I was pretty sure I knew the answer to this one, given all the praise the ND555 has been rightly receiving, and, after all, I have always been a source first bloke. Well it turns out I know nothing!
Thinking it was time to move to the new streaming platform and take advantage of possibly one of the best streamers ever made, I was keen to hear the ND555 at home but, due to the steep incline in costs for future upgrades, any upgrading now will need to be done in stages. That means the ND555 will need to be able to show its capabilities with my current 252DR/250DR and MA GX300 speakers until such time I can pay attention these other components.
There is a problem though. In the back of my mind I remember the praise the 'classic' component in the Naim range, the 552, has received on a continuous basis over the last two decades. But that would need to work with my current NDS/555DR/250DR/MA GX300s. As luck would have it, my dealer happens to have both a mint pre-loved 552 and one of the first ND555s (so well run in). A plan was forming.
To solve this puzzle my trusty dealer set up two systems for me to listen to. The first - ND555/PS555DR/252/SuperCapDR and the second - NDS/PS555DR/552(non DR), both systems used with a 300DR and Kudos Titan 707s. I would listen to both and decide which I would take home for extended dem, the ND555 or the 552. A forgone conclusion, I thought.
I brought 4 favourite CDs which the dealer ripped and I listened to the system fronted by the ND555 first and waited with bated breath for the fireworks. But there were none. The initial problem I had was that the dealer's listening room was over double the size of mine and was less damped. I was also used to listening 'near field' but was further away from the speakers at the dealers. It took me a while to acclimatise and the system was, I believe, improving over that first hour of listening. No denying the detail and coherence on offer but I felt the whole presentation was a bit on the clinical side. I was a tad dissappointed and checked with the dealer that the ND555 was fully run in, and it was. Might it have been the 252 struggling a bit with the detail it was being asked to process, or was it the unfamiliar listening environment. Not sure, but something wasn't quite right.
So onto the NDS/552 based system. From the first track I could tell this was rather special, although I was still struggling with the brighter, slightly echoey listening room. Again, as this session went on things started to improve, either the equipment settling in or me becoming more in tune with the listening room, or both.
After a further hour of listening, I had decided it was the 552 I wanted to take home for an extended listen. But before it was packed up, the very accommodating dealer married up the ND555 with the 552 and this was when things really took off, even in those unfamiliar acoustic surroundings. It seemed to me that the NDS/552 was less of a compromise than the ND555/252, so off I went with the 552 for home demo.
I have been listening to the 552 in my system for much of today and have been pretty much blown away. I will save all the detailed descriptions for a couple of days when I have had a chance to listen more. But this 552 ain't going nowhere!
Posted on: 22 November 2018 by Filipe
Hi Nigel, Thank you for your thoughtful insights. I’ve just returned a Rega Aura phonostage and am listening to some of the same music again with the Aria phonostage. It would be fair to say the differences largely are that the Aura makes everything much more natural sounding. Sustained oboe notes sounded sweeter, more intense and textured for instance. Bass notes whether guitar or drums revealed the instrument’s character. Vocals sweeter sounding in the best possible sense. Brass shone.
I wonder whether the 552 would have that effect with my existing sources or whether the limitation of the source would just become more apparent?
I feel my CDX2 + nDAC + PS555DR into 252 + SuperCap DR is pretty good, and probably better than the vinyl (RP10/Aphelion into Aria). Full SL. I’m hoping to try Superline with Air plugs.
Don't suppose you live within a few hours of Gloucester.
Phil
Posted on: 22 November 2018 by nigelb
Hi Nigel, Thank you for your thoughtful insights. I’ve just returned a Rega Aura phonostage and am listening to some of the same music again with the Aria phonostage. It would be fair to say the differences largely are that the Aura makes everything much more natural sounding. Sustained oboe notes sounded sweeter, more intense and textured for instance. Bass notes whether guitar or drums revealed the instrument’s character. Vocals sweeter sounding in the best possible sense. Brass shone.
I wonder whether the 552 would have that effect with my existing sources or whether the limitation of the source would just become more apparent?
I feel my CDX2 + nDAC + PS555DR into 252 + SuperCap DR is pretty good, and probably better than the vinyl (RP10/Aphelion into Aria). Full SL. I’m hoping to try Superline with Air plugs.
Don't suppose you live within a few hours of Gloucester.
Phil
The great thing about upgrading your pre amp is that it will benefit both your CD and TT sources. Although I have no direct experience of either the CDX2 or the RP10, I suspect the 552 would show them at their very best, rather than highlight any shortcomings.
Of course you know the only way to find out is to do a home dem. The dealer dem did not show the full capability of the 552, so a home dem is essential IMHO. As others have said, don't dem the 552 unless you have the finance, but if you can find a pre loved one, it makes things less of a financial stretch.
Sorry, I hail from Buckinghamshire so a long way from Gloucestershire.
Good luck.
Posted on: 22 November 2018 by Filipe
Nigel and Yeti, I tried Naim’s loan 552DR for a week earlier in the year. What it showed was that HiFi Racks weren’t good enough, but that is now largely sorted by the addition of Naim isolation glass, cups and ball bearings, better spacing etc. As the 252 with isolation shelves I demoed sounded better than the 552 without I went that way from my 282. It was £3k against £11k approximately for a new 552DR, some of the saving being from keeping the SuperCap DR.
I’m sure if I had taken the plunge I’d be even happier, but I am actually feeling in a good place with the digital. However, the Aura exposed what is missing from the Aria, which is still a very good phonostage for the money.
So just curious as to what differences the preamp upgrade can do.
Phil
Posted on: 22 November 2018 by S3
Phil,
As you know we have an almost identical support system (hifi racks with Fraim glass and cups / balls).
I took the decision the other day to rebuild the racks as I was concerned to hear my NDS decoupling system (brass plate etc) rattling when I walked past the rack!
The solution was to attach longer spikes to the bottom level of the rack (feet) so that the legs are slightly suspended above the carpet with the longer spikes properly seated in the chipboard below the carpet.
Before, the spikes were going through the carpet but were not properly seated on the base floor hence the lack of proper isolation at the base of each rack; it was effectively sitting on top of the carpet.
Now when I walk past the NDS is silent and the performance of the system is tighter and more coherent.
I only mention it in case your hifi rack support system is similarly seated on the floor.
Kind regards
David
Posted on: 23 November 2018 by Jorg
Hi Nigel,
I had the opportunity to make an extended home demo on a fairly similar topic. In a NDS/555DR-552DR-500 System with Lumina cables on Fraim, the question was whether we should replace the NDS with a ND555 or update the 500 to DR spec. Everybody involved was convinced that the exchange of the streamer would have a much bigger impact on the whole system. And the ND555 was very good, it was indeed no subtle change. But exchanging the 500 for a 500DR provided almost as much of an improvement in resolution, clarity, dynamics and fun. I was very surprised and decided to get the 500 updated first. Of course, both ND555 and 500DR together were so much better again, but that has to wait for next year's budget if I am lucky.
I was surprised. I guess the moral of the story is that the 'source first' dogma is just not always true. If the details get lost in your amplification, an excellent source can only do so much. Since you have a DR power amp already, you might have less of a problem with that.
Jorg
Posted on: 23 November 2018 by nigelb
Hi Jorg,
Very interesting and our experiences show that system balance is all and that source is important but not the be all and end all, although I do consider the pre amp as a fundamental element of the source. I have heard that DRing a 500 makes a huge difference so I am not surprised by your findings and cheaper than a ND555, even with a trade-in on your NDS.
My loan 552 is a non-DR model and if I go for it I will have it DR'd and serviced at the same time in a couple of years, spreading the cost nicely. My 250 is a DR model but of course not a patch on a non-DR 500. I am just amazed at the ultimate capability of the 250DR although I do occasionally hear it struggling when the music gets loud and complex.
But frankly 95% of the time the little 250DR does a fine job and upgrading my power amp can wait a little, although I realise that it is now a limiting factor, as are my speakers. It also makes sense to upgrade speakers and power amp together to ensure they are a good acoustic match and power supply and demand are in synch.
Will this treadmill never end? Not while I get increasing enjoyment from my music it won't.
Posted on: 23 November 2018 by ken c
my view, which I have stated here before, is that 'source first' needs to be a little more nuanced. Probably a tighter 'rule' is: a system is only as good as its weakest link. The trick, of course, is to determine, for any given system/room etc, what the 'weakest link' is. Dealer/user experience, home dem … etc can help here. As I recall, source first comes from the fact that the components up the chain tend(ed) to be more tightly tolerance than those further down -- but this is very general, and specific circumstances/setup/preferences, can easily topple this approach.
enjoy/ken
Posted on: 23 November 2018 by Darke Bear
Very interesting and not entirely surprising result from my perspective. I never thought the NDS was in any way bad but that the ND555 was much better albeit at a price, but the 'weakest-link' concept is not always the source and the Pre is very important, despite many attempts to find a way around it.
It is the first high-gain stage in the system (leaving aside any RIAA flat-gain stage) and I've always found it more critical than I wanted or wished it to be, but the facts were the facts and the Pre is very important in giving you that footing into a secure transparent presentation of music which is difficult to make up for earlier or later.
I've been here myself with the 552 to S1 Pre difference and it still applies. The 552 looks like a bargain by comparison and you will enjoy it for many years as other items may get changed-out and in the Pre gives that feeling of confidence into the performance that everything is being allowed to work without undue strain.
Congratulations and enjoy!
DB.