Servicing Naim Nait Amplifier

Hifiver

Well-known member
Jan 2, 2022
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I understand from my independent dealer that Naim are not as good as they once were and they have lost a lot of their engineers.

I have a Naim amplifier, bought new, around 2018.

Who is best to service it and what would I expect to pay?

Thank you.
 
I understand from my independent dealer that Naim are not as good as they once were and they have lost a lot of their engineers.

I have a Naim amplifier, bought new, around 2018.

Who is best to service it and what would I expect to pay?

Thank you.
I'd be very disappointed if I had an 8 year old amp that needed a 'service'.
(My last Cyrus amp was 20+ years old....never had a service of any kind - and, as it happens, I qualified as an electronics service engineer 🤪).
 
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I understand from my independent dealer that Naim are not as good as they once were and they have lost a lot of their engineers.

I have a Naim amplifier, bought new, around 2018.

Who is best to service it and what would I expect to pay?

Thank you.
well to answer your actual question there places and some advertise there services on ebay. this is one I found
 
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I don’t know any but Naim’s own forum surely will have some suggestions. But I second the point about not fixing what isn't broken.

Unfortunately Naim created a habit where their owners are led to think amplifiers need new capacitors regularly. Either they fit under-specified or dirt cheap ones, or they are conning you. Or maybe it’s because some users leave their amps powered up 24/7?

I know their screens faded in a few years, but I’d not go looking for trouble.
 
I don’t know any but Naim’s own forum surely will have some suggestions. But I second the point about not fixing what isn't broken.

Unfortunately Naim created a habit where their owners are led to think amplifiers need new capacitors regularly. Either they fit under-specified or dirt cheap ones, or they are conning you. Or maybe it’s because some users leave their amps powered up 24/7?

I know their screens faded in a few years, but I’d not go looking for trouble.
The 24/7 thing is probably the reason for Naims suggestion of every 10 years, for some there products at least. But now they have been bought out it will be interesting to see if they actually carry on actually offering the service at all.
 
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If a brand/manufacturer would tell/advise me that their products need to be on 24/7 to work properly and according to specifications, I would simply NOT buy their products.
Besides energy waste and higher bills for me, things I don´t like, what they(the brand/manufacturer) actually are saying is "Our products are not properly designed" "Our products are actually not very good".
 
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If a brand/manufacturer would tell/advise me that their products need to be on 24/7 to work properly and according to specifications, I would simply NOT buy their products.
Besides energy waste and higher bills for me, things I don´t like, what they(the brand/manufacturer) actually are saying is "Our products are not properly designed" "Our products are actually not very good".


What are you talking about? there are very very few devices that actually truly shut down these days.

Devices from companies like Naim and Bluesound/sonos often don’t have a traditional “off” switch, but that doesn’t mean they’re poorly designed. Instead, they enter a low-power mode (not really standby), similar to the phone in your pocket. Your phone isn’t fully off, it’s just sleeping, staying connected and ready to wake instantly when you need it, when was the last time you completely powered down your phone? Does that mean it’s badly designed? you phone will die becasue of planned obsolesce before it dies of machcanical failure. Same for a todays tvs they do alot of there updates while you think there "off". Heck your fridge works this way!

Hi-fi equipment works in much the same way. Keeping circuits gently powered helps maintain a stable temperature helping to avoid electrical stress caused by repeatedly powering on from cold, which can wear components over time. In this "standby" state, the device uses only a small amount of power while remaining ready to perform at its best. If an electrical device is going to fail it will be at most unstable stage.

This approach is a deliberate design choice that balances performance, longevity, and convenience. Rather than shutting down completely, the equipment stays quietly “awake” so you don’t have to wait for it to warm up or reboot.

When manufacturers recommend servicing every 10 years, it’s simply a routine inspection and clean, not necessarily a repair or parts replacement unless something actually needs attention. The most important take away, its a recommendation not a MUST.
 

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