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Price: MSRP: $300.00 Sale Price: You Save $91.05 (30%)
The VP129 is designed to amplify an RIAA equalized
phono signal to a Hi-Fi level signal, and is intended for magnetic pickups.
Since the unit utilizes tube circuitry, the resulting output signal is more warm
and musical than solid state preamplifiers.
Features:
RIAA Equalization
All tube circuitry
Switchable Rumble Filter
Mute Switch
Headphone Output with variable Level control
Steel Chassis
PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS
I/ O Connectors: RCA, 1/4" TRS Stereo
Input Sensitivity: 30 dB gain @ 1kHz, 47k W Input Z
Input Impedance: 50k Ohms
Output Impedance: 8 Ohms Headphone, 100 Ohms RCA
Max Output Level: >10dB @ 1kHz at at .1% dist.
Equalization: RIAA +/- 1.5 dB, 20Hz to 20kHz
Rumble Filter: 20Hz
THD .02% @ 1KHz
S/N Ratio: >80 dB unweighted
PWR: 12 - 18 VDC
Size: 6"w x 2.5"h x 5.4"d
Weight: 1 lb
Indicator: 1 Power LED
VIEW THE MANUAL
These are both in .pdf format for Adobe Acrobat Reader
Putting vinyl back into your life
New phono preamplifier lets you listen to LPs on
today's equipment
By Gary Krakow
Columnist
MSNBC
Updated: 1:35 p.m. PT March 29, 2006
Rolls
Corporation
This
great
sounding
device is
based on
a
single
vacuum
tube. You
can
see
it beneath its
protective
cover.
Gary Krakow
Columnist
LPs are making a comeback. Not that CD
manufacturers and Internet download sites should
lose any sleep, but many people out there —
including those firmly rooted in the iPod
generation — are enjoying vinyl recordings and
their rich musical sound once again.
Ready to jump aboard?
You'll need a record player, obviously. But you
may also be startled to find that your home
stereo doesn't contain the circuitry that lets
you listen to LPs. It's not that it's
particularly complicated — but when CDs took
over, electronics manufacturers stopped
including the circuitry that lets you listen to
records.
There are expensive
high-end options, of course. But I’ve found a
new, little red box that allows you to listen
your LPs in style without paying a bundle.
The item in question
is the Bellari VP129 Tube Phono Preamp made by
the Rolls Corporation, an audio electronics
manufacturer in Salt Lake City. It processes and
amplifies the very, very small electrical signal
that comes from a turnable's high output,
moving-magnet phono cartridge and needle,
amplifies it and sends to your music system.
It’s very, very good at what it does. (Very low
output moving coil cartridges will need yet
another step-up device.)
The whole concept
began when people at Rolls wanted to listen to
LPs and didn’t want to spend a lot of money
doing so. You see, once this type of circuitry
was removed from equipment we can afford, people
started making separate, super-duper boxes we
couldn’t afford.
The VP129 measures 6
by 2.5 by 5.4 inches and weighs less than a
pound. There are RCA inputs (from your
turntable) and output (to your
amplifier/receiver) jacks, a headphone jack,
plus volume controls for LP playback and
headphones, a rumble filter (in case you don’t
appreciate heavy bass notes) and a mute button.
Oh yes, there’s one
12AX7 vacuum tube sticking up right smack in the
middle of the box. For the record, it’s a
modern-day Electro-Harmonix model made in
Russia. Rolls chose a vacuum tube because it
makes the VP129 sound terrific. The tube circuit
was designed in house, based on a very old
schematic blueprint.
Using the VP129 is
straight forward. Plug the record player to the
device, plug the device to your
amplifier/receiver, let the tube warm up for at
least 15 to 20 minutes, adjust the volume to
your liking and then sit back and listen.
Sounds great, no? The
Bellari has the sound of very sophisticated
hi-fi gear, of items that retail for a lot more
money. The VP129’s tube-driven circuit
reproduces voices and allows them to sound
real. There’s no other way to explain it. The
bass is authoritative. The high notes are smooth
and extended. And the critical midrange — where
most music and voices occur — sounds absolutely
right.
The VP129 now retails
for $249 — still a relative bargain for such a
terrific sounding device. Actually, the people
at Rolls just raised the price after receiving
raves in a recent issue of Stereophile magazine
(a high-end hi-fi fanzine). When I received my
test sample the box sold for $199. Luckily, if
you search the Web you can still find the
Bellari at the $199 price.
If listening to LPs
sounds good to you and this preamp peaks your
interest as it should — I’d recommend that you
jump on the chance to own a great sounding
device, made in the United States, selling at
the old price. But even at $249 you won’t be
disappointed.
A-I Consolidated, Inc.
5002 Industrial Way, #2
Coeur D Alene, ID 83815
208-765-3280
Fax 208-765-3338
Sales on Pro Audio Video DJ Electronic & Music
Gear Since 1976
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A-I
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