Rotel RMB-1075 5-channel power amplifier
Rotel might have taken that as a challenge. I won't say that the RMB-1075 is the best thing to happen to amplification since Bardeen, Shockley, and Brattain knocked their heads together at Bell Labs inventing the transistor, but as far as practical value is concerned, the RMB-1095's little brother would certainly have made those men proud of what their little electronic switching creation has made possible.
Physical Description
There's no mistaking the RMB-1075's membership in the Rotel family. It's THX-certified, and its front panel is covered with the same vertical heatsinking as its brothers, although its increased cooling area is one of the ways the RMB-1075 is an improvement over the now-discontinued RB-985 Mk.II. These fins did their job during all of my listening sessions; the RMB-1075 was never more than slightly warm to the touch. The center of the front panel sports the same solitary Power button as other Rotel amps. Above it are five LEDs that light up if any of the amp's five channels are forced into protection mode.
The relatively compact RMB-1075 is smaller than any other amplifier I currently have in my studio, and, at a mere 43 lbs, the most manageable. But while small in stature, it couldn't be called a lightweight—like that weight-lifting boy who used to show up in all our comic books, the RMB-1075 had strengths that belied its size.
A quick comparison of the RMB-1075's internal parts shows how Rotel made this less expensive version of their RMB-1095. The RMB-1075 uses only one 1.5kVA toroidal transformer instead of the RMB-1095's two 1.2kVA devices. The power supply includes eight 10,000µF slit-foil capacitors, vs. eight 22,000µf devices in the larger, more powerful amp. The output amplification comprises twenty 130W/15-amp transistors, down from the larger unit's thirty 150W/15-amp devices.
Audio Pro Sessions
I noted in my review of the Audio Pro Black Diamond (October 2001) that the combination of that Swedish speaker with the Rotel RMB-1075 was a good one. The Black Diamond's minimal crossover allowed the RMB-1075's controlled performance to sing through without restriction, and the speaker's above-average efficiency made the most of the Rotel's power output. Dynamic transients had proper attack, and front-to-rear soundstage layering was precise. Film soundtracks sounded eerily live.
The Black Diamonds are unforgiving of harsh or strident electronics, and the RMB-1075's smooth performance proved a heavenly match. I had switched to the RMB-1075 after packing up the 7-channel Integra Research RDA-7 amplifier to send it to our Home Entertainment 2001 show in New York, and was slightly bummed that the Rotel had only five channels. After a few listening sessions, I wired a second set of monopole rears in parallel for a more enveloping surround "bubble."
The RMB-1075 didn't complain about this extra load for days. Then, walking through my studio one night, I tripped on a speaker wire, possibly shorting it out. Later, I noticed that one of the amp's protection LEDs had lit up. I removed the cover, found a blown fuse, and replaced it. But the replacement's instant demise in a bright flash proved that the wound was deep.
Rotel quickly sent another unit, and my evaluation continued—all speaker cables now safely affixed to the floor with wide black gaffer's tape. When I talked with Rotel's service department, we couldn't decide exactly which part of my stupidity had caused the problem: the possible short, or my having wired the speakers in parallel, which presented a load to the amp lower than it should be asked to handle. Please learn from my mistake—this is only the second amp I can remember having blown up.
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