It may be small, but this is a well thought-out design
that boasts a number of very clever features
The A19 is the smallest amplifier in the Arcam FMJ range and
is also one of the less expensive amps in the test. Despite this, you get a
fair amount for your $1,039.5. This design comes with five analogue inputs and
a MM phonon stage. Interestingly, for those of you with six input sources and
no turntable, the phonon stage can be bypassed and turned into an additional
line input. The remote is small and not the most substantial device, but is
well laid out.
Arcam FMJ A19
On the rear panel, the Arcam is fitted with a power socket
that will allow you to connect a member of the ‘r’ family to the A19 without
the need for an extra socket. This means that although it has no digital or
Bluetooth connections, you can use an rBlink or an rPac (which offer these
features) to add this functionality and still stay within the test budget.
Unlike the digital inputs fitted to the other amps, doing so will cost you one
of the existing analogue line inputs.
Around the front, it is business as usual for an FMJ product
with the reasonably well-finished black casework livened up a little with a
silver volume knob and the green on black display that shows the input and
volume level currently selected. The Arcam doesn’t feel as substantial as some
of the designs here, but it would be churlish to call it flimsy. The display
looks a little old fashioned compared to the Creek’s OLED, but it is easy to
read at a distance and can be switched off for those that find its green glow
too intrusive.
Sound quality
From the outset, the Arcam shows some characteristics that
are in keeping with the brand, but also some that aren’t shared with its
predecessors and are largely positive. Although it is the least powerful amp,
it shows no signs of strain at the level selected for the test and with Muse’s
Madness, manages to sound rich and vibrant with a very impressive sense of
scale and weight to vocals and instruments. This is even more apparent with the
Neil Cowley Trio, where the A19 shows a real ability with the piano, conveying
the size and weight of the instrument very effectively. The smoothness is
unmistakably Arcam, but the top-end sparkle it has and the very open and airy
performance that results is a welcome evolution.
The A19 is the
smallest amplifier in the Arcam FMJ range and is also one of the less expensive
amps in the test
It is slightly less happy in terms of bass, however. With
both the Muse piece and the heavyweight Pleine Lune from Scratch Massive’s
Communion, the A19 doesn’t find quite the same detail and separation to very
low notes that the best in test manage. The bass it produces is substantial,
but slightly monotone, stealing a little excitement and engagement from the
performance. This slight lack of life is shown most clearly with Aloe Blacc’s I
Need a Dollar where the Arcam excels with Blacc’s vocals, but doesn’t have
quite the same head nodding get up and go that some of the other amps can
generate. There is a sense that its presentation is slightly gentle and in
being forgiving across most material, it is on occasions slightly soft.
This should not detract too much from an amplifier that is
well thought out, impressively flexible – in terms of setup given the bolt-on
options – and is capable of a very rich and engrossing musical performance that
should win it many friends. The slight lack of low-end control and the somewhat
matter of fact presentation with more aggressive material does mean that there
are better all-rounders in the test, though.
The Arcam doesn’t
feel as substantial as some of the designs here, but it would be churlish to
call it flimsy
One test
Rated by Arcam at just 50W, the A19 gets closer to 2x64W and
2x100W into 8/4ohm with 75W, 135W and 180W available under dynamic conditions
into 8, 4 and 2ohm, but it’s still no ‘powerhouse’. Distortion is very low at
0.0009-0.0015% from 1W to 50W through bass and midrange, increasing to 0.016%
at high frequencies. The A19’s A-wtd S/N ratio is also very wide indeed – a
full 92dB (Re. 0dBW), second only to the NAD.
Wide S/N ratios can open an amp to noise from upstream
components, but Arcam has engineered a relatively steep high treble roll-off to
reduce the impact of ultrasonic noise from SACD, in particular, amounting to
–0.4dB/20kHz down to –11.7dB/100kHz into 8ohm. The output impedance is a
moderate 0.07ohm, increasing to 0.145ohm at 20 kHz, so this system response
should remain consistent. Stereo separation is good to 75dB through bass and
midrange.
Our verdict
·
Sound quality: 4/5
·
Value for money: 4.5/5
·
Build quality: 4/5
·
Features: 4.5/5
·
Like: Clever bolt-on options; rich and engrossing sonic
performance
·
Dislike: Slight lack of bass control and excitement
·
We say: Considerable all round ability, but it’s bettered in some
areas by the competition
·
Overall: 4/5
Details
·
Product: Arcam FMJ A19
·
Origin: UK
·
Type: Integrated amplifier
·
Weight: 8.5kg
·
Dimensions (W x H x D): 432 x 85 x 275mm
·
Features : Quoted power output: 50W RMS per channel into
8ohms; Available finishes: Black; Line inputs: 5 RCA; Digital inputs: no, but
there’s an option to connect rSeries units
·
Distributor: Arcam
|