Mondia Designs Amfitheater 1 Receivers
Mondia Designs Amfitheater 1 Receivers
USER REVIEWS
[Dec 27, 1999]
Travis
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
American designed, Mondial(Acurus), great amp for the price
Weakness:
lack of video switching, no Dolby Digital
Similar Products Used: Yamaha, Denon, Sony ES |
[Jan 27, 1998]
Cary Noel
an Audio Enthusiast
I spent nearly 3 months searching for the best pro-logic reciever, listining to everything out there. My number one concern was purely sound quality. I had already purchaced and returned compairably priced recivers from Harmon Kardon and Denon, both of which were disappointing in sound quality, but great on looks and reputation. I was suprisingly dissapointed with both. The AMFI is far and away the best sounding reciver one can buy for $500. It's amps are so strong and solid - I never thought my Polks could sound as good as they do now. Hands down - If you want a reciver that will sound fantastic, strong, and as solid as much more expensive amps and recivers, than the AMFI theater 1 by Mondial Designs is the one to get. |
[Jan 25, 1998]
Tom
an Audio Enthusiast
My first Prologic Reciever Sucked. It was noisey and the signal kept jumping around the room. The music it played was way over processed. It would turn my stomach to listen to anything. All recorded music cololected dust... |
[Jan 27, 1998]
Oscar
an Audio Enthusiast
Simply the best receiver you can find for under $500, May not satisfy the pickiest listener but what more can you expect from this unit, this units fairly competes with others that costs as twice as much.Oscar |
[Feb 25, 1998]
Randall
an Audio Enthusiast
Incredibly well built device , Strong & Clear, this unit is virtually impossible to beat among the sub $ 750. |
[Apr 22, 1998]
tom
a Casual Listener
Okay the Amfi still sounds great but I need to revise my review.....After the a few months the first uniot died. No one knows why, So I sent it back and it was fixed.... NOT. It was buzy and died again within 24 hours. |
[Oct 16, 1999]
DJ ArcSin
Audiophile
Strength:
Great styling, very powerful tuner, high-quality connecting points, sound quality is very high
Weakness:
No phono stage, Radio Data System circuit on tuner rarely recieves a steady signal even when audio comes in clear Beautiful unit to behold, nice "Indiglo" style LCD display, handsome face. Inputs are all analog, RCA, but are gold-plated and will accomodate inters up to the AudioQuest Ruby range, not to mention the gold-plated binding posts, VERY handy for shoving in as much copper and silver has humanly possible (just the holes on the side are about 10 or 8 gague), and the pre-outs make for a definite temptation to upgrade later. The sound is top-notch for it's all-in-one-box design, the tone controls haven't been touched except for the turntable. This leads me to my only complaint about this piece of electronics : NO PHONO STAGE. The sound is under-powered, tinny, and bright from my ancient-history turntable, forcing me to either get an external phono stage, or a newer, higher-output current cartridge. Mine cost me a piddling $300, from http://www.soundfactor.com , MSRP is $500 which I can understand. Unless you plan on AC3, or going above $800 for separates or some outrageous H/K or Denon, look into this reciever, you won't be dissapointed. Similar Products Used: Harman Kardon AVR65, Marantz 680 |
[Nov 10, 1999]
DJ ArcSin
Audiophile
Strength:
Powerful and detailed tuner, great amplifier stage, pre-outs, beautiful, musical sound
Weakness:
No phono stage, kind of flimsy/weak remote, no balanced input Well, I've come back to give a more seasoned review of the AmFiTheater 1 by Mondial. Now that my system is complete, I can give a more encompassing review. The sound is impeccable. Engaging, excited, and "pseudo-live", if a little bright. The sound from my now properly equipped turntable is very revealing, tends to make me clean my LPs more often it is so accurate. I take back the comment about the lack of an integrated phono stage, it's worth it to have a separate phono preamp to gain proper control over capacitance. The wattage, like many high-end audio gear, is under-rated. My speakers are rated at 250 watts peak, and "70 watts" from the AmFi is enough to top out considerate apartment listening at 25% volume. Surprisingly, the Dolby sound modes are worth turning on, most other recievers I demo-ed sounded tubby in surround mode (I was shown what Surround was supposed to be later, with a Lexicon and a set of PSBs, I feel it's on par). Video watching becomes involving, even immersive, even with two speakers, which weren't designed for Dolby surround, see review. But best of all is the sound from CDs. There is so much I never knew was in a lot of the recordings I play every night, even on a high-end Marantz/Carver DJ setup. What sounded like distortion on samples/voices/guitars now becomes as intended when the filters were applied in the studio. I couldn't ask for anything more, I don't own any CDs recorded with such clinical methods as to create a sound I won't hear. True, there are maybe a handful of Classical or Jazz HDCDs that were recorded with millions of dollars of pro audio equipment, mastered by lifetime professionals and generally combed over bit-by-bit for reference quality sound, thereby justifying MBL/Martin Logan/Krell setups, but why spend $250,000 on equipment to play maybe 50 CDs, about 10 that you actually enjoy. Audio is about loving the music, not disecting it. I spent what I consider a large amount of money on this setup, but it has come out to be my dream come true, the AmFi being an integral part of that. If you share my views on music, and don't need Dolby Digital or an all-in-one box, the AmFi is head-and-shoulders above anything in overall value. Six stars for value, five for overall, only because there is still better equipment out there for those who will appreciate it's clinical properties. Similar Products Used: Rotel RX950, Marantz SR-680, NAD 7xxx series, dare I say B&K 202 minus the DD |
[Dec 25, 1999]
Patric Gould
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
USA Design, Clean sound, Price
Weakness:
Not AC-3, Looks a little cheap The Amfi Theatre is made by the same company that makes Acurus and Aragon hi end equipment. I've alwas loved the Acurus components but couldn't afford them plus a suround decoder. I was delighted to find the Amfi at my local used store. It was a "new" demo model with full waranty and I think I paid around $350.00 for it. Similar Products Used: Pioner, Denon |
[Jan 01, 2000]
Tom Johnson
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Ability to make subtle adjustments to tailor the output to the sound type and quality. Surprisingly powerful with face-plate simple logic. Musical reproduction above excellent
Weakness:
The damn remote: this thing will never feel 'natural'. Finding one of these off eBay for way under the $500MSRP just couldn't be resisted; I was planning to put it in the office to give em reasonable background working 'sounds'. After testing it, I moved it into the living area and my old Carver CT-7 with a M-1.0t power amp no live in the office making these 'sounds'. The Mondial is in a room about 14'x28'; place near the middle powering a pair of Wharfdale Modus 1-6 and an old Epicure 'bookshelf' single speaker I added as the 'center' speaker: the sound is absolutely superb. The Mondial (with the exception of the remote) is a joy to 'focus'. The speaker test mode allows individual adjustmets of the two main speakers separate from the added 'center'. Mondial gives you the option to "phantom" the center speaker: I tried it and then added the Epicure. Now I have a spare Epicure: anyone want it for a real fair price ? There's comparable power from the Mondial as from the Carver: hard to believe from a unit that's "all in one box". Binding posts are 'hole' type and with my bi-wired Wharfedales that was a problem; split-base screw-type closure would have been better but it was workable. |