Pearson1977
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- Aug 3, 2024
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Very sad, but it always happens when a capital fund takes over the operation. Unfortunately, this is probably the future of hifi
Summary:Sigh* The guy is slow as molasses and is boring too. Can you please give us a bullet point rundown of what this is about? If it is about buying up companies with investment goals then it is happening in Canada too. Investment groups are buying up rental properties and boosting the rents, buying up businesses and then gouging customers etc.
I see. Thank you for the rundown. I appreciate that very much. That seems like a cluster mess to me. Naim enters into a agreement with buyers that Naim will provide warranty service on new product. Legally they cannot escape that agreement. So that's the first error for the new Naim company. The second error is breaking a sales and service agreement with a retailer (If they actually did.) The agreement has a start and stop date so they are supposed to act upon that agreement. I feel sorry for the retailer but I'm guessing that there is something he is not telling us.Summary:
Naim dealer of 39 years says he has stopped carrying Naim as they can't order new stock and have trouble getting existing equipment serviced and repaired.
Says Naim now more interested in selling through mail order houses not dealers
He previously decided to stop selling Focal speakers so thinks this may have something to do with it.
Naim/Focal now owned by large investment group and Naim is not the company that it used to be years ago when owned by J.V
Quite possibly. He's clearly a big fan of Naim for decades, but the world has changed in 40 years.I see. Thank you for the rundown. I appreciate that very much. That seems like a cluster mess to me. Naim enters into a agreement with buyers that Naim will provide warranty service on new product. Legally they cannot escape that agreement. So that's the first error for the new Naim company. The second error is breaking a sales and service agreement with a retailer (If they actually did.) The agreement has a start and stop date so they are supposed to act upon that agreement. I feel sorry for the retailer but I'm guessing that there is something he is not telling us.
I've seen the inside of a couple of pieces of Naim gear and it was very simple. Maybe some people think that's better I don't know.Quite possibly. He's clearly a big fan of Naim for decades, but the world has changed in 40 years.
I'd guess that Naim's current owners have developed a strategy they believe will succeed in the current environment. Sticking to what used to work might actually result in declining sales and profits.
Maybe they are wrong about that, only time will tell.
Personally I've always thought it was overpriced for what it is and, post 'Chrome Bumper' era, the styling is hideous. But that's subjective.
Simplicity was inherent to the whole UK 'Flat Earth' philosophy at the time, the theory (or marketing angle) being that every additional component degrades the sound.I've seen the inside of a couple of pieces of Naim gear and it was very simple. Maybe some people think that's better I don't know.
Which were just a traffo and a couple of capacitors in an otherwise empty case, but which cost thousands. Yes, it got silly. Best not to mention their loudspeakers...But they could be ‘improved’ by buying multiple power supplies what a crock.
Keith
Too bloomin' right it isn't the same company (not as smug and self-satisfied today I feel, but very much more commercially minded as a dealer pal and colleague of old was treated the same way) - and if you fully support the brand it can work both ways.. Our local audio salon is hugely invested in Naim and has genuinely sold a few Statement amp confections (preamps first, the power amps come later on I gather). They don't seem to have supply issues and don't stock much Focal (Dynaudio is their speaker range of choice still, I gather).Summary:
Naim dealer of 39 years says he has stopped carrying Naim as they can't order new stock and have trouble getting existing equipment serviced and repaired.
Says Naim now more interested in selling through mail order houses not dealers
He previously decided to stop selling Focal speakers so thinks this may have something to do with it.
Naim/Focal now owned by large investment group and Naim is not the company that it used to be years ago when owned by J.V
Objectively speaking, when German audio magazine labs did measured maximum output voltage of some old Naim amps on reactive loads, they often found that some amps cannot cop with more than +/- 40° or even +/- 20° phase angle even with moderate 4 ohms nominal loads.My own theory is that a lot of that budget Japanese equipment of the late 1970s on skimped on the power supplies (i,e the expensive bit) and the Naim power amps handled tough loads better and so sounded better with many loudspeakers.
To be clear, I think Naim were, and still are, sub-optimal in that regard, which is why I personally favour Krell (S/H prices being roughly similar).Objectively speaking, when German audio magazine labs did measured maximum output voltage of some old Naim amps on reactive loads, they often found that some amps cannot cop with more than +/- 40° or even +/- 20° phase angle even with moderate 4 ohms nominal loads.
Thus, the fact that old Naim power amps handled tough loads better remains to be proven.
Newer Naim amps generally behave much better on reactive loads as far as I can tell from measurements of the same kind.
Examples?The measurements I've seen imply instead that much of the competition at the time performed better on complex reactive loads than most Naim amps.