---
product_id: 25146206
title: "iFi Micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier"
price: "£2.45"
currency: GBP
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/25146206-ifi-micro-ican-se-headphone-amplifier
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# Ultra-Fast Response High-Res Audio Powerful Output iFi Micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier

**Price:** £2.45
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

## Summary

> 🎶 Amplify Your Experience: Where Sound Meets Sophistication!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** iFi Micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier
- **How much does it cost?** £2.45 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Currently out of stock
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.uk](https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/25146206-ifi-micro-ican-se-headphone-amplifier)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Durable Design:** Built to withstand the rigors of daily use while looking sleek.
- • **Compact Powerhouse:** Designed for portability without compromising on performance.
- • **Elevate Your Sound:** Experience audio like never before with high-resolution capabilities.
- • **Seamless Connectivity:** Enjoy hassle-free pairing with a variety of devices.
- • **User-Friendly Controls:** Intuitive interface for effortless adjustments on the go.

## Overview

The iFi Micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier is a compact yet powerful device designed to enhance your audio experience. With high-resolution audio capabilities, seamless connectivity, and user-friendly controls, it’s perfect for audiophiles and casual listeners alike. Its durable design ensures it can handle everyday use while delivering exceptional sound quality.

## Description

iFi micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier 4000mW of Class A TubeState Power Effortlessly Drives Any Headphone: iFi micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier Touts XBass, 3D HolographicSound, DirectDrive, and iPower Power Supply Exclusive Class A TubeState circuitry and a whopping 4,000mW of Class A power comprise the brains behind the sonic brawn of the iFi micro iCAN SE headphone amplifier , a souped-up and highly improved version of the acclaimed iCAN model. Able to effortlessly drive any headphone on earth via customized Turbo headamp circuitry, iCAN SE also touts revised XBass technology, refined 3D HolographicSound, and DirectDrive topology that yields incredible transparency courtesy of its nearly unmeasurable output impedance. Boutique resistors and capacitors, and the iPOWER power supply/adapter – with a miraculously low noise floor of just 1uV – further help contribute to performance distinguished by remarkable clarity, stunning dynamics, in-the-room soundstages, wide-open spaciousness, and natural musicality. Able to ferret out the noise and distortion that inhibit he enjoyment of headphone playback, iCAN SE claims both power and panache. Three user-adjustable gain-adjustment settings and iFi 's now-hallmark clean design complete a component more than deserving of its Special Edition badge. 100% Music Direct Guaranteed.

Review: The iCan really can! - I've always been intrigued by the ican, but held off due to my power hungry planar headphones. when I saw the new ican se with 4w of power at 16ohm, I jumped. I'm so glad I did, this is a tremendous amp at this price. first let's talk power. this thing is powerful. I can't find a good breakdown of power output at different ohm intervals, but ifi claims 4w (4000mw) at 16ohm, which is a lot. and let me get this out of the way right now. my hungriest headphones, the planar magnetic alpha prime and mad dog pro, all run super loud in LOW GAIN at about 2oclock on the volume dial. put it in mid gain, and I'm at about 10oclock. high gain and I can barely move the dial away from the bottom. Ifi claims this baby will drive an he-6 well, and I'm inclined to believe it; there's power to spare with this thing. build is excellent. it's a small, light unit, with an aluminum shell. seams are tight, and nothing rattles or jiggled unexpectedly. the volume pot is smooth, but a bit tight. I don't want a finger workout changing the volume! but I won't complain much, at least if I bump the dial my volume won't change. it comes with a wall wart style power cord, and lots of cables and extras. the bass and cross feed switches are tight and flick with a reassuring heft. they feel like they'll last a long, long time. my biggest complain about build would be the gain switches. if you look at the bottom of the unit, you'll see tiny flip switches, like you'd see in a garage door opener. to change gain settings you need the tiny screwdriver tool to change them. it's a metal tool, and tiny plastic switches....I can see overzealous flippers damaging the switches with that metal tool....no I'm not speaking from experience.... PS - when changing the gain, you do it in twos. so when all 4 switches are down, you're at low gain. from the left, flip the next two switches to move into medium gain. for high gain, flip the next two so that all 4 are now up. it's odd, to say the least. once you figure it out though it's simple. but a flip switch like the bass/cross feed options would be more welcome. my current amp inventory is a lyr 2 with gold lion tubes, magni 2 uber, o2, and fiio e10k. all are fed by a bifrost 4490 or dragonfly red, with tidal hd lossless tracks. main headphones I've been using lately are the alpha primes, mad dog pro, hd700, and oppo pm3. so how does it sound? dam good! like good enough that I'm considering selling my other amps and just using the ifi. I'll do some amp to amp comparisons later, let me discuss the general sound characteristics first. ifi tunes this amp to sound like a tube amp with solid state detail. I'm not sure I'd say it's very tube sounding, but it's smooth, and quite detailed. it's got a slightly warm presentation, much like my old asgard 2. but where the asgard was a touch fuzzy from that warmth, the ican is extremely sharp and detailed. it is hands down the most micro detailed of all my amps. I find myself hearing small sounds coming through more clearly with this amp vs my others. for example, on Bryan Adams' "summer of 69", the cymbal crashes coincide with every other hit of the drum. sorry I don't know much about drums, so I can't say which drum he's hitting, but it's tight sounding, not a big bass drum. mid-size drum, tight with a leathery texture. anyhow, the beat goes with this drum hit, which is fast, and the drummer hits the cymbals every other drum hit. on lesser quality dacs/amps, that cymbal hit is fuzzy and indistinct. you might not be able to tell if it's just the drum being hit harder, or if something else was hit with it. better gear more clearly resolve the hit, so that you know for sure you're hearing the concurrent hit of a drum AND cymbal. it's really tough to explain but very obvious when listening. besides being slightly warm and well defined, it's incredibly versatile with many different headphones. I cannot find a pairing I did not like. I even grabbed some headphones I haven't listened to in a long time just to see how they'd sound. I tried the alpha prime, mad dog pro, hd700, oppo pm3, urbanite xl, q701, grado 225e, and a friend's hd650 and 800. all of them sounded really good. the brighter headphones never got sibilant unless the track was really bad. the bassy headphones never got muddy or bloated. the mid-centric headphones were as gloriously mid forward as before, without drowning out the bass or highs. I won't go into super details here because there's no point. everything sounded good. and I'm picky. really picky. like I said, this baby might displace my whole amp inventory. and I've had it for about 3 months, so it's not new toy syndrome working here, I promise. So how are those gimmicky bass boost and cross feed features? Excellent! No gimmicks here; they produce excellent results that enhance the sound characteristics of your headphones, without destroying the overall quality of the playback. So how do they work? well bass boost (ifi calls it xbass) is bass boost, not hard to figure out what it does. It's how it does it that's exceptional. Usually bass boost features tend to muddy up the sound, and bleed into the other frequencies. Usually mid bass is boosted, not sub bass, which tends to deteriorate sound quality. Not here. on the low setting, bass has a subtle bump to the sub bass. It gives extra rumble and depth to the lows. It doesn’t in any way intrude into the mids. It's excellent, and I find myself using it more and more. The high bass setting is significantly stronger. Sub bass really rumbles, and there is a mild mid bass boost as well. again, nothing gets muddy, and things still sound relatively coherent. With strong bass headphones, this setting is just too much. My mad dog pro sounds way too bassy on high. The hd700 isn't too bad, but the bass does tend to get a bit dominant. The hd800 really liked the high bass setting, which surprised me. it hit really hard, but still sounded well detailed and coherent overall. It's hardly accurate sounding, but who cares. It added a lot of fun to the 800's bright nature. Would I keep it on high for long? No, it's a bit too much for my neutral loving ears, but for some songs/genres, it was really fun. I can't stress enough how well this feature works. I've had many fiio amps over the years with bass boost, and they were fun, but negatively impacted overall sound quality. None of that happening here! it's a great feature. The cross feed feature (ifi calls it 3d) is harder to explain, and much more subtle in its delivery. I'll try my best here folks, but google cross feed for a more accurate explanation. So headphones are isolated 2 channel systems. If sound is coming out of the right side, you're only going to hear it from the right cup. it can be very odd sounding to our brains, especially when excessive single channel effects are used (70s/80s rock!). when listening to regular floor standing speakers, even if one channel is only broadcasting, both our ears will pick up the sound. So, cross feed in headphones is taking some of that single channel signal and sending to the other channel. It tries to mimic what listening to floor standing speakers is like. It makes tracks with excessive single channel effects more natural sounding. So, does it work? yep, it's pretty good. but it isn’t a well implemented as the bass boost feature. Why? It slightly degrades audio quality, unfortunately. it brightens the highs and gives them a slightly harsh, and brittle sound. Does it sound bad? Not at all. but the highs do sound best when cross feed is off. But the benefits often outweigh the negatives here, in my opinion. I love 70s rock, and they do some really strong single channel effects. It's odd to hear the singer in just one ear, and the instruments in the other, with no cross feed. Doesn’t sound natural at all. the cross feed feature helps blend the channels, making the tracks much more listenable. Also, cross feed enhances soundstage. The stage sounds more open, wider, deeper, and more distinct. Let me stress though, this is at the expense of high frequency sound quality. The loss in sound quality is so small that I don’t really care, I use cross feed low for most of my headphones. I love the more open and natural sound it provides. I'll give up a bit of high frequency detail for it. as for the low vs high settings, you just have to play with it. it's not like bass boost where low is always the same effect vs high. I find myself switching between low and high a lot on various tracks to find what sounds best. amp to amp comparisons? fine, twist my arm! lyr 2 - first, my lyr is my love, my lady, my baby. I love this amp. but I kinda like the new girl more so far. we'll see how a few more months go. but what I find here is the lyr is smoother, more composed, and warmer. for easy listening it's a better choice. Fine micro detail in the highs don’t come across as well defined with the lyr. I might grab some LISST tubes and see if that affects detail retrieval. Both are powerful amps that can drive anything. The lyr gives more heft and weight to the lows and lower mids. It's a smoother delivery, more tube like. The ican is sharper sounding, and just a tad more analytical. It's highs present sharper details, but those details are a bit harsh sounding when coming from the lyr. It's the classic tube vs solid state sound tradeoff, to my ears. Magni 2 uber - brighter, harsher, less refined, grainier. The m2u is a great amp at its price point, but it doesn’t compare to the ican. The ican just does everything better. Are the differences dramatic? No, not really. But they're noticeable when swapping back and forth, especially the highs, and the grain factor. Their overall presentation is more similar than different, but the ican is just the smoother, more refined sounding amp. The o2 sounds more or less like the m2u, same notes apply. The fiio is completely outclassed here, I won't bother with details. Any drawbacks? Sure, plenty! But nothing major. First, this unit has lots of odd buzzes and static noise when idle. What I mean is, when I have the unit on, and headphones plugged in, and my rca cables plugged into the back, but not into a live (powered on) dac, the ican will produce a lot of low level static noise, especially when touching the rca cables (not the leads). But once I plug the rca cables into the dac and turn it on, it goes silent. None of my other amps do this. do I care? Not at all, it doesn’t affect playback performance. But it's something to note. Also, the gain switches are a pain to flip, as previously noted. And let's be frank here, for all my gushing fanboy praise, this is not a be all end all amp. It's a great amp at a sub $500 price. It compares fairly well below that point, but not so favorably with more expensive amps. I'm not implying that price ALWAYS equates to performance. But I've heard some pretty expensive stuff and the ican would not fare well in comparison. The highs, though detailed, are a bit etched and metallic sounding in comparison to better amps. Bass isn’t as well controlled as other amps (lyr!). and the gain settings are not very well thought out. Low gain tends to work best, but once going to mid and high gain, you often find yourself with no room to adjust the volume. Meaning you gotta keep the dial at minimum, or it gets too loud. But when you go down a gains setting, you have to max out. So you're left with either too much or too little gain sometimes. Not a huge deal breaker, but sometimes annoying. Also, the build, which is great for $300, isn’t up to par with other, similar priced amps from Schiit. And let's not forget, the cross feed feature is a bit destructive to high frequency sound quality. So yeah, despite being awesome, it's not perfect. But at its price point, I'm having a hard time finding anything that sounds as good. and let's not forget the benefit of being able to adjust the sound of your headphones via the bass boost and cross feed features. To me those alone make it a total winner. I'll leave you with this. these are my opinions, based on my sound preferences and firsthand experience with the product. Nothing is fact until you, yourself, take one home and decide for yourself how it sounds. If you have any questions fire away.
Review: Powerful, simply works - This little joy is powerful and crystal clear. I found the Bass extension to be very natural and the 3D effect to bring out hidden tones, voices and notes in songs that I thought I knew well. Almost like taking my music collection and having to start over as each song has become new again. The only really downside for me is when its not playing a source, even momentarily I can hear static that seem to not be present when playing a source. Its not a huge deal but it does make me wonder if any of this is introducing artifacts? To this point however its seems to not be the case... I've only had it a couple of days but I have put a few hours on it and overall I am truly impressed. Other notes, no power switch which I will hazard a guess was intention to keep the circuit warm. Fit and Finish are 1st Class and the accessories that came with it weren't the usual trash you might get with some other names, I found them to be solid performers. Heat generated is warm but not uncomfortable to my touch and overall I almost wish I had gone for the Black Edition as I like this very much and I suspect the next rung up would be even better.

## Features

- Consumer Alert: Most users do not need a license to operate this wireless microphone system. Nevertheless, operating this microphone system without a license is subject to certain restrictions: the system may not cause harmful interference; it must operate at a low power level (not in excess of 50 milliwatts); and it has no protection from interference received from any other device.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 22 Reviews |

## Images

![iFi Micro iCAN SE Headphone Amplifier - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51LBuXrsx8L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The iCan really can!
*by A***R on October 13, 2016*

I've always been intrigued by the ican, but held off due to my power hungry planar headphones. when I saw the new ican se with 4w of power at 16ohm, I jumped. I'm so glad I did, this is a tremendous amp at this price. first let's talk power. this thing is powerful. I can't find a good breakdown of power output at different ohm intervals, but ifi claims 4w (4000mw) at 16ohm, which is a lot. and let me get this out of the way right now. my hungriest headphones, the planar magnetic alpha prime and mad dog pro, all run super loud in LOW GAIN at about 2oclock on the volume dial. put it in mid gain, and I'm at about 10oclock. high gain and I can barely move the dial away from the bottom. Ifi claims this baby will drive an he-6 well, and I'm inclined to believe it; there's power to spare with this thing. build is excellent. it's a small, light unit, with an aluminum shell. seams are tight, and nothing rattles or jiggled unexpectedly. the volume pot is smooth, but a bit tight. I don't want a finger workout changing the volume! but I won't complain much, at least if I bump the dial my volume won't change. it comes with a wall wart style power cord, and lots of cables and extras. the bass and cross feed switches are tight and flick with a reassuring heft. they feel like they'll last a long, long time. my biggest complain about build would be the gain switches. if you look at the bottom of the unit, you'll see tiny flip switches, like you'd see in a garage door opener. to change gain settings you need the tiny screwdriver tool to change them. it's a metal tool, and tiny plastic switches....I can see overzealous flippers damaging the switches with that metal tool....no I'm not speaking from experience.... PS - when changing the gain, you do it in twos. so when all 4 switches are down, you're at low gain. from the left, flip the next two switches to move into medium gain. for high gain, flip the next two so that all 4 are now up. it's odd, to say the least. once you figure it out though it's simple. but a flip switch like the bass/cross feed options would be more welcome. my current amp inventory is a lyr 2 with gold lion tubes, magni 2 uber, o2, and fiio e10k. all are fed by a bifrost 4490 or dragonfly red, with tidal hd lossless tracks. main headphones I've been using lately are the alpha primes, mad dog pro, hd700, and oppo pm3. so how does it sound? dam good! like good enough that I'm considering selling my other amps and just using the ifi. I'll do some amp to amp comparisons later, let me discuss the general sound characteristics first. ifi tunes this amp to sound like a tube amp with solid state detail. I'm not sure I'd say it's very tube sounding, but it's smooth, and quite detailed. it's got a slightly warm presentation, much like my old asgard 2. but where the asgard was a touch fuzzy from that warmth, the ican is extremely sharp and detailed. it is hands down the most micro detailed of all my amps. I find myself hearing small sounds coming through more clearly with this amp vs my others. for example, on Bryan Adams' "summer of 69", the cymbal crashes coincide with every other hit of the drum. sorry I don't know much about drums, so I can't say which drum he's hitting, but it's tight sounding, not a big bass drum. mid-size drum, tight with a leathery texture. anyhow, the beat goes with this drum hit, which is fast, and the drummer hits the cymbals every other drum hit. on lesser quality dacs/amps, that cymbal hit is fuzzy and indistinct. you might not be able to tell if it's just the drum being hit harder, or if something else was hit with it. better gear more clearly resolve the hit, so that you know for sure you're hearing the concurrent hit of a drum AND cymbal. it's really tough to explain but very obvious when listening. besides being slightly warm and well defined, it's incredibly versatile with many different headphones. I cannot find a pairing I did not like. I even grabbed some headphones I haven't listened to in a long time just to see how they'd sound. I tried the alpha prime, mad dog pro, hd700, oppo pm3, urbanite xl, q701, grado 225e, and a friend's hd650 and 800. all of them sounded really good. the brighter headphones never got sibilant unless the track was really bad. the bassy headphones never got muddy or bloated. the mid-centric headphones were as gloriously mid forward as before, without drowning out the bass or highs. I won't go into super details here because there's no point. everything sounded good. and I'm picky. really picky. like I said, this baby might displace my whole amp inventory. and I've had it for about 3 months, so it's not new toy syndrome working here, I promise. So how are those gimmicky bass boost and cross feed features? Excellent! No gimmicks here; they produce excellent results that enhance the sound characteristics of your headphones, without destroying the overall quality of the playback. So how do they work? well bass boost (ifi calls it xbass) is bass boost, not hard to figure out what it does. It's how it does it that's exceptional. Usually bass boost features tend to muddy up the sound, and bleed into the other frequencies. Usually mid bass is boosted, not sub bass, which tends to deteriorate sound quality. Not here. on the low setting, bass has a subtle bump to the sub bass. It gives extra rumble and depth to the lows. It doesn’t in any way intrude into the mids. It's excellent, and I find myself using it more and more. The high bass setting is significantly stronger. Sub bass really rumbles, and there is a mild mid bass boost as well. again, nothing gets muddy, and things still sound relatively coherent. With strong bass headphones, this setting is just too much. My mad dog pro sounds way too bassy on high. The hd700 isn't too bad, but the bass does tend to get a bit dominant. The hd800 really liked the high bass setting, which surprised me. it hit really hard, but still sounded well detailed and coherent overall. It's hardly accurate sounding, but who cares. It added a lot of fun to the 800's bright nature. Would I keep it on high for long? No, it's a bit too much for my neutral loving ears, but for some songs/genres, it was really fun. I can't stress enough how well this feature works. I've had many fiio amps over the years with bass boost, and they were fun, but negatively impacted overall sound quality. None of that happening here! it's a great feature. The cross feed feature (ifi calls it 3d) is harder to explain, and much more subtle in its delivery. I'll try my best here folks, but google cross feed for a more accurate explanation. So headphones are isolated 2 channel systems. If sound is coming out of the right side, you're only going to hear it from the right cup. it can be very odd sounding to our brains, especially when excessive single channel effects are used (70s/80s rock!). when listening to regular floor standing speakers, even if one channel is only broadcasting, both our ears will pick up the sound. So, cross feed in headphones is taking some of that single channel signal and sending to the other channel. It tries to mimic what listening to floor standing speakers is like. It makes tracks with excessive single channel effects more natural sounding. So, does it work? yep, it's pretty good. but it isn’t a well implemented as the bass boost feature. Why? It slightly degrades audio quality, unfortunately. it brightens the highs and gives them a slightly harsh, and brittle sound. Does it sound bad? Not at all. but the highs do sound best when cross feed is off. But the benefits often outweigh the negatives here, in my opinion. I love 70s rock, and they do some really strong single channel effects. It's odd to hear the singer in just one ear, and the instruments in the other, with no cross feed. Doesn’t sound natural at all. the cross feed feature helps blend the channels, making the tracks much more listenable. Also, cross feed enhances soundstage. The stage sounds more open, wider, deeper, and more distinct. Let me stress though, this is at the expense of high frequency sound quality. The loss in sound quality is so small that I don’t really care, I use cross feed low for most of my headphones. I love the more open and natural sound it provides. I'll give up a bit of high frequency detail for it. as for the low vs high settings, you just have to play with it. it's not like bass boost where low is always the same effect vs high. I find myself switching between low and high a lot on various tracks to find what sounds best. amp to amp comparisons? fine, twist my arm! lyr 2 - first, my lyr is my love, my lady, my baby. I love this amp. but I kinda like the new girl more so far. we'll see how a few more months go. but what I find here is the lyr is smoother, more composed, and warmer. for easy listening it's a better choice. Fine micro detail in the highs don’t come across as well defined with the lyr. I might grab some LISST tubes and see if that affects detail retrieval. Both are powerful amps that can drive anything. The lyr gives more heft and weight to the lows and lower mids. It's a smoother delivery, more tube like. The ican is sharper sounding, and just a tad more analytical. It's highs present sharper details, but those details are a bit harsh sounding when coming from the lyr. It's the classic tube vs solid state sound tradeoff, to my ears. Magni 2 uber - brighter, harsher, less refined, grainier. The m2u is a great amp at its price point, but it doesn’t compare to the ican. The ican just does everything better. Are the differences dramatic? No, not really. But they're noticeable when swapping back and forth, especially the highs, and the grain factor. Their overall presentation is more similar than different, but the ican is just the smoother, more refined sounding amp. The o2 sounds more or less like the m2u, same notes apply. The fiio is completely outclassed here, I won't bother with details. Any drawbacks? Sure, plenty! But nothing major. First, this unit has lots of odd buzzes and static noise when idle. What I mean is, when I have the unit on, and headphones plugged in, and my rca cables plugged into the back, but not into a live (powered on) dac, the ican will produce a lot of low level static noise, especially when touching the rca cables (not the leads). But once I plug the rca cables into the dac and turn it on, it goes silent. None of my other amps do this. do I care? Not at all, it doesn’t affect playback performance. But it's something to note. Also, the gain switches are a pain to flip, as previously noted. And let's be frank here, for all my gushing fanboy praise, this is not a be all end all amp. It's a great amp at a sub $500 price. It compares fairly well below that point, but not so favorably with more expensive amps. I'm not implying that price ALWAYS equates to performance. But I've heard some pretty expensive stuff and the ican would not fare well in comparison. The highs, though detailed, are a bit etched and metallic sounding in comparison to better amps. Bass isn’t as well controlled as other amps (lyr!). and the gain settings are not very well thought out. Low gain tends to work best, but once going to mid and high gain, you often find yourself with no room to adjust the volume. Meaning you gotta keep the dial at minimum, or it gets too loud. But when you go down a gains setting, you have to max out. So you're left with either too much or too little gain sometimes. Not a huge deal breaker, but sometimes annoying. Also, the build, which is great for $300, isn’t up to par with other, similar priced amps from Schiit. And let's not forget, the cross feed feature is a bit destructive to high frequency sound quality. So yeah, despite being awesome, it's not perfect. But at its price point, I'm having a hard time finding anything that sounds as good. and let's not forget the benefit of being able to adjust the sound of your headphones via the bass boost and cross feed features. To me those alone make it a total winner. I'll leave you with this. these are my opinions, based on my sound preferences and firsthand experience with the product. Nothing is fact until you, yourself, take one home and decide for yourself how it sounds. If you have any questions fire away.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Powerful, simply works
*by B***Z on March 13, 2017*

This little joy is powerful and crystal clear. I found the Bass extension to be very natural and the 3D effect to bring out hidden tones, voices and notes in songs that I thought I knew well. Almost like taking my music collection and having to start over as each song has become new again. The only really downside for me is when its not playing a source, even momentarily I can hear static that seem to not be present when playing a source. Its not a huge deal but it does make me wonder if any of this is introducing artifacts? To this point however its seems to not be the case... I've only had it a couple of days but I have put a few hours on it and overall I am truly impressed. Other notes, no power switch which I will hazard a guess was intention to keep the circuit warm. Fit and Finish are 1st Class and the accessories that came with it weren't the usual trash you might get with some other names, I found them to be solid performers. Heat generated is warm but not uncomfortable to my touch and overall I almost wish I had gone for the Black Edition as I like this very much and I suspect the next rung up would be even better.

### ⭐⭐ I really wanted to like this amp
*by A***R on February 28, 2018*

I really wanted to like this amp. It has enough power to drive any headphone and switches for adjusting both bass and surround sound right on the device. Now the bad. I went through two of these amps and neither one worked right. The first one did not even power up so it was sent back immediately. The 2nd had a really bad high pitch buzz unless you had the volume pretty high. I really wish this amp had worked out but for 300.00 bucks I simply was not willing to try a third time hoping for a good one.

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*Last updated: 2026-05-05*