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  1. Jul 8, 2020 · A 300Wpc dual-mono amplifier with adaptive biasing and balanced circuitry, reviewed by John Atkinson in 1996. He praises its smooth, musical sound, but notes its slightly less bass impact than the monoblock No.20.6.

  2. Jul 8, 2020 · A solid-state stereo amplifier with rated output power of 300Wpc into 8 ohms and 1200Wpc into 2 ohms. See the full specifications, price, dealer information and review of this product on Stereophile.com.

  3. To our aging audiophile, the Mark Levinson 333.5 is simply the best, most neutral sounding, confidently powerful amplifier he has yet heard. He takes great exception to those who say this amp sounds "dull" or "lifeless," suggesting that they have simply not taken the time to mate the amp with the right components, to let it warm up, or listen ...

  4. Jul 8, 2020 · The preamplifier was the remote-controlled Mark Levinson No.38S, with either a Mod Squad Phono Drive EPS or an Audio Alchemy VAC-in-the-Box used to amplify LP signals from a Linn Sondek/Cirkus/Trampolin/Lingo / Ekos /Arkiv setup on an ArchiDee table.

  5. Also, it is the first Mark Levinson linear amplifier to incorporate through-hole parts specifically for critical signal-path components and surface-mount components for building smaller circuits with higher performance.

  6. Aug 7, 2020 · “An area where the No.333 excelled was dynamics. I never got the sense that I was running out of headroom, even on high-level, percussion-heavy recordings. Yet, perhaps more important for a high-power amplifier, the Levinson remained transparent at very low levels.

  7. But at $8495 the Mark Levinson No.333 is significantly less expensive than the pair of No.20.6es it replaced in my system. More important, it is, overall, the best-sounding amplifier I have yet heard from Madrigal.