$249 baby amplifier wows audiophiles
The Icon comes in four colors.
(Credit: NuForce)I heard the NuForce Icon (briefly) at the Rocky Mountain Audio Fest last year, and the little bugger was astounding. The anodized aluminum chassis is available in four snazzy colors. It feels well made.
Stereophile's Wes Phillips reviewed it for real. He even had the nerve to hook up the teeny NuForce Icon to a pair of Definitive Technology Mythos STS SuperTower speakers, and Phillips was bowled over by the sound! The sheer incongruity of the match-up was disarming, but in the end Phillips heard the limitations of the NuForce Icon. Used as intended driving small speakers, it's tough to beat for its size and price.
It has USB, 3.5mm, and stereo RCA inputs; and headphone and speaker-level outputs. It's a 12-watt-per-channel desktop amp, so NuForce isn't touting the Icon as a giant killer, just that it'll sound sweet used in the context of a desktop audio system. Did I mention it's little, just 1 by 4.5 by 6 inches, and weighs one pound?
The S-1 speaker.
(Credit: NuForce)NuForce also offers a matching speaker, the S-1, for $249 a pair. There's also a subwoofer, the W-1, that goes for, you guessed it, $249.
The W-1 subwoofer
(Credit: NuForce)
Steve Guttenberg is a frequent contributor to magazines and Web sites including Home Entertainment, Playback, and Ultimate AV. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. 



http://www.neoseeker.com/Articles/Hardware/Reviews/mh500/
- by xuxusung July 19, 2009 12:49 PM PDT
- I bought it $200 during an online promotion. Connected to Pinnacle bookshelf speakers, they are very nice. I also tried Grado SR325s on the headphone jack and it wasn't bad, not ideal (due to impedance) but listenable. They probably wouldn't do so well connected to my Maggies, tho
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