Highfive

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Hi
Recently I bought the NAD 328 (2x 50w) and 379 (2x 80w) amplifiers. Although especially the 379 is a very impressive power house, there are no controls on the machine! While at the 379 tone control and balance can only be adjusted in the menu. The 328 has none! Where are the knobs?? Am I the only one missing these hardware controls?

Another thing is the A/B speaker switch that seems to have disappeared from any modern and affordable amplifier. Yes, on the 379 you can connect 4 speakers, but NAD forgot to design a speaker switch…

Has anyone advice on NAD amps that have controls for balance/tone AND also A/B speaker options?
 

RoA

Well-known member
Having owned a Chord Mojo and Arcam Solo Movie, I choose traditional knobs over buttons and menus anyday. The Mojo is a failed design IMO, looks great, hard to use.
I find the Mojo (2) a brilliant device. Kudos to Chord for being different. It is very easy to get the hang of it after a short time. The only time I found it difficult is to gauge the right output/db for Hifi system (not headphone) use. Pressing both volume buttons apparently fixes it to 3v out but that seems a little hot so I adjust down.
 
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Many hifi amps lack tone controls - the theory being that they are a corruption in the signal pat. Whether it would be audible, who knows - but I guess if you are trying to design something to be the best it can be?

The idea is that you match it with speakers that fit the room, rather than compensating for ill-matched speakers by ramping bass up or down.

Speaker switching does seem like rather an oversight.
 
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Noddy

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Where are the knobs?? Am I the only one missing these hardware controls?
This might be obvious, but the reason for touch sensitive controls and buttons is cost reduction. Selection dials are more expensive. I worked for a company making displays used in cars, and having a display for several functions such as air con is cheaper than lots of buttons. The display itself isn’t cheap, but assembly is much quicker. And of course if you already have a display for the entertainment system, why not also use it for air con and other functiona. They were also developing fake buttons, and sliders. You would slide your finger along a groove in a screen, and the system would detect your finger motion using a capacitance grid.
 
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