amps, it
did have a certain
resonance to it.
Probably the resonance
you would hear if you
were hearing Ely playing
live.
Enter the
Electrostat
If you
haven't already caught
my hints, the eVo was an
ideal match for the Quad
ESL-989s. In fact, it
was a synergistic whole
that brought the
listener much closer to
best-at-any-price
performance than $12,000
may ever have. As I
mentioned in my Quad
review, the eVo took an
already legendary
performing speaker and
kicked it up another
notch with capabilities
that I did not know the
Quad possessed. The Quad
is like clear water in
its presentation, so the
eVo's soundstage and
harmonic richness came
through
beautifully-absolutely
stunning. What I did not
expect were the
dynamics, slam and ease
I got from the pairing.
I don't know if it was
the power supply phasing
or the control from
simultaneous pushing and
pulling, but these amps
squeezed out performance
like the last bit of
juice from an orange. I
speculate that just as
the inversion of phase
between the channels
makes the power supply
more efficient, the same
technique makes the
electrostatic element
more tolerant to high
wattages. Granted, the
Quads still felt a bit
restrained at high
volumes, but with the
eVo, the high volumes
got much higher-much
higher in fact than I
ever listen. At anything
less than the highest
volumes, they had an
ease that made them
sound as though they
were simply coasting
through the finish line.
I just could not believe
the added dynamics and
headroom. The Quads
already are extremely
articulate through the
bass, but the eVos made
them even more impactful.
This is just what you
would expect when going
from about a 100 Wpc amp
to a 400 Wpc one-but
that scenario is simply
just not ever mentioned
in the same phrase as
"Quad." I can't help but
to wonder if this
phenomenon would occur
with Martin Logans or
other electrostatics,
let alone Magnepans or
even traditional dynamic
speakers. As I mentioned
earlier, with this clear
increase in performance,
I just cannot understand
why other amps do not
use the same balance
bridging technique.
Conclusion
This amp
accomplished miracles
with the Quad 989, and I
wish I could have heard
what it could have done
for other speaker
designs. However, I did
have had the opportunity
to hear a few other
amplifiers that actually
exceeded the eVo's
transparency, detail and
deep bass control. But I
still have yet to hear
an amp that is so
exceptional in all
areas. I have a feeling
this amp could steal
quite a few tube-lovers'
hearts as well as those
who are inclined to
remain within the solid
state. You would expect
this from a $20,000
design, but not from
$4,000. Call it a
miracle, call it a steal
or call it a dream. This
is the Bel Canto eVo4 in
a nutshell-and it's not
a dream.

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