I'm just jumping in here real quick to address a question or critique I'm seeing a few of you make about our use of the Klipsch Cornwall IV speakers in this review. I fully understand that it is unlikely that anyone in their right mind would willingly go out and pair a $300 streaming amp with roughly $6,000 speakers. Still, you need to separate price from performance in this instance to understand the why. For starters, we used a few more pairs of speakers than the three mentioned in this video, as we've had the WiiM for months now. The Cornwall IVs were actually the LAST speaker I used with the amp, and I only used them because I was routinely running into power and dynamic issues with the WiiM. I used the Cornwalls because they are the most efficient loudspeakers I own. They can be successfully driven to peaks above 90-95dB in our listening room using a 2 WPC Decware SET amp without a hint of strain, yet the WiiM and its reported 60 WPC struggled to crest 80dB in some cases. If I did manage to get peaks in the upper 80s the amp often shut down soon after hitting such volumes. If the WiiM struggles with a speaker like the Cornwall, you can imagine how much more difficult it was for the Q Acoustics Concept 50 (90.5dB at 4 Ohms) or the KLH Kendall 2F (96dB at 8 Ohms). In this instance, the price or quality of the speaker is irrelevant; the WiiM's dynamic capability is the problem you should be focused on. While numerous tests show the WiiM can produce 60 WPC, it would appear that when forced to playback non-test signals, the resulting power or potential headroom of the Amp is a different story. This is something I've noticed with a number of these cheaper TI-based chip amps. I get that it's not a popular opinion to go against the grain and say that while these amps may be a "value" in one or two ways, they are NOT --I repeat, NOT --outright giant killers regarding amplifier and sound quality. Feature-wise, the WiiM, and others are an absolute embarrassment of riches, but software is not the same as hardware. The truth is these are built around amp chips that were never (really) designed for the type of work they're being forced to do. Can these TI amps sound good? Sure, but I believe it is misleading to say they're as good, in the same ballpark, or even better than even a modest Class D, AB or A amp --nevermind amplifiers that cost thousands more and that have had to hold up to scrutiny beyond a couple of forums and weekend measurement warriors. I am not trying to hate WiiM; like I say in the video, I'm trying to give you the clearest picture of what to expect. As I said in the review, if you adhere to a few general rules (which are stated in the video), you stand to have the best chance for success. But if you try and go toe-to-toe with a better, more capable amp with the wrong speakers or source, you may be in for a rude awakening in more ways than one.
Your job is always well done because it prepares potential buyers with what to expect. As for me” I wasn’t expecting much from it based on the price, and from what I have learned from your channel” I decided that for my small listening space couple with a subwoofer takeover the heavy lifting” it should be just fine and It is. My only thing now is even though It has a built in DAC plus EQ/ PEQ there is no good stereo separation and spaciousness. So I am going to see if I can get a use B&W or ML bookshelves speakers to see if I can squeeze some more life out of it 🥸
Andrew sounds apologetic and he really shouldn’t be. He stated in the video why the Cornwalls made more technical sense than others in their review stack of speakers to use for the Wiim Amp review. Getting on their case about that decision and the disappointing results helps frame that budget product better in its strengths and weaknesses. I’m now better informed about the Amp and have a clearer outlook for its best use case which is appropriately nearfield or small room with lower volume setting. Don’t expect 11 when you should be dialing in 7.
This is NOT the review I expected - The first review I've heard that didn't just "praise" this amp. I own 3 Wiim mini's, and love them. Great products with ever improving updates. I'm sure this company will go a long way. That said, Thank you for your assessment and honest opinion on this piece. I don't own one and it isn't really on my radar, but it's nice to hear a different opinion for once.
Bought the WiiM Amp after Christmas and using it for over a month in a 'smaller' livingroom in a 2.1 setup. First tested it with Mission LX-2 speakers and then with the Wharfedale EVO 4.2 in combination with a SVS SB-1000 Sub. Because of the neighbours, I never could turn the volume up a 100%. For the average Joe (like me) the WiiM Amp is more then sufficient and gives you a great bang for the buck. You're right that the WiiM Amp is not the right choice for a 'big' room or 'big' speakers, but that is not what it pretend to be. I would like to give one suggestion, try to test the speakers with and without a subwoofer and give us a report about the difference it makes in performance. PS. Sorry for my Englisch, it's only my 3e langues and I don't use it everyday. Thank you for your effort!
Adding or subtracting a subwoofer, at least in our room, didn't solve or completely do away with the WiiM's apparent power/dynamic limitations when playing back at volumes of about 60-70dB + in room.
@@andrewrobinsonreviews Thanks for your reaction. Because I've to rely on my hearing and have no professional equipment to support my 'feeling', it felt like the addition of the sub, took away some 'pressure' from the speakers and made the total sound picture better. But that is probably my wishful thinking. Thank you again.
Andrew and Kristi. I'm late to the party with my comments. However, I'm glad that i waited. It gave me time read through the viewer comments. So, I'd like to thank you for providing an objective review of this device, highlighting the good and the bad; best use cases and worst use cases. I also appreciate the fact that you used super sensitive speakers to test the amplifier, since they are so efficient. You essentially gave the amplifier the best opportunity to shine by using super sensitive speakers. I think it's important to listen, first to the entire review to get the facts and the full picture, and then ask follow-up questions. 😉
Thanks Andrew and Kristi, the Wiim Amp really is a gateway product to Hi fi and for the price and right setting it’s a direct punch to Sonos and Bluesound. The streamers are still the best value proposition in audio. In Australia, audio equipment and the hobby generally is expensive, and everyone is always looking out of the latest, greatest, slick looking device, wiim does fit the bill for masses. Looking at yours and your colleagues reviews, from what I’ve seen Wiim does seem to pay attention to reviews so good chance they will refine this.
I’ve chased the chi-fi craze. Mostly disappointed. Thin. Lean. Soulless. Wiim has it together on the streamer/app gig. They’ve won that battle, to me. I’m always going back to class AB or the hard to find, and hot, class A. Also, the AKM chips are crazy good. 4491 with 4499ex. That’s just perfection. But, for those on a tighter budget, happy listening and enjoy!
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Hi Andrew, i should say i was really waiting for review on this. I would request you to do a video on KEF T205 5.0 speaker system. Which would help i vesting on that system for people who are picky on the interiod design for living room setup. Thanks in advance.
the integrated power supply is weak i suppose as 32v should do 60w but a large room like yours needs a bigger amp. Id like to see more cheaper amps like fosi audio V3 with a 48v power supply. emotiva basx series looks promising for a home theatre
I think it would be a better mactch with a pair of bookshelf speakers and a sub if necessary. Wish to hear how it sounds when pairing with some quality bookshelf spearkers from martin logan, polk, etc.
This was a really great review. It’s refreshing to see a reviewer cover all aspects of the product and not just the positives. Did anyone else notice the hdmi input being cockeyed, definitely speaks to quality.
Chip based amps have changed the audio landscape, there are some good ones out there. I’ll still take a class ab 100% call me old school (or just old.) Thanks for the honest review.
I think hdmi capability is glossed over too much with this amp. The ability to pair this with bookshelf speakers and a sub for a TV in a bedroom or small to average sized living room is pretty awesome. Most other amps getting compared to the Wiim are either analog only or 5x the price. There is definitely a niche for this thing, but I at least think the niche is pretty awesome.
I’m buying the WiiM for its lightweight & portability, not as a focal point for a critical listening setup. It will be in my back patio or my garage powering an old pair of Klipsch R-51Ms or Energy micros w/sub when enjoying the outdoors or working on my car or bikes. So the WiiM amp really is the perfect solution for my use case. I also really love the clean Applesque design of the WiiM.
The input gain on most of the 3255 amps isn’t very high. Some of them have 48V 5A power supply option(like the Fosi V3, Ayima A07 and Max and the new Fosi za3) This makes them way more capable with dynamics but definitely doesn’t solve the signal gain issue. The solution is to boost the input voltage and use the high current/voltage power supply. The problem with that is that you don’t get the awesome dsp and hdmi features of the Wiim(which has an anemic power supply inside) The way I like to use TPA3255 amps is to use them to directly drive an individual driver with a dsp acting as crossover. Using a 4ohm driver and 48v power supply on every amp except the tweeter, you can get some pretty impressive volume levels and dynamic range. Let’s face it though, that’s way too complicated for most people. If you want to try TPA3255 for cheap, I’d recommend getting the Ayima A07 max with the 48v power supply. It has the highest input gain and can be converted to mono if you want to upgrade later by getting a second one. The ZA3 has a mono subwoofer out which actually tracks with the volume pot but it doesn’t filter the main channels so I don’t find that to be very useful. The most impressive thing actually about these tpa3255 amps is actually the 48v 5A power supply that fosi and Ayima are using. That thing is amazingly clean as a power supply and it costs $50 is which is pretty impressive considering how it measures (especially the fosi unit which Works on all of the 3255 amps). I would like to see Andrew revisit the 3255 amps with the 48v 5A supply, he might be surprised. In a previous video he mentioned that he didn’t like the idea of someone having to pay extra for that but you can buy these with that power supply from the start and it’s pretty affordable. The 3255 really does need that voltage and current to pull off good dynamics. That being said, there are way better amps out there, these are just fun to play with especially if you need 6 channels of amplification for a 3 or 4way pair of speakers running active. I’m surprised I haven’t seen anyone else doing this with these amps.
The issue with these TPA3255 based amps is their power rating is linear with the voltage (at lower volumes) or the current (at higher volumes) coming from the power supply. It sounds like the DC voltage of the WiiM Amp is plenty (32V) but the current might be limited to < 5 A. Thanks for testing it with the Cornwalls, it really shows the limit of this affordable amp.
This is the type of review that sets this channel apart from the pack of "BEST HIFI VALUE AMP" hype machine. Thank you both! I think it was a very fair review considering you tested it with and without a sub, and with and without highly efficient speakers. Unfortunate to see the amplifier section is not quite there yet. I pre-ordered mine from Crutchfield 3 months ago (thank you Lord for a generous return policy in cases like this) but it still hasn't arrived yet. They are supposedly working out software issues. But for myself, its for a small 10x12 secondary room. Hoping it'll have enough headroom in a small room like that but we will see once it arrives. Thanks again for this review!
I got the amp back in November 2023 and I am using as a 2.1, a pair of 5inc bookshelf speakers and 8inch powered subwoofer and it’s sound very loud and great, I think this is the best way to use this amp by handing off the heavy lifting to a powered subwoofer 🎉😊
A very balanced review, many other reviews raved how this is a giant killer. These small affordable amps have a proper use case scenario. Appreciate the fact you show it wont work in most larger rooms and is primarily a near field solution.
I've had my WiiM Amp since early Jan hooked up with my secondary TV/Listening area to a set of KEF q350s. It performs great in the smaller room and the integration features that makes the second area sooo much easier to setup. I would never use this in my primary listening area but, for a smaller system its perfect. Happy Listening folks!
Obviously (to me), the most common appplication would be a sub satt set up crossed over around 80 hz. Not testing it with a sub which would drop the power load on the amp is a big miss.
Thank you for this review. Based on other reviews I also ordered this amp. I wanted to use it on my desk to get rid of the cables. After some hours of listening I came to the same conclusion. It sounds OK but I was missing details in almost all kinds of music. I quickly cross checked with my almost 20 year old TEAC CR-H225 receiver with a WIIM mini and a Kadas 100$ DAC. This is the setup I was using so far. It sounded definitely better in almost every way - and I do not have 5000$ speakers on my desk. So I sent the WIIM amp back and will stick to my good old TEAC. Last year I also tried the Aiyima A07 MAX (also with a TI chip) with the same disappointing result.
It's absolutely clear that there are no alternatives with same functionality, sound quality and price bellow three c-notes. In moment it's the best solution for your home universal system (TV and music) with total budget bellow one grand.
You set it up for failure. It should be set up as bedroom set up with mini monitors and powered sub that fills in lows and punch . This is not living room amp
In a way WiiM themselves set this amp up for failure. It's not a true 60w amp, as Erin's review will confirm - in peak loads it loses half its power, which is not common in good amplifiers. It's a great amp for small to medium rooms with efficient speakers.
@@MohsinWadee Even 30 watts per channel will be enough to power efficient book shelf speakers when lows are directed to the sub , such set up can play plenty loud and clean for smaller rooms
@@kdomster9141this is not the first review to suggest that this amp does not behave like it truly outputs 60w. Gist of the matter is temper your expectations, other reviews reported clipping.
We told you as much in the review and couldn't have been able to provide you with that information without testing the WiiM to its limits. I wish people would hold the product up to the same standard as this or any review rather than continue to make excuses for a limited-use, poorly-designed product.
I'm kind of surprised you never re-ran your listening tests with a subwoofer hooked up to the LFE out and engaging the app's internal bass management you briefly mentioned. I would imagine the amp would gain quite a bit of headroom by allocating bass amplification to an external sub. I'm curious to see if it would make a huge difference it its tonality as well.
To me, amps like this are aimed at bookshelf systems with powered subwoofers, for small to medium sized rooms. Given this, I find your choice of speakers baffling.
Watching this while listening through my new WiiM amp. Thanks for sharing the good/bad. It’s not being used in my critical listening setup or where high volume is needed. So far I’m happy with the product.
For me, it's a minor concern. At least it's on the back. Maybe you all have forgotten our Leak stereo amp review. People lost their minds over the crooked button on the front and that product cost far more than this one.
Finally, some light being shed on what I have experienced with the Wiim amp. It's always the case - the hype train always glosses over the whole truth with regard to what really lies behind the facade.
I'm inclined to agree with your findings. I have two setups - a near-field one at my workstation and a living room setup. While I thoroughly enjoy the Class D amps in my near-field setup - they fail to deliver to the level of even basic Class A/B amps from Denon/Marantz when I move them to the living room
Love the honesty here. Nobody can argue with the features offered here, but man, if there was just an option to use this as a preamp to pair with some of the other great, inexpensive amps that are around these days, it'd be a formidable setup.
Good Lord! Can you imagine the disruption a Wiim Preamp Streamer with the same feature set (especially with the same subwoofer out) would have on the budget hifi section of the market? Especially when considering budget audio fans can pretty much kit build power amps using ICEPower AS-series amp modules (the ones with integrated power supplies) with nothing but a screwdriver and a couple hours of time?
I have been waiting to hear your take on this product launch. Direct and candid- appreciate that Andrew and Kristi.I am a Wiim owner and supporter but will wait for this product to evolve before buying. Was hoping it might handle a somewhat larger room- thank you for clarifying.
@robinsonbrand | Perhaps I missed something? If not, why the heck did not try unloading the amp by offloading low frequencies from it using the built-in sub-out/base-management functionality? It might have helped the higher-SPL problems...
Agreed…where is the sun out bass management discussion? Thats a significant feature you ignored…pls update this review with a suitable sub using the BM and would think the top end issues should/may resolve?
From across the pond in the UK, I found this review detailed, fair and very comprehensive. I will be following this channel to keep abreast of thorough reviews
The review was pretty good. One peeve. "if you are willing to spend a little more" on what planet is a little more over 3 times the price? What about the LOXJIE A40? Any better?
I do not recommend any of these cheaper Texas Instruments-based amplifiers as they all have the same issues I discuss here and in other videos I've made about them. The TI chip was never intended for hifi use, it was designed initially for small, portable electronics, think laptops etc. It simply does not do nor produce the sound the manufacturers claim (many of which are all subsidiaries of one another producing the same product under different names). Additionally the amp's struggle with speakers who's impedances may dip to 4 Ohms, or whose impedances fluctuate, which is all speakers by the way. For small-small spaces or on a desktop these amps MAY work fine for 90% of users, but these are NOT giant killers who's sound and performance outdoes amps costing 2,3,4 or 5x more.
Hmm, this is interesting. I have an Aiyima A07 on my desk and a CA AXR100 running my 2.1 system in the living room. After watching this, I decided to try my A07(same amp chip as Wiim amp) with my towers. My Jamo Concert 11s are nowhere near as sensitive as those cornwalls, and the little amp drove them easily to eardrum slaughtering levels with a 36V 6A PSU. Phone was showing about 90dB average and peaks in triple digits. I don’t know if it sounded “good” as I was plugging my ears, but the volume was there, and I played through some bass heavy tracks and it was rattling cabinets. Noise floor is excellent as well. Wonder if something is wrong with this unit.
So, one important question: Did you test the Wiim Amp using a subwoofer, with the mains crossed over at 80Hz, 100Hz and 120Hz? Doing so would significantly reduce the demands on the internal amp which might result in performance improvements. Would you give that a try and let us know if makes a difference? Thanks a ton. Love your vids.
Adding a subwoofer to this amp and tweaking the in-app bass management doesn't fix or make the WiiM's power/dynamic woes magically disappear. Adding a sub also increases the noise floor for some reason and increases the humming from the amp itself. A recent firmware update was released to combat this issue; however, the update did not totally fix it, though it did lessen it.
wiim are really interesting to me because they seem to be one of the only companies meeting me where I'm at, Sonos and arylic are intent on building their own ecosystem and they're just.... wrong about it. i have an Android phone, i am going to use chromecast, I have a Mac, I'm going to use airplay. i HATE closing my music app and opening a separate speaker app, it drives me nuts that every company is desperate to drive me to their own, universally worse, app, its ridiculous hubris to think you're better at this than tidal, or whoever. it's a bummer that this amp isn't quite there, but at least we know the wiim amp pro 2 S Max will be out 6 months and probably address at least half of these complaints.
I paired the WiiM amp with the leaf b6.2 and sound really nice. It replaces my older svs sound base. I will say in my opinion this sounds so much better than the sound base for half the price but I know it’s newer. Plus the WiiM interface is top tier.
For a secondary TV/Music location, hard to find anything that competes? What else has 1) Hi-Res Streaming, 2) HDMI input, 3) a decent app to control it all, 4) compact, attractive design and 5) is less than even double what the Wiim Amp runs?. I do wish the wiim amp had a capability to drive an outboard amp (pre-amp out), and the TI based amp does have limitations, but other than going with an old school "AV receiver" that is huge and has tons of completely unneeded functions, what else is there out there? If Wiim either added pre-out to the Wiim Amp or HDMI input to the Wiim Pro +, it would take it to the next level...
I love the objectivity around the lack of dynamic capabilities. Back in the 80's, my father had an HiFi store, and one day we used entry-level Marantz PM-26 to drive a pair of JBL L100 Ti. Although they were easy to drive, everyone who listened to that combo wouldn't believe that it was only a 30 watt RMS per channel amplifier. It has to be said that Marantz was very conservative with their power ratings at that time, and that the specified dynamic power was way higher (suggesting a big headroom), but as efficient as those JBL were, they were not Klipsch sensitive, and I can't imagine that same amp not being able to drive them in that room (which seems way smaller than the shop was back then.). Of course they didn't put out the same output levels than the PM 94 (which we also had), but it was still impressive output for almost 1/10 of the price. I haven't seen measurements of the Wiim Amp addressing the peak output power, but it does seem like it must be lacking on it. I don't believe that any class A/B amplifier with that power would struggle on driving a pair of Klipsch, even if more and better power is likely beneficial. Some class D designs are known for lacking headroom, which wouldn't be that important if it had 200 rms into 8 Ohm. While it seems inexpensive at first, I'd argue that it has a poor value. For all the great things that it offers, it lacks on the foundation which is the amp itself. I'm not necessarily concerned if any particular amp doesn't include the best dac or streaming capabilities, since they can be added later with separates (and even follow that evolution). But if it fails at performing its main function, there's no way around it. And while I can definitely see good usage scenarios for this product, it's still an underperforming product, with a limites usage range. This is certainly not where HiFi should start, imho.
Thank you for adding some perspective to the many cheap amps that are hitting the market. The attention grabbing headlines of many reviewers are things like: "game changer, giant killer, market disrupter, audiophile quality" etc. It makes me sometimes wonder if I can really put together a streamer, amp, and dac for $300 to $500 as my foundation and call it a day. When I put my own system together I followed many of your suggestions and invested in a quality amp, dac/ preamp, and speakers. It sounds so quiet, clean, and neutral (at any volume) that the only thing I look forward to purchasing periodically are better or different styles of speakers. I think if your foundation is good, upgrading your speakers will bring the most sonic improvements one can make. The dac and amp upgrades aren't nearly as important. Now I'm talking about having spent $1-2k on a well respected amp and the same for the dac/preamp. Perhaps in today's world of advancement (sometimes) that might even be a tad high. I did buy a Wiim streamer starting with a mini and upgrading to a pro for better computing power. Even though I bypass the Wiim dac, the mini does affect the quality of the sound. It's only apparent in a moderately revealing system, but it's definitely there. So even though I concede some budget items can fit into a real audiophile system, there is a jumping on point that one should consider which I think speaks to your video. $300 isn't much in the audiophile world, but it's a lot to some folks. I've been there. How frustrating would it be to spend your hard earned money only to hear it thin out and distort when you crank it up? Manufacturers and even at times, complicit reviewers know darn well that it's gonna fall apart in real world use. Yet they justify their over endorsement by saying to themselves "Well hey it's only $300. What do people expect?" They expect you to tell them the whole truth about the product with realistic expectation. Based on misleading reviews, purchasers are expecting sonic nirvana. Thanks for the video Andrew!
I think almost every half decent 20 - 40 year old amp or receiver will outperform this amp. Now add just a streamer like the WIIM mini and a 100$ DAC and you have the same features but much better sound.
Hi Andrew and Kristi, I can see why many of your viewers might think your snobbish or elitist, but having been an "audiophile" all my life, you typically get what you pay for and it's good to know each product's pros and cons. The pro in this case is the value. Thanks for your honest reviews. Oh! I bought the Fosi amp and it performs better than a $100 dollar amp should, but it's no where an amazing experience.
brooooooo! I miss the beard :(, but yeah no surprise on this review, sadly many of these little asian amps rate wattage at 10% THD which does mislead many consumers. Your review is about what I was expecting. But man that thing certainly does look beautiful!!
In my opinion, the WiiM is a great example of how measurements and one's personal experience don't always align and why you can entirely base your judgment, good or bad, on just one perspective.
Thank you for the honest review Andrew and Kristi! I think what I love the most about the $300 WiiM Amp is how much of a wake-up call this creates with the competition. There is less and less excuse for higher priced products to not include the features this "cheap amp" has such as HDMI ARC input, decent supporting apps, network ability, etc. While this first generation WiiM Amp isn't for me...I can't wait to see what they come out with next.
You hit the nail on the head Bryan. Why is it that those of us who did our homework and invested in a quality amp often find ourselves with a "purist" amp regardless of the topography? The sound is amazing, but tone controls, sub outs, eq, tone control, remote (in my case 😂), probably not. Why? I know it's always BEEN that way, but to your point can't we keep the quality sound and even pay for it, but have these features that are showing up everywhere? It's not cheap to add stand alone units to a great amp. I had to use active high pass for my mains and an Rme ADI 2 dac to get a surprisingly good preamp (dead quiet autobiasing), dac, eq, remote and loudness. I thought I did it the cheapest way possible without making sonic compromises but dang! If Crown added more software to their XLS series, my oh my!
Update on my problem with the Wiim Amp: I posted earlier that my unit had an audible hum with the use of the subwoofer and also would not trigger the shutdown of the subwoofer. Wiim filed a ticket and immediately sent me a new unit within 48 hours. Happy ending.
I like the new (darker) side table! I don't believe that I noticed it before today. Also, I wanted to restate how lovely your customized Cornwalls are in the space. The Wiim seems decent. I definitely appreciated the specifics to ensure that everyone tempers their expectations. Nice touch with the SPL meters in the B roll.
@robinsonbrand The discussion on the difference between test tones and complex music (real world power output) was awesome and definitely not one I've run across elsewhere. Great food for thought.
No Andrew you are not a snob. What has happened is that you have tested the champagne and caviar of music equipment and your ears and vision will never be the same. Yes it’s only £299 but issues are issues and if they are there thank you for pointing them out. Still a lot of people will put up with it because of the price.
Thx for your honest review and lowering too high expectations. At this price its actually great for smaller rooms I think, I am very happy with my Wiim pro+ as a streamer which is just a bit cheaper. But I still prefer having dedicated parts for more flexibility in my chain and trying out / upgrading from time to time. But not everybody cares about that and dont want to spend much money.
Sounds like it is what I would expect from this unit. Nice for background music and ease of use but not for critical listening. I attribute that mainly to the power supply. The p 19:33 ower supply can make or break an amplifiers sound. It needs to be able to supply reserve power when the music calls for it when listening to spirited levels.
Appreciate the frank review. 👍 I do think we all need to keep an eye on the devices that the WiiM Amp will inspire. We’re likely only months away until someone packs the equivalent of a WiiM Mini, SMSL SU-1, and Fosi Audio ZA3 into a single chassis. Add dual sub outs with room correction, and I’ll be opening my wallet for sure.
I've bought an Octavio Amp about a year ago. I later gifted it to my nephew. He is now happily using it in his apartment as a 2.1 system streaming Spotify and having a TV and a BluRay drive connected to it. Devices like the Octavio, and the WiiM, are perfect for that. I'll be sticking with my Cambridge stack (CXA81, CXNv2, CXCv2) and my Sony BluRay drive. But there is definitely a market out there for integrated all-in-one's.
@@andrewrobinsonreviews I really enjoyed ya’lls take on the Wiim amp. Although I’ve not listened to it, I do feel like I can relate to a few of your experience descriptions when it comes to some of the more affordable class D amplifier products I’ve owned over the past few years. I haven’t experienced any shut off, but have experienced two that just stopped getting louder well before the volume knob got close to full tilt. One class d amp even had what sounded like frequency dependent volume level differences when pushed to 75% volume. They were all a little too cool and 2 dimensional for my taste and it seams that although the Wiim amp may be a step up, it doesn’t sound like it’s far enough away from the affordable class D amp characteristics I’ve experienced thus far (sound unheard of course). I’m not actually in the market though (picked up the rn-1000a late last year-the sweet spot!), just really enjoy this hobby and hearing about others’ experiences with other products. You just never know when someone runs across a unicorn :-). As always, great video to both of ya’ll!
The wiim would probably perform better with some high efficiency bookshelves and a sub since the bass management would take some load off the amp by removing lower frequencies from the speaker outputs.
The WiiM is a desktop amp for close listening connected to a subwoofer. That is where it shines. I have Mission 750 AE bookshelf speakers and a Episode EVO 6 inch powered sub and it is excellent for a desk.
The WIM's crappy power supply doesn't provide enough power - there are a few TI 3255 based amps that get it right, like the offerings from Ayima or Fosi Audio.
You may have a point that more voltage and current in the power supply might help. But the WiiM's power supply is internal and operates from AC input. There is no "upgrade" path as there is with some Chi-Fi amps based on the TI (ne Tripath)'s TPA3255 IC. What you bought is all you will ever get. 2. The class-D amp chip used so widely in these Chi-Fi amplifiers are rated so misleadingly that it's arguably dishonest. 315 Watts output into 4 ohms at 10% THD? 10% THD will sound horrible and might blow your tweeters. 10% THD is not a usable output. The rating at 1% is still audible. At age 60, I can still reliably detect distortion at -45 dB/0.5% THD so even the 1% power rating is at a point that people with normal hearing will likely detect and cause fatigue. The TI device is capable of at MOST 100 W/ch RMS into 8 ohms with the highest voltage supply the chip can take, before distortion rapidly becomes apparent. 200 Watts into 4 ohms, maybe, with the same very rapid climb into gross distortion once you increase the volume even a small amount above that level. 300W, never ever. Can't happen. With hyper-efficient Klipsch speakers (maybe a two way KP-300m II would be a more realistic pairing, but Andrew's point was that at this level of efficiency, it should play louder than it did, and that would likely be true of any efficient speaker). So why didn't it play louder? Perhaps the internal power supply is under-designed to meet a price or size objective. Perhaps it was a QC flaw in the particular unit and a re-test with a different unit would deliver much better performance at high output levels. For long-term expandability, what I did was buy the WiiM Pro streamer. It feeds an outboard integrated amp. There is nothing missing from the streamer than I feel would drive me to replace it, and the 160W/ch (0.1% THD) amplifier has no trouble lighting up a pair of UF52 towers to silly volumes. For a desktop system or a small bedroom 2.1, it may be hard to find better for $300. The HDMI input especially makes it a great value proposition. But if you want hi-fi in a large room, thanks to this review, you way want to go with a separate streamer and amplifier. WiiM still holds the value champion crown IMHO.
I use the wiim amp in my garage where I have a small home office. It is fantastic for that situation but I wouldn't want it upstairs where I do most of my listening and movie watching.
I got one of the cheap digital amps recommended by another channel when i first got into quality music equipment, but I immediately replaced it with a Cambridge AXR100 for the reasons Andrew described.
Another great video Andrew! Always excited to hear your opinion. Although, I’m a big Schitt fan, currently. I’ve bought almost all of their products. And I’m having fun. But, I’ve got an itch to find a new audio relationship….maybe Hegel…audiolab?
I've owned the WiiM amp for about six weeks. This review meshes almost exactly with my experiences, so it's validating to have what I hear backed up. The dynamics really are noticeably lacking, and that's by far its biggest shortcoming. If it sounded like 60wpc of goodness, this would be one of the best audio products in years. It sounds like an underpowered kit amp. That's not to say it sounds BAD, it just doesn't take a song you love and shake you loose from your day. I disagree with the built-in power supply being a bonus - outboarding it would allow for a much beefier power supply and perhaps swappable options. Integrating it seems like it turned into too severe of a compromise. Adding a sub makes matters a little better in my experience so far, which is the wildest part. A relatively high crossover point (~70-80Hz) appears to free up some headroom. What would make this thing significantly better? Pre-outs. If a software update can turn the analog ins to analog outs, I'd be thrillled. 😂 I've noticed a lot fewer updates than Andrew, though.
Hi Andrew - I want to ask that you review on wall (not in wall) speakers. I realize these are never considered high quality. However, I live in a very small home, as I am sure many others do. I looked for a long time and stumbled into a Swedish brand DLS that sound great. Dali makes an on wall, as does KEF and Totem. I really want to upgrade my wall hangers - but would love to see reviews focused on on walls. Thanks in advance.
Wow! This was a very good review with excellent, and I think, VERY honest input! I'm not an audiophile but I can hear well enough, even at 62, whether somethings sounds good or sounds muted. It has always been a pet peeve of mine when somethings you spend your money on sounds muted, or maybe it sounds open and airy, but nothing at the bottom end. I'm a country bumpkin so I'm not going to use a bunch of fancy words. I purchased the Wiim Amp a couple weeks ago and paired it with some really simple Polk XT20 speakers. This is installed in my 15x15 (inside walls) woodshop. The speakers are mounted high and tilted downwards and toed in. But even with this, it really seemed to be lacking in the lower end. Also, and this one I am trying to understand, there is a really high pitched sound (I feel it more than hear it) that is almost painful after several minutes if I up the volume around 1/3 or more. I have messed with the EQ but it doesn't go away. I went to the Wiim Amp Forum and talked about the low end and bass and lack of "oomph", and though everyone was polite, I thought I had crossed a line and could tell that these folks love the Wiim and if I had any complaints, it's all my issues and not the Wiim's. Your review matches what I'm hearing exactly! And no, I don't crank it up that much because I want the neighbors to like me. ;-) Again, please let me say that your review convinces me of what I've been experiencing isn't just me and my environment. Something is "missing" in this amp and I can hear that. I really want to move towards Bluesound, not only because of their performance, but also because of the BluOS app. I think Wiim did a great job on the app, but it is also lacking (and buggy) in many ways. It's just not there "yet". I'm one of those older folks that is willing to spend a little more to get something a little better. The Wiim Amp is perfect in many ways for many folks, but I want a little more. You did a good job!! Thank you!
I don’t know what wiim claim this amp can achieve but I would have thought it is a simple matter of physics that a small box like this amp would not be able to power the large diaphragms in these speaker cones. The efficiency of the speakers is not relevant in this situation. You may not lose as much energy converting the signal into sound but if the energy from the signal is weak then the sound will also be weak. All this conversion of electrical energy into sound energy (mechanical) generates heat energy, due to inefficiencies, and I can’t see how this heat is dissipated from the amp. Hence the distortion and thermal cut outs.
To be frank, Wiim does not need to pursue amplification. They need to focus on a well-measuring all-in one streamer preamp that includes the most prominent digital connections. HDMI ARC, Coax/Tos/USB for both Ins&Outs. Add a Amp with Digital In & done.
I have a WiiM Pro Plus, not the amp, and I love it. Great software, easy to use, works with everything. I have it hooked up to a Cambridge Audio AXA35 and KEF Q350 speakers. Can't comment on the amp but WiiM makes a good streaming product.
Good review. I see this as a soundbar replacement. Or small room, near field listening say an office or desktop. I’m not much into Class-D amplification so I went to the Schitt J-horn with their Modi DAC for my office. It sounds great. But, it wouldn’t replace my Cambridge Audio CX series stack. Not even close. Keep up the good work.
TY Andrew. Great video. I have the Wiim pro plus. Love Wiims interface for price. Instead of upgrading to this AMP should i just buy the Cambridge AXR 100 and plug my current wiim in which all goes to my Vintage Marantz 2250B. I am running Focal 805 Bookshelfs. And want to hook up my Sub. Trying to keep this simple and will not give up my Marantz. 😅. Thoughts.
Thanks for the honest review. Wiim is a great company. The updates may be annoying, but they add new features often. The value is there and the company is quick to respond to customers and reviews.. Maybe their best solution would be a set of preouts? A better amp chip (swappable OP amps)? Better power supply? I am sure these are currently being explored by Wiim.
I have nothing bad to say about WiiM as a company. I hope they come out with a version two. If I had a say in the design, I'd ditch the TI chip amp for something like ICE Power or Hypex, which would make the Amp a true force to be reckoned with.
"Texas Instruments based amps", the problem is the power supply they are given. Thats not from google seach.. im a pro design engineer (audio is easy).
I’m going to have to disagree on this one Andrew, but perhaps my use case is just vastly different from yours. I recently switched from a pair of Klipsch The Fives (that you reviewed favourably) to the Wiim Amp and Klipsch RP500M IIs. For me this is a small living room setup and the new passive speakers + Wiim amp cost slightly less than what I originally payed for the Fives. I played them side by side while I still had both and I was far more impressed by the sound coming from the new setup. I was fully prepared to return my new purchases if the sound wasn’t better and made sure to buy from retailers that were easy to work with. However, it was no contest in the end. I understand my comparison point is between two class-D amps rather than more premium Class A or Class A/B but I was looking for a compact unit. The Fives were a great solution, just didn’t impress in sound clarity. Beyond the base sound though, the feature set is what really impressed me with the Wiim. Even if you don’t like the out-of-the-box sound from your setup, you have a great EQ and PEQ to work with. The Klipsch only had a basic EQ with “Low”, “Mid” and “High”. You couldn’t even change the subwoofer crossover on the Fives. I also considered the Bluesound, they also give you just a basic 2-band EQ. I personally don’t like being “locked-in” to a type of sound and being forced to find hardware solutions (different speakers, room treatment etc.) to fix a software problem. I also have not faced any of the issues you have with noise from the Amp and it shutting off when you drive them harder. Admittedly, it seems they have had some quality control issues with the first few batches (as reported on their forums) but I seem to have been lucky. I’m wondering if you received a unit that has some of those issues? All in all, my personal experience with the Wiim amp has been very positive. I did have slightly lower expectations knowing it is a D-class budget amp but I think this is a better sounding alternative than something like The Fives (HDMI-enabled all in one powered speakers). Even if the sound was even, much better control and connectivity.
I know he has a bad early sample because the RCA inputs on the back are the wrong way around - they swapped them in the corrected versions. Mine has been great for me, powering a pair of floor standers and making the old huge Yamaha amp redundant. Plenty of volume always below 50% in a medium sized room.
My experience as well. I wanted something small with the WAF and was concerned this would sound too thin and lifeless. Replaced a vintage 70's Pioneer amp and honestly am quite impressed. No volume issues, plays loud enough and I have heard details in some familiar songs I hadn't noticed before. I purchased an Aiyima 07 Max with 48 watt power supply to compare and there is no comparison. My opinion is the Wiim is better...much better . For the price, I couldn't be happier.
I feel that many small footprint/large power output Class-D amps tend to suffer from fatigue after playing music continuously for some time. Is that something that my overactive imagination is tricking me with or does it actually happen?
I'm just jumping in here real quick to address a question or critique I'm seeing a few of you make about our use of the Klipsch Cornwall IV speakers in this review. I fully understand that it is unlikely that anyone in their right mind would willingly go out and pair a $300 streaming amp with roughly $6,000 speakers. Still, you need to separate price from performance in this instance to understand the why. For starters, we used a few more pairs of speakers than the three mentioned in this video, as we've had the WiiM for months now. The Cornwall IVs were actually the LAST speaker I used with the amp, and I only used them because I was routinely running into power and dynamic issues with the WiiM.
I used the Cornwalls because they are the most efficient loudspeakers I own. They can be successfully driven to peaks above 90-95dB in our listening room using a 2 WPC Decware SET amp without a hint of strain, yet the WiiM and its reported 60 WPC struggled to crest 80dB in some cases. If I did manage to get peaks in the upper 80s the amp often shut down soon after hitting such volumes. If the WiiM struggles with a speaker like the Cornwall, you can imagine how much more difficult it was for the Q Acoustics Concept 50 (90.5dB at 4 Ohms) or the KLH Kendall 2F (96dB at 8 Ohms).
In this instance, the price or quality of the speaker is irrelevant; the WiiM's dynamic capability is the problem you should be focused on. While numerous tests show the WiiM can produce 60 WPC, it would appear that when forced to playback non-test signals, the resulting power or potential headroom of the Amp is a different story. This is something I've noticed with a number of these cheaper TI-based chip amps. I get that it's not a popular opinion to go against the grain and say that while these amps may be a "value" in one or two ways, they are NOT --I repeat, NOT --outright giant killers regarding amplifier and sound quality.
Feature-wise, the WiiM, and others are an absolute embarrassment of riches, but software is not the same as hardware. The truth is these are built around amp chips that were never (really) designed for the type of work they're being forced to do. Can these TI amps sound good? Sure, but I believe it is misleading to say they're as good, in the same ballpark, or even better than even a modest Class D, AB or A amp --nevermind amplifiers that cost thousands more and that have had to hold up to scrutiny beyond a couple of forums and weekend measurement warriors.
I am not trying to hate WiiM; like I say in the video, I'm trying to give you the clearest picture of what to expect. As I said in the review, if you adhere to a few general rules (which are stated in the video), you stand to have the best chance for success. But if you try and go toe-to-toe with a better, more capable amp with the wrong speakers or source, you may be in for a rude awakening in more ways than one.
Your job is always well done because it prepares potential buyers with what to expect. As for me” I wasn’t expecting much from it based on the price, and from what I have learned from your channel” I decided that for my small listening space couple with a subwoofer takeover the heavy lifting” it should be just fine and It is. My only thing now is even though It has a built in DAC plus EQ/ PEQ there is no good stereo separation and spaciousness. So I am going to see if I can get a use B&W or ML bookshelves speakers to see if I can squeeze some more life out of it 🥸
I don't care what you a pairing them with....you could be reviewing broccoli but as long as you show me those Cornwall's, I am a happy man.
Andrew sounds apologetic and he really shouldn’t be.
He stated in the video why the Cornwalls made more technical sense than others in their review stack of speakers to use for the Wiim Amp review. Getting on their case about that decision and the disappointing results helps frame that budget product better in its strengths and weaknesses. I’m now better informed about the Amp and have a clearer outlook for its best use case which is appropriately nearfield or small room with lower volume setting. Don’t expect 11 when you should be dialing in 7.
Could you a bad unit? If it's as bad as you say I would expect this in other reviews. 80 db is not that loud.
What advantage does this have over the Sony STR-DH190 2 channel receiver which goes for $199, has Bluetooth and puts out 100 X 2 at 8 Ohms?
This is NOT the review I expected - The first review I've heard that didn't just "praise" this amp. I own 3 Wiim mini's, and love them. Great products with ever improving updates. I'm sure this company will go a long way. That said, Thank you for your assessment and honest opinion on this piece. I don't own one and it isn't really on my radar, but it's nice to hear a different opinion for once.
Is that HDMI port… crooked?
The whole back panel looks poorly machined even at this price point
Savage. That ruined it right from the start 😂
Yes
It looks so cheap
That's what I was thinking
IS IT JUST ME OR IS THE HDMI-ARC PORT SO CROOKED TILTED TO THE LEFT AND NOT AT SEA LEVEL?
Bought the WiiM Amp after Christmas and using it for over a month in a 'smaller' livingroom in a 2.1 setup. First tested it with Mission LX-2 speakers and then with the Wharfedale EVO 4.2 in combination with a SVS SB-1000 Sub. Because of the neighbours, I never could turn the volume up a 100%. For the average Joe (like me) the WiiM Amp is more then sufficient and gives you a great bang for the buck. You're right that the WiiM Amp is not the right choice for a 'big' room or 'big' speakers, but that is not what it pretend to be. I would like to give one suggestion, try to test the speakers with and without a subwoofer and give us a report about the difference it makes in performance. PS. Sorry for my Englisch, it's only my 3e langues and I don't use it everyday. Thank you for your effort!
Adding or subtracting a subwoofer, at least in our room, didn't solve or completely do away with the WiiM's apparent power/dynamic limitations when playing back at volumes of about 60-70dB + in room.
@@andrewrobinsonreviews Thanks for your reaction. Because I've to rely on my hearing and have no professional equipment to support my 'feeling', it felt like the addition of the sub, took away some 'pressure' from the speakers and made the total sound picture better. But that is probably my wishful thinking. Thank you again.
Andrew and Kristi. I'm late to the party with my comments. However, I'm glad that i waited. It gave me time read through the viewer comments. So, I'd like to thank you for providing an objective review of this device, highlighting the good and the bad; best use cases and worst use cases. I also appreciate the fact that you used super sensitive speakers to test the amplifier, since they are so efficient. You essentially gave the amplifier the best opportunity to shine by using super sensitive speakers. I think it's important to listen, first to the entire review to get the facts and the full picture, and then ask follow-up questions. 😉
Thanks Andrew and Kristi, the Wiim Amp really is a gateway product to Hi fi and for the price and right setting it’s a direct punch to Sonos and Bluesound. The streamers are still the best value proposition in audio.
In Australia, audio equipment and the hobby generally is expensive, and everyone is always looking out of the latest, greatest, slick looking device, wiim does fit the bill for masses.
Looking at yours and your colleagues reviews, from what I’ve seen Wiim does seem to pay attention to reviews so good chance they will refine this.
This is the best review of this product I've heard yet. We'll done Mr. Robertson
I’ve chased the chi-fi craze. Mostly disappointed. Thin. Lean. Soulless. Wiim has it together on the streamer/app gig. They’ve won that battle, to me. I’m always going back to class AB or the hard to find, and hot, class A. Also, the AKM chips are crazy good. 4491 with 4499ex. That’s just perfection. But, for those on a tighter budget, happy listening and enjoy!
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Hi Andrew, i should say i was really waiting for review on this. I would request you to do a video on KEF T205 5.0 speaker system. Which would help i vesting on that system for people who are picky on the interiod design for living room setup. Thanks in advance.
the integrated power supply is weak i suppose as 32v should do 60w but a large room like yours needs a bigger amp. Id like to see more cheaper amps like fosi audio V3 with a 48v power supply. emotiva basx series looks promising for a home theatre
Topping LA90 discrete also id recommend for a review
I think it would be a better mactch with a pair of bookshelf speakers and a sub if necessary. Wish to hear how it sounds when pairing with some quality bookshelf spearkers from martin logan, polk, etc.
This was a really great review. It’s refreshing to see a reviewer cover all aspects of the product and not just the positives. Did anyone else notice the hdmi input being cockeyed, definitely speaks to quality.
Yeah the HDMI port is crooked for sure. Stuck out to me right away.
I immediately noticed that as well.
Chip based amps have changed the audio landscape, there are some good ones out there. I’ll still take a class ab 100% call me old school (or just old.) Thanks for the honest review.
I think hdmi capability is glossed over too much with this amp. The ability to pair this with bookshelf speakers and a sub for a TV in a bedroom or small to average sized living room is pretty awesome. Most other amps getting compared to the Wiim are either analog only or 5x the price. There is definitely a niche for this thing, but I at least think the niche is pretty awesome.
I’m buying the WiiM for its lightweight & portability, not as a focal point for a critical listening setup. It will be in my back patio or my garage powering an old pair of Klipsch R-51Ms or Energy micros w/sub when enjoying the outdoors or working on my car or bikes. So the WiiM amp really is the perfect solution for my use case. I also really love the clean Applesque design of the WiiM.
The crooked HDMI port, is curious.... Anyone know if that is soldered to a board or somehow wired to a board?
The input gain on most of the 3255 amps isn’t very high. Some of them have 48V 5A power supply option(like the Fosi V3, Ayima A07 and Max and the new Fosi za3)
This makes them way more capable with dynamics but definitely doesn’t solve the signal gain issue. The solution is to boost the input voltage and use the high current/voltage power supply. The problem with that is that you don’t get the awesome dsp and hdmi features of the Wiim(which has an anemic power supply inside)
The way I like to use TPA3255 amps is to use them to directly drive an individual driver with a dsp acting as crossover. Using a 4ohm driver and 48v power supply on every amp except the tweeter, you can get some pretty impressive volume levels and dynamic range. Let’s face it though, that’s way too complicated for most people.
If you want to try TPA3255 for cheap, I’d recommend getting the Ayima A07 max with the 48v power supply. It has the highest input gain and can be converted to mono if you want to upgrade later by getting a second one.
The ZA3 has a mono subwoofer out which actually tracks with the volume pot but it doesn’t filter the main channels so I don’t find that to be very useful.
The most impressive thing actually about these tpa3255 amps is actually the 48v 5A power supply that fosi and Ayima are using. That thing is amazingly clean as a power supply and it costs $50 is which is pretty impressive considering how it measures (especially the fosi unit which Works on all of the 3255 amps).
I would like to see Andrew revisit the 3255 amps with the 48v 5A supply, he might be surprised. In a previous video he mentioned that he didn’t like the idea of someone having to pay extra for that but you can buy these with that power supply from the start and it’s pretty affordable. The 3255 really does need that voltage and current to pull off good dynamics.
That being said, there are way better amps out there, these are just fun to play with especially if you need 6 channels of amplification for a 3 or 4way pair of speakers running active. I’m surprised I haven’t seen anyone else doing this with these amps.
The issue with these TPA3255 based amps is their power rating is linear with the voltage (at lower volumes) or the current (at higher volumes) coming from the power supply. It sounds like the DC voltage of the WiiM Amp is plenty (32V) but the current might be limited to < 5 A. Thanks for testing it with the Cornwalls, it really shows the limit of this affordable amp.
This is the type of review that sets this channel apart from the pack of "BEST HIFI VALUE AMP" hype machine. Thank you both! I think it was a very fair review considering you tested it with and without a sub, and with and without highly efficient speakers. Unfortunate to see the amplifier section is not quite there yet. I pre-ordered mine from Crutchfield 3 months ago (thank you Lord for a generous return policy in cases like this) but it still hasn't arrived yet. They are supposedly working out software issues. But for myself, its for a small 10x12 secondary room. Hoping it'll have enough headroom in a small room like that but we will see once it arrives. Thanks again for this review!
I got the amp back in November 2023 and I am using as a 2.1, a pair of 5inc bookshelf speakers and 8inch powered subwoofer and it’s sound very loud and great, I think this is the best way to use this amp by handing off the heavy lifting to a powered subwoofer 🎉😊
A very balanced review, many other reviews raved how this is a giant killer. These small affordable amps have a proper use case scenario. Appreciate the fact you show it wont work in most larger rooms and is primarily a near field solution.
I've had my WiiM Amp since early Jan hooked up with my secondary TV/Listening area to a set of KEF q350s. It performs great in the smaller room and the integration features that makes the second area sooo much easier to setup.
I would never use this in my primary listening area but, for a smaller system its perfect.
Happy Listening folks!
I would also like to use it with the Q350, is it a good match?
Obviously (to me), the most common appplication would be a sub satt set up crossed over around 80 hz. Not testing it with a sub which would drop the power load on the amp is a big miss.
The misalignment of the HDMI port is pretty telling.
Thank you for this review. Based on other reviews I also ordered this amp. I wanted to use it on my desk to get rid of the cables. After some hours of listening I came to the same conclusion. It sounds OK but I was missing details in almost all kinds of music. I quickly cross checked with my almost 20 year old TEAC CR-H225 receiver with a WIIM mini and a Kadas 100$ DAC. This is the setup I was using so far. It sounded definitely better in almost every way - and I do not have 5000$ speakers on my desk. So I sent the WIIM amp back and will stick to my good old TEAC.
Last year I also tried the Aiyima A07 MAX (also with a TI chip) with the same disappointing result.
It's absolutely clear that there are no alternatives with same functionality, sound quality and price bellow three c-notes. In moment it's the best solution for your home universal system (TV and music) with total budget bellow one grand.
You set it up for failure.
It should be set up as bedroom set up with mini monitors and powered sub that fills in lows and punch .
This is not living room amp
In a way WiiM themselves set this amp up for failure. It's not a true 60w amp, as Erin's review will confirm - in peak loads it loses half its power, which is not common in good amplifiers. It's a great amp for small to medium rooms with efficient speakers.
@@MohsinWadee Even 30 watts per channel will be enough to power efficient book shelf speakers when lows are directed to the sub , such set up can play plenty loud and clean for smaller rooms
@@kdomster9141this is not the first review to suggest that this amp does not behave like it truly outputs 60w. Gist of the matter is temper your expectations, other reviews reported clipping.
We told you as much in the review and couldn't have been able to provide you with that information without testing the WiiM to its limits. I wish people would hold the product up to the same standard as this or any review rather than continue to make excuses for a limited-use, poorly-designed product.
I'm kind of surprised you never re-ran your listening tests with a subwoofer hooked up to the LFE out and engaging the app's internal bass management you briefly mentioned. I would imagine the amp would gain quite a bit of headroom by allocating bass amplification to an external sub. I'm curious to see if it would make a huge difference it its tonality as well.
Bookshelf speakers & sub, smaller listening area....
To me, amps like this are aimed at bookshelf systems with powered subwoofers, for small to medium sized rooms. Given this, I find your choice of speakers baffling.
Watching this while listening through my new WiiM amp. Thanks for sharing the good/bad. It’s not being used in my critical listening setup or where high volume is needed. So far I’m happy with the product.
:) Thank you for watching.
@@KristiWright 😊
What's the deal with that mis-aligned HDMI port?
That's definitely an OCD trigger.
Thank you. I couldn't stop looking at that. Had to even pause the video to confirm I wasn't mis-seeing something.
Same, so much for build quality.@@iamnatis
For me, it's a minor concern. At least it's on the back. Maybe you all have forgotten our Leak stereo amp review. People lost their minds over the crooked button on the front and that product cost far more than this one.
My Wiim amp is powering my 30K Harbeths just fine. I moved these to my vacation home and it's the perfect solution.
Finally, some light being shed on what I have experienced with the Wiim amp. It's always the case - the hype train always glosses over the whole truth with regard to what really lies behind the facade.
Just bought this to pair with my Dali Zensor 1 for my near field desk setup. First impressions are it's bloody brilliant.
I'm inclined to agree with your findings. I have two setups - a near-field one at my workstation and a living room setup. While I thoroughly enjoy the Class D amps in my near-field setup - they fail to deliver to the level of even basic Class A/B amps from Denon/Marantz when I move them to the living room
Love the honesty here. Nobody can argue with the features offered here, but man, if there was just an option to use this as a preamp to pair with some of the other great, inexpensive amps that are around these days, it'd be a formidable setup.
Good Lord! Can you imagine the disruption a Wiim Preamp Streamer with the same feature set (especially with the same subwoofer out) would have on the budget hifi section of the market? Especially when considering budget audio fans can pretty much kit build power amps using ICEPower AS-series amp modules (the ones with integrated power supplies) with nothing but a screwdriver and a couple hours of time?
I have been waiting to hear your take on this product launch. Direct and candid- appreciate that Andrew and Kristi.I am a Wiim owner and supporter but will wait for this product to evolve before buying. Was hoping it might handle a somewhat larger room- thank you for clarifying.
@robinsonbrand | Perhaps I missed something? If not, why the heck did not try unloading the amp by offloading low frequencies from it using the built-in sub-out/base-management functionality? It might have helped the higher-SPL problems...
Agreed…where is the sun out bass management discussion?
Thats a significant feature you ignored…pls update this review with a suitable sub using the BM and would think the top end issues should/may resolve?
Honestly I would consider this unit as more of a small place product. Bedroom, office,study. Anything bigger than that I would look elsewhere.
From across the pond in the UK, I found this review detailed, fair and very comprehensive. I will be following this channel to keep abreast of thorough reviews
Thank you very much!
The review was pretty good. One peeve. "if you are willing to spend a little more" on what planet is a little more over 3 times the price? What about the LOXJIE A40? Any better?
I do not recommend any of these cheaper Texas Instruments-based amplifiers as they all have the same issues I discuss here and in other videos I've made about them. The TI chip was never intended for hifi use, it was designed initially for small, portable electronics, think laptops etc. It simply does not do nor produce the sound the manufacturers claim (many of which are all subsidiaries of one another producing the same product under different names). Additionally the amp's struggle with speakers who's impedances may dip to 4 Ohms, or whose impedances fluctuate, which is all speakers by the way. For small-small spaces or on a desktop these amps MAY work fine for 90% of users, but these are NOT giant killers who's sound and performance outdoes amps costing 2,3,4 or 5x more.
Hmm, this is interesting. I have an Aiyima A07 on my desk and a CA AXR100 running my 2.1 system in the living room. After watching this, I decided to try my A07(same amp chip as Wiim amp) with my towers. My Jamo Concert 11s are nowhere near as sensitive as those cornwalls, and the little amp drove them easily to eardrum slaughtering levels with a 36V 6A PSU. Phone was showing about 90dB average and peaks in triple digits. I don’t know if it sounded “good” as I was plugging my ears, but the volume was there, and I played through some bass heavy tracks and it was rattling cabinets. Noise floor is excellent as well. Wonder if something is wrong with this unit.
So, one important question: Did you test the Wiim Amp using a subwoofer, with the mains crossed over at 80Hz, 100Hz and 120Hz? Doing so would significantly reduce the demands on the internal amp which might result in performance improvements. Would you give that a try and let us know if makes a difference? Thanks a ton. Love your vids.
Adding a subwoofer to this amp and tweaking the in-app bass management doesn't fix or make the WiiM's power/dynamic woes magically disappear. Adding a sub also increases the noise floor for some reason and increases the humming from the amp itself. A recent firmware update was released to combat this issue; however, the update did not totally fix it, though it did lessen it.
Thanks for an honest review Andrew and not a 'this blows so and so out the water ' one, why you and Kristi are the ones to trust.
wiim are really interesting to me because they seem to be one of the only companies meeting me where I'm at, Sonos and arylic are intent on building their own ecosystem and they're just.... wrong about it. i have an Android phone, i am going to use chromecast, I have a Mac, I'm going to use airplay. i HATE closing my music app and opening a separate speaker app, it drives me nuts that every company is desperate to drive me to their own, universally worse, app, its ridiculous hubris to think you're better at this than tidal, or whoever. it's a bummer that this amp isn't quite there, but at least we know the wiim amp pro 2 S Max will be out 6 months and probably address at least half of these complaints.
I paired the WiiM amp with the leaf b6.2 and sound really nice. It replaces my older svs sound base. I will say in my opinion this sounds so much better than the sound base for half the price but I know it’s newer. Plus the WiiM interface is top tier.
For a secondary TV/Music location, hard to find anything that competes? What else has 1) Hi-Res Streaming, 2) HDMI input, 3) a decent app to control it all, 4) compact, attractive design and 5) is less than even double what the Wiim Amp runs?. I do wish the wiim amp had a capability to drive an outboard amp (pre-amp out), and the TI based amp does have limitations, but other than going with an old school "AV receiver" that is huge and has tons of completely unneeded functions, what else is there out there?
If Wiim either added pre-out to the Wiim Amp or HDMI input to the Wiim Pro +, it would take it to the next level...
I love the objectivity around the lack of dynamic capabilities.
Back in the 80's, my father had an HiFi store, and one day we used entry-level Marantz PM-26 to drive a pair of JBL L100 Ti.
Although they were easy to drive, everyone who listened to that combo wouldn't believe that it was only a 30 watt RMS per channel amplifier.
It has to be said that Marantz was very conservative with their power ratings at that time, and that the specified dynamic power was way higher (suggesting a big headroom), but as efficient as those JBL were, they were not Klipsch sensitive, and I can't imagine that same amp not being able to drive them in that room (which seems way smaller than the shop was back then.).
Of course they didn't put out the same output levels than the PM 94 (which we also had), but it was still impressive output for almost 1/10 of the price.
I haven't seen measurements of the Wiim Amp addressing the peak output power, but it does seem like it must be lacking on it.
I don't believe that any class A/B amplifier with that power would struggle on driving a pair of Klipsch, even if more and better power is likely beneficial.
Some class D designs are known for lacking headroom, which wouldn't be that important if it had 200 rms into 8 Ohm.
While it seems inexpensive at first, I'd argue that it has a poor value.
For all the great things that it offers, it lacks on the foundation which is the amp itself.
I'm not necessarily concerned if any particular amp doesn't include the best dac or streaming capabilities, since they can be added later with separates (and even follow that evolution).
But if it fails at performing its main function, there's no way around it.
And while I can definitely see good usage scenarios for this product, it's still an underperforming product, with a limites usage range.
This is certainly not where HiFi should start, imho.
If I had $300 + $200 for speakers, I’d be looking at a heavily discounted Klipsch Five.
That would be a potentially nice alternative!
I own a pair and they go louder than the WIIM amp. Because of that, I'm returning the W A
Thank you for adding some perspective to the many cheap amps that are hitting the market. The attention grabbing headlines of many reviewers are things like: "game changer, giant killer, market disrupter, audiophile quality" etc. It makes me sometimes wonder if I can really put together a streamer, amp, and dac for $300 to $500 as my foundation and call it a day.
When I put my own system together I followed many of your suggestions and invested in a quality amp, dac/ preamp, and speakers. It sounds so quiet, clean, and neutral (at any volume) that the only thing I look forward to purchasing periodically are better or different styles of speakers. I think if your foundation is good, upgrading your speakers will bring the most sonic improvements one can make. The dac and amp upgrades aren't nearly as important. Now I'm talking about having spent $1-2k on a well respected amp and the same for the dac/preamp. Perhaps in today's world of advancement (sometimes) that might even be a tad high.
I did buy a Wiim streamer starting with a mini and upgrading to a pro for better computing power. Even though I bypass the Wiim dac, the mini does affect the quality of the sound. It's only apparent in a moderately revealing system, but it's definitely there. So even though I concede some budget items can fit into a real audiophile system, there is a jumping on point that one should consider which I think speaks to your video. $300 isn't much in the audiophile world, but it's a lot to some folks. I've been there. How frustrating would it be to spend your hard earned money only to hear it thin out and distort when you crank it up? Manufacturers and even at times, complicit reviewers know darn well that it's gonna fall apart in real world use. Yet they justify their over endorsement by saying to themselves "Well hey it's only $300. What do people expect?" They expect you to tell them the whole truth about the product with realistic expectation. Based on misleading reviews, purchasers are expecting sonic nirvana. Thanks for the video Andrew!
I think almost every half decent 20 - 40 year old amp or receiver will outperform this amp. Now add just a streamer like the WIIM mini and a 100$ DAC and you have the same features but much better sound.
Hi Andrew and Kristi, I can see why many of your viewers might think your snobbish or elitist, but having been an "audiophile" all my life, you typically get what you pay for and it's good to know each product's pros and cons. The pro in this case is the value. Thanks for your honest reviews.
Oh! I bought the Fosi amp and it performs better than a $100 dollar amp should, but it's no where an amazing experience.
I don't see why they would be viewed as snobs.
brooooooo! I miss the beard :(, but yeah no surprise on this review, sadly many of these little asian amps rate wattage at 10% THD which does mislead many consumers. Your review is about what I was expecting. But man that thing certainly does look beautiful!!
This review is spot on. Bought the Wiim Amp to see what the hype was about and was left disappointed.
Seems to me, for $300 it's best to go with a WiiM Pro Plus streamer feeding a Fosi ZA3 with swappable op amps which has been given high praise lately.
Interesting review thanks. Would adding an active sub to the wiim add lower weight and ease the amps load?
"Test signals are not the same as music" This is the golden sentence that needs to be etched in a 2 tonne stone and then delivered to Amir at ASR.
In my opinion, the WiiM is a great example of how measurements and one's personal experience don't always align and why you can entirely base your judgment, good or bad, on just one perspective.
@@andrewrobinsonreviews Agreed. A good analogy is measured and advertised MPG on a car vs what it gives in downtown Manhattan 😁
Thank you for the honest review Andrew and Kristi! I think what I love the most about the $300 WiiM Amp is how much of a wake-up call this creates with the competition. There is less and less excuse for higher priced products to not include the features this "cheap amp" has such as HDMI ARC input, decent supporting apps, network ability, etc. While this first generation WiiM Amp isn't for me...I can't wait to see what they come out with next.
It does make the lack of certain features in more expensive products like glaring omissions.
If they add a better Class D amp to it (enough with these TI chips that can't deliver on their own promises) I'll be first in line to scoop one up!
You hit the nail on the head Bryan. Why is it that those of us who did our homework and invested in a quality amp often find ourselves with a "purist" amp regardless of the topography? The sound is amazing, but tone controls, sub outs, eq, tone control, remote (in my case 😂), probably not. Why? I know it's always BEEN that way, but to your point can't we keep the quality sound and even pay for it, but have these features that are showing up everywhere? It's not cheap to add stand alone units to a great amp. I had to use active high pass for my mains and an Rme ADI 2 dac to get a surprisingly good preamp (dead quiet autobiasing), dac, eq, remote and loudness. I thought I did it the cheapest way possible without making sonic compromises but dang! If Crown added more software to their XLS series, my oh my!
Can we EQ this unit to filter out lower frequencies below 50hz for example, that should put less stress on the amp...
Even better is to add a sub…
Update on my problem with the Wiim Amp: I posted earlier that my unit had an audible hum with the use of the subwoofer and also would not trigger the shutdown of the subwoofer. Wiim filed a ticket and immediately sent me a new unit within 48 hours. Happy ending.
I'm happy to hear they replaced your unit.
I like the new (darker) side table! I don't believe that I noticed it before today. Also, I wanted to restate how lovely your customized Cornwalls are in the space.
The Wiim seems decent. I definitely appreciated the specifics to ensure that everyone tempers their expectations. Nice touch with the SPL meters in the B roll.
I thought I needed to try to show "proof" that the amp cannot fully drive even super efficient speakers.
@robinsonbrand The discussion on the difference between test tones and complex music (real world power output) was awesome and definitely not one I've run across elsewhere. Great food for thought.
No Andrew you are not a snob. What has happened is that you have tested the champagne and caviar of music equipment and your ears and vision will never be the same. Yes it’s only £299 but issues are issues and if they are there thank you for pointing them out. Still a lot of people will put up with it because of the price.
Thx for your honest review and lowering too high expectations. At this price its actually great for smaller rooms I think, I am very happy with my Wiim pro+ as a streamer which is just a bit cheaper. But I still prefer having dedicated parts for more flexibility in my chain and trying out / upgrading from time to time. But not everybody cares about that and dont want to spend much money.
Am I wrong to think when I see 60wpc @ 8 double @ 4, plus a sub out, the brand is screaming "this is for a Bookie/Sub setup" !?!?
Sounds like it is what I would expect from this unit.
Nice for background music and ease of use but not for critical listening.
I attribute that mainly to the power supply. The p 19:33 ower supply can make or break an amplifiers sound.
It needs to be able to supply reserve power when the music calls for it when listening to spirited levels.
Appreciate the frank review. 👍 I do think we all need to keep an eye on the devices that the WiiM Amp will inspire. We’re likely only months away until someone packs the equivalent of a WiiM Mini, SMSL SU-1, and Fosi Audio ZA3 into a single chassis. Add dual sub outs with room correction, and I’ll be opening my wallet for sure.
I've bought an Octavio Amp about a year ago. I later gifted it to my nephew. He is now happily using it in his apartment as a 2.1 system streaming Spotify and having a TV and a BluRay drive connected to it. Devices like the Octavio, and the WiiM, are perfect for that.
I'll be sticking with my Cambridge stack (CXA81, CXNv2, CXCv2) and my Sony BluRay drive. But there is definitely a market out there for integrated all-in-one's.
Thanks for the video drop!!! Will definitely listen to in my drive in to work in the A.M. or maybe later today. At any rate, looking forward to it!
Let us know what you think once you get a chance to watch!
@@andrewrobinsonreviews Absolutely!
@@andrewrobinsonreviews I really enjoyed ya’lls take on the Wiim amp. Although I’ve not listened to it, I do feel like I can relate to a few of your experience descriptions when it comes to some of the more affordable class D amplifier products I’ve owned over the past few years. I haven’t experienced any shut off, but have experienced two that just stopped getting louder well before the volume knob got close to full tilt. One class d amp even had what sounded like frequency dependent volume level differences when pushed to 75% volume. They were all a little too cool and 2 dimensional for my taste and it seams that although the Wiim amp may be a step up, it doesn’t sound like it’s far enough away from the affordable class D amp characteristics I’ve experienced thus far (sound unheard of course). I’m not actually in the market though (picked up the rn-1000a late last year-the sweet spot!), just really enjoy this hobby and hearing about others’ experiences with other products. You just never know when someone runs across a unicorn :-). As always, great video to both of ya’ll!
My fav part of this amp is the bass management. I’d rather have bass management in my amp than hdmi (or any DAC for that matter).
The wiim would probably perform better with some high efficiency bookshelves and a sub since the bass management would take some load off the amp by removing lower frequencies from the speaker outputs.
Adding a sub does not solve this product’s power woes. It also results in more noise from the chassis and speakers being audible.
If you already have an amp, you can get the Wiim Pro Plus.
The WiiM is a desktop amp for close listening connected to a subwoofer. That is where it shines. I have Mission 750 AE bookshelf speakers and a Episode EVO 6 inch powered sub and it is excellent for a desk.
I have the Wiim Pro streamer. The things great. I run it into my DAC and it sounds great.
The WIM's crappy power supply doesn't provide enough power - there are a few TI 3255 based amps that get it right, like the offerings from Ayima or Fosi Audio.
You may have a point that more voltage and current in the power supply might help. But the WiiM's power supply is internal and operates from AC input. There is no "upgrade" path as there is with some Chi-Fi amps based on the TI (ne Tripath)'s TPA3255 IC. What you bought is all you will ever get.
2. The class-D amp chip used so widely in these Chi-Fi amplifiers are rated so misleadingly that it's arguably dishonest. 315 Watts output into 4 ohms at 10% THD? 10% THD will sound horrible and might blow your tweeters. 10% THD is not a usable output. The rating at 1% is still audible. At age 60, I can still reliably detect distortion at -45 dB/0.5% THD so even the 1% power rating is at a point that people with normal hearing will likely detect and cause fatigue.
The TI device is capable of at MOST 100 W/ch RMS into 8 ohms with the highest voltage supply the chip can take, before distortion rapidly becomes apparent. 200 Watts into 4 ohms, maybe, with the same very rapid climb into gross distortion once you increase the volume even a small amount above that level. 300W, never ever. Can't happen.
With hyper-efficient Klipsch speakers (maybe a two way KP-300m II would be a more realistic pairing, but Andrew's point was that at this level of efficiency, it should play louder than it did, and that would likely be true of any efficient speaker). So why didn't it play louder?
Perhaps the internal power supply is under-designed to meet a price or size objective. Perhaps it was a QC flaw in the particular unit and a re-test with a different unit would deliver much better performance at high output levels.
For long-term expandability, what I did was buy the WiiM Pro streamer. It feeds an outboard integrated amp. There is nothing missing from the streamer than I feel would drive me to replace it, and the 160W/ch (0.1% THD) amplifier has no trouble lighting up a pair of UF52 towers to silly volumes.
For a desktop system or a small bedroom 2.1, it may be hard to find better for $300. The HDMI input especially makes it a great value proposition.
But if you want hi-fi in a large room, thanks to this review, you way want to go with a separate streamer and amplifier. WiiM still holds the value champion crown IMHO.
Why HDMI port on it is so crooked? 😂
I was thinking the same thing 😅. All of the inputs seem a little off.
I use the wiim amp in my garage where I have a small home office. It is fantastic for that situation but I wouldn't want it upstairs where I do most of my listening and movie watching.
I noted the HDMI input jack isn't square to the top / bottom. Look about 1:20 in. Cheap.
Kristi's review comments are killing it...she's able to see who this product might be right for.
Thank you :)
I got one of the cheap digital amps recommended by another channel when i first got into quality music equipment, but I immediately replaced it with a Cambridge AXR100 for the reasons Andrew described.
Another great video Andrew! Always excited to hear your opinion. Although, I’m a big Schitt fan, currently. I’ve bought almost all of their products. And I’m having fun. But, I’ve got an itch to find a new audio relationship….maybe Hegel…audiolab?
I've owned the WiiM amp for about six weeks. This review meshes almost exactly with my experiences, so it's validating to have what I hear backed up. The dynamics really are noticeably lacking, and that's by far its biggest shortcoming. If it sounded like 60wpc of goodness, this would be one of the best audio products in years. It sounds like an underpowered kit amp. That's not to say it sounds BAD, it just doesn't take a song you love and shake you loose from your day.
I disagree with the built-in power supply being a bonus - outboarding it would allow for a much beefier power supply and perhaps swappable options. Integrating it seems like it turned into too severe of a compromise. Adding a sub makes matters a little better in my experience so far, which is the wildest part. A relatively high crossover point (~70-80Hz) appears to free up some headroom.
What would make this thing significantly better? Pre-outs. If a software update can turn the analog ins to analog outs, I'd be thrillled. 😂
I've noticed a lot fewer updates than Andrew, though.
Hi Andrew - I want to ask that you review on wall (not in wall) speakers. I realize these are never considered high quality. However, I live in a very small home, as I am sure many others do. I looked for a long time and stumbled into a Swedish brand DLS that sound great. Dali makes an on wall, as does KEF and Totem. I really want to upgrade my wall hangers - but would love to see reviews focused on on walls. Thanks in advance.
RADIO SHACK SOUND METER! RADIO SHACK AHHHH GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN 😊
Wow! This was a very good review with excellent, and I think, VERY honest input!
I'm not an audiophile but I can hear well enough, even at 62, whether somethings sounds good or sounds muted. It has always been a pet peeve of mine when somethings you spend your money on sounds muted, or maybe it sounds open and airy, but nothing at the bottom end. I'm a country bumpkin so I'm not going to use a bunch of fancy words.
I purchased the Wiim Amp a couple weeks ago and paired it with some really simple Polk XT20 speakers. This is installed in my 15x15 (inside walls) woodshop. The speakers are mounted high and tilted downwards and toed in. But even with this, it really seemed to be lacking in the lower end. Also, and this one I am trying to understand, there is a really high pitched sound (I feel it more than hear it) that is almost painful after several minutes if I up the volume around 1/3 or more. I have messed with the EQ but it doesn't go away.
I went to the Wiim Amp Forum and talked about the low end and bass and lack of "oomph", and though everyone was polite, I thought I had crossed a line and could tell that these folks love the Wiim and if I had any complaints, it's all my issues and not the Wiim's. Your review matches what I'm hearing exactly! And no, I don't crank it up that much because I want the neighbors to like me. ;-)
Again, please let me say that your review convinces me of what I've been experiencing isn't just me and my environment. Something is "missing" in this amp and I can hear that. I really want to move towards Bluesound, not only because of their performance, but also because of the BluOS app. I think Wiim did a great job on the app, but it is also lacking (and buggy) in many ways. It's just not there "yet". I'm one of those older folks that is willing to spend a little more to get something a little better. The Wiim Amp is perfect in many ways for many folks, but I want a little more.
You did a good job!!
Thank you!
That HDMI ARC port isn't straight, is it?
No
Morning all!
Good morning!
How can I hook this to an outdoor tv along with my outdoor speaker and outdoor sub?
@@johnnyjohn4154 the same way you’d plug it in inside with just.. longer cables?
I don’t know what wiim claim this amp can achieve but I would have thought it is a simple matter of physics that a small box like this amp would not be able to power the large diaphragms in these speaker cones. The efficiency of the speakers is not relevant in this situation. You may not lose as much energy converting the signal into sound but if the energy from the signal is weak then the sound will also be weak. All this conversion of electrical energy into sound energy (mechanical) generates heat energy, due to inefficiencies, and I can’t see how this heat is dissipated from the amp. Hence the distortion and thermal cut outs.
To be frank, Wiim does not need to pursue amplification. They need to focus on a well-measuring all-in one streamer preamp that includes the most prominent digital connections. HDMI ARC, Coax/Tos/USB for both Ins&Outs. Add a Amp with Digital In & done.
They have that, it’s called the wiim pro plus.
No HDMI ARC
I have a WiiM Pro Plus, not the amp, and I love it. Great software, easy to use, works with everything. I have it hooked up to a Cambridge Audio AXA35 and KEF Q350 speakers. Can't comment on the amp but WiiM makes a good streaming product.
What about using nice powered speakers?
What?
Did it have pre-out that I didn't see?
Review an amplifier with powered speakers?
Is it based on the form factor of Fosi Audio / Aiyima - with the streamer, HDMI ARC amd Optical port thrown in ? Or is it more to that ?
Good review. I see this as a soundbar replacement. Or small room, near field listening say an office or desktop.
I’m not much into Class-D amplification so I went to the Schitt J-horn with their Modi DAC for my office. It sounds great. But, it wouldn’t replace my Cambridge Audio CX series stack. Not even close. Keep up the good work.
How did the amp behave with efficient book shelf speakers????
TY Andrew. Great video. I have the Wiim pro plus. Love Wiims interface for price. Instead of upgrading to this AMP should i just buy the Cambridge AXR 100 and plug my current wiim in which all goes to my Vintage Marantz 2250B. I am running Focal 805 Bookshelfs. And want to hook up my Sub. Trying to keep this simple and will not give up my Marantz. 😅. Thoughts.
Thanks for the honest review. Wiim is a great company. The updates may be annoying, but they add new features often. The value is there and the company is quick to respond to customers and reviews.. Maybe their best solution would be a set of preouts? A better amp chip (swappable OP amps)? Better power supply? I am sure these are currently being explored by Wiim.
I have nothing bad to say about WiiM as a company. I hope they come out with a version two. If I had a say in the design, I'd ditch the TI chip amp for something like ICE Power or Hypex, which would make the Amp a true force to be reckoned with.
Please review the Sonos Amp!
"Texas Instruments based amps", the problem is the power supply they are given. Thats not from google seach.. im a pro design engineer (audio is easy).
I’m going to have to disagree on this one Andrew, but perhaps my use case is just vastly different from yours.
I recently switched from a pair of Klipsch The Fives (that you reviewed favourably) to the Wiim Amp and Klipsch RP500M IIs. For me this is a small living room setup and the new passive speakers + Wiim amp cost slightly less than what I originally payed for the Fives.
I played them side by side while I still had both and I was far more impressed by the sound coming from the new setup. I was fully prepared to return my new purchases if the sound wasn’t better and made sure to buy from retailers that were easy to work with. However, it was no contest in the end.
I understand my comparison point is between two class-D amps rather than more premium Class A or Class A/B but I was looking for a compact unit. The Fives were a great solution, just didn’t impress in sound clarity.
Beyond the base sound though, the feature set is what really impressed me with the Wiim. Even if you don’t like the out-of-the-box sound from your setup, you have a great EQ and PEQ to work with. The Klipsch only had a basic EQ with “Low”, “Mid” and “High”. You couldn’t even change the subwoofer crossover on the Fives. I also considered the Bluesound, they also give you just a basic 2-band EQ. I personally don’t like being “locked-in” to a type of sound and being forced to find hardware solutions (different speakers, room treatment etc.) to fix a software problem.
I also have not faced any of the issues you have with noise from the Amp and it shutting off when you drive them harder. Admittedly, it seems they have had some quality control issues with the first few batches (as reported on their forums) but I seem to have been lucky. I’m wondering if you received a unit that has some of those issues?
All in all, my personal experience with the Wiim amp has been very positive. I did have slightly lower expectations knowing it is a D-class budget amp but I think this is a better sounding alternative than something like The Fives (HDMI-enabled all in one powered speakers). Even if the sound was even, much better control and connectivity.
I know he has a bad early sample because the RCA inputs on the back are the wrong way around - they swapped them in the corrected versions. Mine has been great for me, powering a pair of floor standers and making the old huge Yamaha amp redundant. Plenty of volume always below 50% in a medium sized room.
My experience as well. I wanted something small with the WAF and was concerned this would sound too thin and lifeless. Replaced a vintage 70's Pioneer amp and honestly am quite impressed. No volume issues, plays loud enough and I have heard details in some familiar songs I hadn't noticed before. I purchased an Aiyima 07 Max with 48 watt power supply to compare and there is no comparison. My opinion is the Wiim is better...much better . For the price, I couldn't be happier.
I feel that many small footprint/large power output Class-D amps tend to suffer from fatigue after playing music continuously for some time.
Is that something that my overactive imagination is tricking me with or does it actually happen?