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Home Theater Magazine Review
- ATP8500 Pre/Pro - AT2007
ATI ATP8500 Pre/Pro and AT2007 Amplifier: High-end tricks at a mid-fi
price.
by
Chris Lewis, March, 2003
Why is it so much harder to sell the concept of value to people as they
cross over into the higher end of the A/V realm? In the lower price ranges,
people don’t only appreciate value, they actively seek it out. Down
there, people whole-heartedly buy into the idea that you can often find
equivalent performance, features, etc., for less. But, as price tags get
bigger, some people’s rationality seems to fade. Part of it may
be name recognition. Whereas most of the lower-end brand names are more
familiar, many names in the higher end are unknown to the masses. Thus,
price becomes a security blanket: "If it costs more, it must be better."
Maybe some people who can afford higher-end gear figure, who needs value
when you’ve got money? The bottom line is, price can be a dubious
barometer of quality. The number of factors that go into each particular
manufacturer’s pricing decisions can be bewildering, and assuming
that price really tells you anything about a piece of gear can be an expensive
mistake.
There is such a thing as value in the high end, and ATI is proof of that.
As a major OEM manufacturer for a number of well-known brands, they’re
usually content to maintain a relatively low profile for their own brand
and let people who’ve done their homework come to them. But they’re
not hiding, either. The company’s first foray into the pre/pro game,
the recently released ATP8500, generated as much buzz as I’ve heard
from them in some time. Of course, with a name like Amplifier Technologies,
you know they’re never going to drift away from their bread and
butter, as the AT2007 – the seven-channel configuration of their
AT2000 amp – clearly demonstrates.
The ATP8500 steps into a realm of stiff competition in the $3,500-to-$5,500
range for pre/pros – but it comes prepared. The base price of $3,995
gets you the basics (DTS and Dolby Digital 5.1, Pro Logic, and other DSP
modes); another $500 gets you the new upgrade board with Dolby EX, DTS
ES, and Pro Logic II. ATI is currently working out some issues with THX.
Although some units have a THX button on the front, as of this writing,
the ATP8500 doesn’t have the THX post-processing. Your first glance
at the front panel will reveal on of the ATP8500’s rarer features:
the slick 5-inch color LCD screen that allows you to preview almost any
video source or access the onscreen menu system (which you can also output
to an external monitor). This is especially handy for things like cuing
video sources or checking a television guide without tying up the main
screen.
The back panel also indicates some advanced features, starting with a
full eight-channel complement of balanced outputs. There’s also
a pair of balanced inputs, which is truly rare at this price. Digital
audio gets two optical inputs and an output, one AES/EBU jack, and four
coaxial inputs, which is comparatively lean but will be plenty for most
systems. Analog audio options include a 7.1-channel input for use with
external processors (most importantly, DVD-Audio and SACD) and 10 stereo
pairs. There’s also a tape loop and a stereo pair for a second zone.
Video gets six composite and S-video inputs, plus three full-bandwidth
component video ins. Video outputs consist of two composite (one of which
can be dedicated to the second zone) and S-video connections and one component.
There’s also two IR jacks, three remote triggers, and an RS-232
connection. A large expansion area indicates a degree of futureproofing,
which ATI will accomplish with "daughter board" upgrades and
connection additions of the hardware side and RS-232 and EPROM updates
for some software functions.
Balanced (XLR) connections are a highlight on the AT2007 ($2,995), as
well. This amp is a true differential design and is balanced from input
to output (some amps that claim to be balanced are not). Naturally, seven
unbalanced RCA jacks are provided, as well, along with seven sets of five-way
binding posts. The AT2007 is rated a 200 watts per each of its seven channels
(with all channels driven), which is a significant amount of horsepower
to pack into one chassis – especially at this price. Protecting
all of those ponies are optically coupled protection circuits and an instant
shut-off system that prevents any high voltage from passing through, which
should save you a few fuses. The two massive toroidal transformers use
a soft-start procedure to prevent turn-on overload.
Despite the high degree of tweaking that ATP8500 offers, setup is relatively
quick and easy, thanks to a good remote and a well-executed onscreen menu
system. If you want to take the time to tweak, the control is there for
you. If you want the quick approach, you can be done within a few minutes.
I began my review at our studio using the quality, mid-priced B&W
CDM 9NT speaker system and a couple of different sources, including the
Onkyo DV-SP800 SACD/DVD-Audio player. The ATI gear also saw time in my
home A/V system, which includes the Energy Veritas speaker system and
a Philips SACD1000 SACD/DVD-Video player, along with an Anthem AVM 20
pre/pro, Aragon Palladium monoblocks, and a Krell KAV-500 mulitchannel
amp mixed in at times to give each ATI unit a chance to do its own thing.
I led off with two-channel music, and the ATI gear quickly reacquainted
me with the sound I’ve come to know from ATI – crisp and dynamic,
but not without a sense of warmth that prevents the overall sonic profile
from leaning toward sterility or harshness. My initial impression of the
ATP8500 was that it likes to get out of the way and let the amps and speakers
do the talking – exactly what I want in a preamp, especially with
music. The ATI gear confirmed this hunch when I used it in my home system
with the amps and speakers I listen to every day. The AVM 20 is a rather
neutral pre/pro, and the fact that my system’s sound remained virtually
unchanged is a strong indication that the ATP8500 resists almost all temptation
toward editorialization. Naturally, there were subtle differences, but
I think you’ll find that the ATP8500 takes its role as a processor
and controller (but not necessarily a creator of sound) very seriously.
The AT2007 won’t do anything to disrupt your system’s sound,
either. Still, as is always the case with amps, its sonic profile is more
obvious. This amp will tell you right away that power is rarely going
to be an issue, especially with two-channel material. Out of the gate,
its sound was big and bold with considerable dynamic range and a relatively
massive soundstage. Based on what I heard with the B&Ws, which I know
to be fairly neutral up top, my initial thought was that the AT2007 may
have a tendency toward brightness and occasional graininess inn the upper
frequencies. With the Energy speakers, however, the brightness was virtually
eliminated. This surprised me, given that the Energies are more aggressive
than the B&Ws – they don’t roll off the top end at all.
With both systems, the AT2007 was consistently excellent with bass. While
both of these setups are based around larger towers, said towers rely
on two smaller woofers rather than one large one to move low-frequency
air, which puts more pressure on the amp. This was not problem for the
AT207, whose ability to draw a full, potent sense of upper bass/lower
midrange from the Energies especially impressed me. Many amps leave this
region thin and underpowered. The powerful, haunting drive of the cellos
from the opening theme of Dracula was large and intoxicating, even in
the two-channel CD soundtrack. Rather than seeming to float a couple of
feet behind the main image as they sometimes do with these speakers, the
cellos were clearly up front, steering the piece’s powerful thematic
nature without getting too far into the listener’s face.
This ATI combo will certainly get your attention with multichannel music,
but for the right reasons. Rather than hammering you from all sides with
bright, aggressive noise, it sucks you in with a seemingly boundless soundstage
and a bass drive that will make meeker speakers roar and stronger speakers
pick you up and slap you around a little. At the same time, the bass maintains
its musicality and refrains from crossing the line into simple, raw SPL.
The big bass drum kicks present throughout Bucky Pizzarelli’s Swing
Live disc hit with precision and natural attack and decay – not
boomy, mushy monotonality. The rest of the presentation wasn’t bad,
either. The B&Ws displayed little of the brightness they had offered
up on CD, despite having ample opportunity via the ever-present clarinet,
abundant cymbals, and other high-frequency ringers. Midrange was silky
and transparent through both speaker systems, with and immediacy that
was unmistakable.
The AT2007’s power truly came to the forefront during movie demos
– and I’m not talking about simple watts. I’ m talking
about truly high current capability. I hammered it with my usual battery
of Saving Private Ryan, Snatch, Phantom Menace, and others, and I was
only able to get even a hint of compression at an excruciating volume
level. I particularly liked the throaty roar that the ATI combo offered
as the pod racers prepare for battle in chapter 19 of Phantom Menace.
Even without a sub, the AT2007 conjured up enough SPL through the B&Ws
to deliver an intense physical impact that was also clear and defined.
Dexterity was no problem for this pair, either. Long, wide EX pans were
quick and full-bodied with a highly successful sense of spatiality. This
combo handled the circulating spy droid from chapter 26 particularly well.
The high end will always be the high end, with prices that are unattainable
for those who can’t spend thousands of dollars on A/V equipment.
As this ATI combo proves, though, there are good deals even at these prices.
The ATP8500 and AT2007 offer rock-solid performance, excellent build quality,
and features you normally have to spend more for. That’s real value.
You’ll be hard-pressed to find an amp that performs this capably
with this much power and balanced inputs for less. If you don’t
know the ATI name yet, you should.
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