Primare I35 Prisma integrated amplifier

Original price was: R135,000.00.Current price is: R42,000.00.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

  • Type: Integrated amplifier with optional internal streamer and DAC
  • Power output: 2 × 150W in 8 Ohms
  • Minimum load: 2 ohms
  • Analogue Inputs: 2 × balanced (XLR), 3 × unbalanced (RCA) unbalanced variable (RCA)
  • Analogue outputs: 2× unbalanced variable (RCA)
  • Digital Inputs: 1 × USB-A, 1 × USB-B, 2 x RCA S/PDIF, 4 × Toslink S/PDIF, WLAN, LAN Line level
  • Digital Outputs: 1× RCA S/PDIF
  • Streaming/connectivity capabilities: multi-room/multi-zone, LAN, WLAN, Bluetooth®, AirPlay, Spotify Connect, Chromecast built-in, and RS-232 connectivity and control
  • Decoding capabilities: PCM to 24bit, 384kHz, DSD to DSD256 (DoP)
  • Frequency response: 20Hz–20kHz -0.2dB
  • Signal-to-noise ratio: > 100dB
  • THD+N: <  0.01%, 20Hz–20kHz, 10W at 8Ω
  • Dimensions (H×W×D): 10.6 × 43 × 42cm
  • Weight: 11kg
  • Price: £3,995

Description

Primare I35 Prisma integrated amplifier

I thought this would be one of the easiest reviews to write, and in a way it is. Having already extensively covered the base Primare I35 integrated amplifier in Issue 163 and the Prisma network and DAC concept in both reviews of the award-winning I25 (in Issue 172) and as a part of the 15 system (in Issue 187), joining all the dots to make the Primare I35 Prisma integrated amplifier shouldn’t be too difficult?

In a way, I was right. But only in a way. What I didn’t expect was just how significant the effect of the combination is on the perception of the I35. If ever there was a product that exhibits the notion that ‘the whole is greater than the sum of the parts’ it’s the Primare I35 Prisma.

We’re getting ahead of ourselves. First, a quick recap. The I35 was the first amplifier from the brand to feature its UFPD 2 amplifier modules. UFPD stands for Ultra Fast Power Module. This Primare designed and exclusive to the brand Class D module has long provided instantaneous current delivery and extremely low distortion, but in its new UFPD 2 guise has more linear amplification across the entire audible bandwidth than previous modules. It also means Primare can make a true 150 watt per channel amplifier in a relatively small chassis without heat issues.

The I35 is an extremely modular design, allowing a series of add-on board options to bring the amplifier from base model, through I35 DAC (with modular DAC board added) right through to the I35 Prisma tested here. Prisma adds a wired and wireless streaming board to the I35+DAC option. However, there are a significant number of other avenues to get access to that Primare streaming option, including using the matching CD35 CD player with its own Prisma option as a digital hub, and connect via the analogue inputs to the I35, or take that player’s digital output to the I35’s optional DAC. The core I35 sports two sets of XLR balanced inputs, three RCA single-ended line inputs, and both fixed and variable outputs for a home cinema processor or tape loop.

Adding both DAC and Prisma makes the I35 one of the most comprehensively specified integrated amplifiers out there at the moment. The DAC board alone adds four S/PDIF Toslink connectors and two coaxial RCA links, as well as USB input and S/PDIF/RCA output. But no AES/EBU link.

Adding in the Prisma section brings two Ethernet connections, provision for an external USB hard drive and two antenna for connection to a smartphone for (Apple and Android chummy) Bluetooth music replay (Apple and Android chummy) or controlling the Prisma section via the Prisma app.

All of this is well documented in those previous reviews. There is not much point re-hashing them further. And, staying on that tip, the other thing that hasn’t changed is the sonic performance of I35 or Prisma, when they are brought together under the same roof. It’s the same enjoyable, musically-oriented performance we’ve heard from Primare, with a good sense of rhythm, a nice, wide soundstage and enough detail to make the presentation pass muster with the audiophile cognoscenti as much as it does with the music lovers who just want something entertaining and fuss-free. As I noted in the original review of the I35, there’s something of the ‘chrome bumper’ Naim sound to this, although without the peaky sound of more than 30 years ago. And, one last sonic point; consistency. The DAC and Prisma sounds like the I35.

Tonally, the I35 Prisma is rich and satisfying rather than bright and breezy, and yet it comes over as both energetic and dynamic sounding. That’s the ‘Chrome Bumper’ connection as these were all the elements that drove people into hi-fi stores in the 1980s, and all of those elements are improved here, with more detail, midrange clarity, and focus. And that holds regardless of input.

Set-up of Prisma is a breeze (at least for those net-savvy enough to have built their own home network), and the Prisma App makes connection and use simple. The app goes for the kind of unflustered simplicity we have come to expect (but sadly not often receive) from good network apps, and I’d put the Primare option (both in install and day-to-day use terms) up there with the best. In many respects, the next generation of audio buyers more as likely to be swayed by the quality of the app than by the character of the electronics, so Primare deserves praise for getting this right.

There was a line in that last paragraph that came to define how this review began to unfold: the next generation of audio buyers more as likely to be swayed by the quality of the app than by the character of the electronics. This is a key part of the Primare I35 Prisma. Not that the character of the electronics is somehow wanting, but it’s the way your approach to the amplifier changes when thinking of it as the Primare I35 and the Primare I35 Prisma that shows just how we are changing, and why this product is at the epicentre of that change.

The I35 is a good, conventional amplifier. You use it in the way you have used amplifiers for decades. Select source, set volume level, listen. It’s a part of a rack of electronics that may or may not include a CD player and a turntable. Cast your mind back 30 years or more and it could be doing the same task (OK, so the amplifier modules are very different, but the intent is the same). The amp with its built-in DAC has a similar position, although naturally it connects those digital sources directly to its built-in DAC, rather than through analogue connections… but once again it’s an electronics box in a rack. Once you add in the Prisma, that all evaporates. Suddenly it’s the only piece of equipment on display. It’s the fit and forget/just add speakers digital hub. While we’ve had such devices before, the network component of the amplifier has not been so clearly an option before, and this allows you to view the Primare I35 as a ‘before’ and an ‘after’ Prisma product, and perhaps more importantly how that impacts upon you, the listener.

In a very real way, I’ve not had a more immediate example of just how potentially game-changing this is, even though I’ve been working with computer audio in some way or form since the Napster days. This isn’t a ‘technology’ issue, it’s one of philosophy of listening and the psychology of the listener. You change your way of thinking between ‘I35’ and ‘I35 Prisma’ and the change is well met and worth making.

It’s an odd thing. The addition of Prisma almost immediately changes your perception of the Primare I35 from ‘amplifier’ to ‘ complete music-making entity’. It stops being just another product on the shelf, because it challenges the need for the rest of those products on the other shelves in your system. Even with a significant collection of unripped discs playing through a disc spinner of some description, you find yourself drawn almost inexorably to streaming; not in some Svengali-like way and not just for simplicity. It’s because music happens that way and you want to get more of it. Where maybe you liked those additional devices as things you could enjoy in their own right, suddenly many become impediments to playing music as fast as you can. It’s as if the I35 suddenly moves into pole position in your system and the other parts become of less and less importance. Granted, you still end up playing other formats (especially vinyl, which becomes your ‘special occasion’ listening source), but all that fuss and bother of having lots of extra bits in your system? They just stopped being a part of the audiophile obsession. Fast!

The Primare I35 Prisma isn’t the only game in town, of course, and there are other fully integrated units that stream music from local and online sources with similar aplomb, but there’s something about the Primare option that’s beguiling. Perhaps it’s the absence of nonsense, the way it makes everything sound musically entertaining and enjoyable, or perhaps its the sheer ease of use. I’m pleased on a number of levels to have stepped from I35 to I35 Prisma, even though I suspect in today’s world most people will just opt for the full-fat Prisma version. But that insight into how we relate to streaming and how it changes our perception for the better will stay with me. Thanks!


 

Primare I35 Prisma Integrated Amplifier

Primare I35 Prisma Integrated Amplifier

The Swedish-built I35 Prisma integrated amplifier, the latest model in Primare’s highly regarded 30 Series, exemplifies a new breed of integrated amp. Where once upon a time the integrated existed in a world apart from separates, and then only as a humble, low-cost, space-saving component, the last few years have seen a rise in high-powered, full-featured, upmarket contenders brimming with connectivity and outfitted with premium internals. Much of this uptick can be credited to the introduction of high-resolution onboard DACs. But streaming services and storage options have also elevated the integrated amp to even greater heights as a complete one-box solution. So much so, that many enthusiasts might start asking, “Separates? Who needs ’em?” It’s a question that kept occurring to me as I’ve evaluated the new generation of integrateds.

Outwardly, the I35 is pure Primare, a pristine appearance that has remained unsullied over the years. The thick, brushed-aluminum faceplate sports a wide rectangular OLED display and a quartet of small buttons that include power, menu, and configuration. The display is flanked on the left and right by pleasingly tactile selector and volume knobs. 

In spite of the front panel’s minimalism, the I35 is teeming with connectivity: Wi-Fi and Ethernet for network-based storage, Bluetooth, AirPlay (for Apple devices), Spotify Connect, and more. Perhaps most importantly, the I35 is equipped with Chromecast (a streaming portal à la Apple TV) that when connected via a Wi-Fi network (or Ethernet) can “cast” a galaxy of music-streaming services to the Prisma and, when operated from the Google Home app (a free download), will connect with a panoply of Google home/multi-room devices. (For Old School users dedicated to conventional sources, such as CD players, the I35 is available in an analog-only version sans DAC and network connectivity.)

The relatively crowded real estate of the back panel speaks to the wide-ranging inputs that the I35 offers. The top row of digital inputs includes four optical, a pair of coaxial plus USB-B for a computer (PC or Mac), and a coaxial digital output. Sturdy footers isolate the chassis from vibration. Network LAN connections and a USB-A slot reside between the dual antenna taps. The bottom row is dedicated to analog inputs, including a pair of balanced XLR and three unbalanced RCA, a pre-out, and a line-level out. The speaker terminals are on the lower left beside the IEC plug and on/off rocker switch. Irksome, however, is the placement of the speaker terminals which are positioned so low on the panel that it is difficult to affix commonly used spade connectors and larger cables. Prospective owners might consider banana plugs instead.

The I35’s Class D output stage delivers 150Wpc into 8 ohms, and 300Wpc into 4 ohms. The interior layout uses space efficiently by virtue of two- and four-layer double-sided circuit boards for shorter signal paths. Surface-mount components are also used whenever possible, again to keep signal paths short. 

The amp section of the I35 is the first to use Primare’s proprietary UFPD 2 power-module technology, powered by a switching power supply. Primare’s literature states that the new circuit improves on earlier generations with “immediate and sustained high power output with very low distortion, lower noise and extended headroom, instantaneous rise time, and absolutely linear amplification across the entire bandwidth… over an ultra-wide frequency range.”

My review sample included the DAC stage—an AKM AK4497EQ 32-bit stereo DAC capable of supporting up to 768kHz PCM and 22.4MHz DSD. Noteworthy is that this DAC “integrates a newly developed switched-capacitor filter ‘OSR Doubler’ that greatly reduces sound degradation from noise shaping, achieving a flat noise floor up to 200kHz.” Further, the USB-B input allows playback of files up to PCM 768kHz/32-bit and DSD256/11.2MHz.

Given the sophistication of today’s streamer amps, organization is key. For the I35 that responsibility is mostly handled by the Prisma app—a free download onto a smart device such as an iPad or comparable Android tablet. I connected an Ethernet cable to my router, and in the time it takes to say “Swedish meatballs” I was off to the races. With my NAS drive automatically configured, I was effortlessly streaming content from Spotify, Tidal, and TunedIn within the Chromecast folder. Fortunately, the configurable world of the I35 keys well off the Prisma app. The graphical interface is nicely sorted out for selecting input sources and streaming services; it’s stable and, after brief experience, intuitive to navigate. It controls volume, renames source inputs, and even adjusts input gain per source with a swipe or the touch of a virtual button. More than likely you will end up putting the traditional remote control in a drawer. But don’t lose it—it comes in handy when your teenager makes off with the iPad.  

A couple of minor quibbles: The characters of the OLED display are perfectly legible up close, but so tiny that you’ll need a pair of binoculars to read them from more than a few feet away. The front-panel menu interface on the I35 needs updating, and users are much better off getting cozy with the comprehensive Prisma app. Finally, Chromecast worked well (the more Google Home stuff the better) but, on occasion, toggling between the Prisma app and a streaming service like Tidal caused the audio output to default to the iPad’s internal speakers. It took only a moment to reselect the I35 output, but this was a reminder of the complexity of these systems.  

In sonics, the I35 walked the straight and narrow musically with solid, pitch-precise behavior in the bass, a full midrange, and a treble that didn’t etch or irritate. I would characterize the I35 as being on the slightly cooler side of the tonal spectrum, but not by a wide margin. Vocalists of all stripes exhibited a lively, natural sound; from Tom Waits’ craggy baritone to the sassy, songbird soprano of Linda Ronstadt, voices were reproduced with sensitivity to sibilance and low-level intimacy. Singers were not rendered as cutouts, either. They had the physical presence of being within the soundspace—Waits’ voice suggesting deep chest resonance, Ronstadt’s a mix of high-altitude extension and gutsy brio. Although some treble dryness crept in during violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter’s performance of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto, the I35 maintained the violin’s intensity, tempered with overtones of harmonic sweetness on top. During solo piano passages it convincingly generated the necessary soundboard fullness and harmonic resolution that I associate with a concert grand—the most difficult instrument in the orchestra to reproduce in full. Bass response was nicely extended, alive with a level of timbre and texture that made it easy to separate a rock kickdrum and an electric bass guitar playing in sync, four beats to the measure. Or the pitch and sustain from the cascading kettle drums during Copland’s Fanfare 

Transient behavior was swift and clean. Picking up the leading edge of a tambourine rattle, a trumpet blast, or even the fingernails of a classical guitarist was part of the enjoyment of living with the I35—not because it drew attention to itself but rather because of the ease with which transient information was being integrated into the larger performance. Its cooler balance was sometimes revealed during brass passages, but I think this was due more to a hint less bloom than to aggressive tonality.

Class D power, often mischaracterized as digital amplification, was once the elephant in the room as regards sonic quality. Many were quick to point out its deficiencies while not fully appreciating its strengths and its potential. Typical gripes were the airless top end, lack of dimensionality, and an extended but overly controlled bass region bereft of timbral detail. I found this seldom to be the case with the I35, as it largely ameliorated the clichés that dogged early Class D. In fact, the I35 easily upstaged the Primare I20, the excellent 70Wpc integrated I reviewed way back in Issue 143—a Class AB design.

Imaging was very good, sufficiently precise without sounding unnaturally clamped in a vise. Soundstaging and dimensionality were good, but not as immersive as I would have liked. Although there were glimmers of front-to-back depth reproduction—especially during orchestral passages—I felt the I35 could improve slightly on providing the full expanse of players layered from the edges of the stage to the furthest upstage recesses.

On the macro-dynamic level, the I35 was explosive and superbly controlled. However, by a small margin I felt the gradations of micro-dynamic energy that I’m accustomed to hearing when listening to a large chorale or smaller collection of voices were less than fully resolved. A track like “After the Gold Rush” is a good example. The song, which features a three-part harmony sung by Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and Linda Ronstadt, is from their Trio album and it’s a wonderful track in the way it reveals the finely-honed efforts of these artists. In this instance, the I35 closes in on but doesn’t entirely express the low-level vocal interplay of these iconic singers and the soundspace surrounding them. In fairness this was a subtle subtraction and a conclusion I only arrived at when I swapped out the I35’s on-board DAC for my reference Lumin S1 media player. In the great scheme of things, I’d call it a minor deduction. A little perspective: Compared with some personal (and pricey) faves in this segment the I35 can’t quite muster the pop or Wagnerian bass response of the MBL C51, the dynamic fireworks of the Pass Labs INT-250, or the earthy mid and top-end romanticism of the Aesthetix Mimas. However even in the midst of this elite company, and at a fraction of the price, the I35 puts in a top-notch, nicely balanced performance.

Never have integrated amps been asked to do so much musically and functionally. But any way you want to listen, the I35 Prisma is at your beck and call. Maybe you only want to stream from Tidal or one of the other services. Or play back music from a computer or network storage. Maybe you’ll never spin a CD or an LP, or even own a recording in any physical format. The I35 is non-denominational. But like a virtual butler, it’s poised at the ready should you change your mind. In sum, Primare’s latest is a rock-solid performer excelling in a highly competitive bracket. It met or exceeded all my expectations.