Jeff Polan's New NextGen PHONO Preamp!

Afveep

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Jun 9, 2010
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www.xtremefidelity.net
Back in July 2023, I posted my thoughts on Jeff Polan's exceptional-sounding tape repro cards: New Repro Cards!- post # 123 that are a direct plug-in replacement for Studer A80-RC decks. I believe that I was one of the first to evaluate those cards configured in an external chassis with power supply for use with my Dan Labrie rebuilt Ampex ATR-102 reel-reel deck. I wrote that what I heard with those cards on my ATR literally knocked my socks off.

Jeff Polan is an "electrical engineer for electrical engineers", the holder of numerous advanced-technology patents, and a lifelong audiophile who is big time into phono and tape reproduction. Jeff called me up a few months ago and told me that he had designed a phono preamp, based loosely on the NextGen tape repro cards. Now, we know that generally speaking, there is not that much difference between a tape head preamplifier circuit and a phono preamp. Both need to amplify vanishingly low signals from a coil of some type, and do it with as little noise as possible. Of course, EQ and impedance matching are different. So, it is not unnatural that Jeff would attempt to apply his circuits designs to phono. Having had such great experience with the Repro cards, I jumped and said "yes" to Jeff's request to loan me the new phono preamp pair to listen to.

Indeed, I expected a somewhat similar sonic presentation to the wonderful tape cards, and I did experience that, to some extent. However, what I did not expect were the sonic results of some new and highly-innovative engineering that Jeff created that differentiates the Phono cards, not only from their tape cousins, but sonically from almost every other modern phono amplifier. Among these innovations is a specially-developed Group Delay Compensation model for cutting head and inverse RIAA characteristics used in cutting. This provides unrivaled transparency and information retrieval.

Jeff provides complete technical detail of the cards with specifications, functionality and configuration on his website: NextGen Phono Preamp , so no need for me to get in the middle. Make sure you pay attention to the outstanding configuration flexibility as well.

So how does it SOUND? Sorry, but I already lost my socks when I first listened to the tape repro cards; this phono preamp does it again and yet is unlike virtually anything I've heard. First, I was slammed with a huge dynamic range- just totally effortless! Like the tape cards, the noise level approaches the technical term of "zilch to -10". This allows me to hear micro-details, hall or studio ambience, creaking chairs, fingers on strings and natural decay to an extent I had not experienced with both solid state and tube phono circuits. There is transparency and speed to a remarkable extent without producing a sonic signature that is all about transparency, detail and speed like so many other products. Nor, is it about a lush presentation that is temporarily soothing and which can fool you into thinking it's real. THIS phono preamp is ultimately about the natural, true sound of music and not a hyped avatar. The Nextgen phono cards walk perfectly the balance between transparency, detail, speed and low noise vs. authentic timbre, harmonic structure (OK, somewhat like the not-necessarily-still-valid comparison of solid state vs. tubes) resulting in just "real music", including the huge dynamic range of the real thing. Oh, and the soundstage! Wow! It just makes you want to keep listening, LP after LP.

Just be aware, the genius and magic resides in Jeff's extremely well-built, professional circuit cards (built on the Studer form factor used for his tape repro version). The cards slide into a "highly utilitarian", 5 1/4" standard rack chassis, virtually identical to the external chassis used for non-Studer A-80 tape card applications like mine. As such, the chassis is not, at this early stage, a pretty piece of kit. Nevertheless, it does have unique high-response, low noise digital VU meters which can be calibrated to a given level (and can be turned off) as well as a low noise external linear power supply that can be hidden away. The packaging is more of form-follows-function thing.

One final critical point- Jeff provides standard outputs on the rear of the chassis. HOWEVER, the cards have a mini-XLR output on the front of the card. OMG, use these outputs! The front panel outputs bypass certain buffer stages and, as great sounding as the regular rear panel connections are, the front panel outputs are the way to go for ultra-level performance and transparency. The output cables need to be custom built with a mini-XLR (I use Furutech) and can be wired as either single-ended or balanced. Of the 2 configurations, maximum performance is reached with the single-ended configuration (even if you have to use an RCA>Balanced adaptor into your line stage).

Get past the current physical appearance and you will experience an innovative & highly flexible phono preamplifier with groundbreaking musical sonics. In my experience, there is little, if anything, like it. Of course I bought one, and I can't stop listening. Such fun!
 
As a brief followup, Jeff has received questions about my system to put context around my thoughts above on his NextGen Phono preamp. There are full details in my signature, but some may not be aware to hit the "Toggle signature" link to reveal it. So here are the details of my main system in which the Nextgen Phono pre now resides:

TIDAL Audio Agoria Loudspeakers; Tidal Prisma Preamp & Tidal Ferios mono blocks; TechDas AirForce V Premium TT with Kuzma 4 Point arm & Transfiguration Proteus Diamond Cartridge; NextGen Phono Preamp; Ampex ATR-102 reel-reel with NextGen Tape Repro Preamp; Sonore Signature RenduSE Optical Network Player; Silent Angel Munich MU Streamer; Bricasti M1-II DAC; Siltech Royal Single Crown Cables; Silent Angel BonnNX ethernet switch; Mutec Nano clock; Symposium Racks
 
As a brief followup, Jeff has received questions about my system to put context around my thoughts above on his NextGen Phono preamp. There are full details in my signature, but some may not be aware to hit the "Toggle signature" link to reveal it. So here are the details of my main system in which the Nextgen Phono pre now resides:

TIDAL Audio Agoria Loudspeakers; Tidal Prisma Preamp & Tidal Ferios mono blocks; TechDas AirForce V Premium TT with Kuzma 4 Point arm & Transfiguration Proteus Diamond Cartridge; NextGen Phono Preamp; Ampex ATR-102 reel-reel with NextGen Tape Repro Preamp; Sonore Signature RenduSE Optical Network Player; Silent Angel Munich MU Streamer; Bricasti M1-II DAC; Siltech Royal Single Crown Cables; Silent Angel BonnNX ethernet switch; Mutec Nano clock; Symposium Racks
These reviews are really inspiring! ! ! I'm waiting for Jeff to figure out a match for my M15 that also has the Phono Oreamp built in......
 
I would like to share my experience with NextGen’s phono preamp. Since I have been using Jeff Polan’s recording and playback cards for the Studer A80 Mark II since 2022—with fantastic sound, far superior to the original cards—I decided to purchase the phono preamp in the hope that it would surpass my Tom Evans Supreme, TOL, for which I paid nearly 40k USD.

My system consists of MBL Reference 101 E Mark II speakers, 2x MBL 9008 amplifiers, an Audiopax L50 Reference preamplifier, a Transrotor Tourbillon turntable, a SME-V tonearm, and a Benz LP-S cartridge. Cables by Logical Design. NADAC Player DAC with power and clock. Studer A80 RC Mk II 15/30 ips 1/2”. Line conditioners Elgar 6006B and 5006B.

After three weeks of listening to the NextGen preamp, I continue to be amazed. It feels like I’m hearing my records for the first time. It has definitively dethroned the TE Supreme.

I’ve been listening to reel-to-reel tapes since the early 1960s. I stopped listening to vinyl in the 1990s and returned to it 15 years ago. Never have I enjoyed listening to vinyl as much as I do now. Thank you, Jeff.
 
Thanks very much for the review; with this phono stage we were driven to redefine what is possible today in phono reproduction, and we are happy to report that your own experience conforms closely to both our own listening experience as well as the feedback received from all our other customers to date.

(Full description, design approach, and technical data on our phono and tape reproduction products is available online at www.NextGenAudioSystems.com. )

Stay tuned as well for announcements regarding our upcoming plug-in tape repro card and matching headblock preamp for the the Studer A810/812/820 series (based on our top-regarded NextGen A80R/C cards), and also a replacement tape repro card for the Nagra IV-S, each of which re-define what is possible in audio performance from these machines.

jeff polan
 
This card looks like it has been designed in the 80ies. You just don't see this kind of pcb layout and routing anymore. A true museum piece.
 
Thanks for your comment - I will take this as a compliment..

It may look perhaps like a "pcb layout from the 80ies", but rest assured it is a thoroughly state-of-the-art design based on an all DC-coupled, wideband, fully discrete low-noise balanced Class A operational amplifier topology with DC servo, and a unique disk cutting process model applied which we have developed based on much information-theoretic investigation and measurements, and which significantly reduces group delay distortion in playback. (The fully discrete design allows for complete optimization of each stage's noise, gain, bandwidth, feedback, IMD/THD, and dynamic range simply not possible in conventional packaged operational amplifier designs.)

Likewise the PCB layout (based on the Studer A80 form factor used in our NextGen A80R/C plug-in tape electronics ) has gone through significant development to minimize RFI-, noise- and crosstalk- pickup, with carefully optimized power supply distribution and decoupling, while providing a useful range of switchable cartridge loading to properly match most cartridges, along with a wide range of separate switchable stage gain adjustments to optimize both SNR and dynamic range according to cartridge output ratings.

Finally there are also a few real benefits to discrete through-hole design - such as parts pre-test/matching and selection, which we employ where beneficial in the design.

Of course, this itself raises the very serious issue of continued through-hole parts availability - unfortunately diminishing rapidly - contrasted with the large volume requirements of economic surface mount assembly; this last is likely to prove the most serious threat to the high-end audiophile community going forward.

Jeff
 
Been using tape repro cards from NextGen for quite some time and am very happy with these.
Got the opportunity to try their Phono boards and have by now spent half a year in comparing these with other Phono-amplifiers. Some at many times it’s price.
Arm and cartridge used are Brinkmann Breuer 12” with EMT cartridge and Supatrack 12” with My Sonic Lab Signature Platinum.
These NextGen Phono-cards are the most detailed and with reproduction of depth and space better than anything I have yet heard.
Perhaps a slight loss of warmth like that what one gets from tubes. That is my feel day one, while the next day I prefer without that warmth. The difference is so very small that I on / off doubt my own judgment.
All in all I feel this is the best Phono reproduction. Outstanding musical reproduction and a reference to which others must be compared.
 
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Been using tape repro cards from NextGen for quite some time and am very happy with these.
Got the opportunity to try their Phono boards and have by now spent half a year in comparing these with other Phono-amplifiers. Some at many times it’s price.
Arm and cartridge used are Brinkmann Breuer 12” with EMT cartridge and Supatrack 12” with My Sonic Lab Signature Platinum.
These NextGen Phono-cards are the most detailed and with reproduction of depth and space better than anything I have yet heard.
Perhaps a slight loss of warmth like that what one gets from tubes. That is my feel day one, while the next day I prefer without that warmth. The difference is so very small that I on / off doubt my own judgment.
All in all I feel this is the best Phono reproduction. Outstanding musical reproduction and a reference to which others must be compared.
Congratulations @LeifH and welcome to the WBF - It sounds like you are having fun with your phono setup. Enjoy the music ;) !

/ Jk
 
Thanks very much for the review; with this phono stage we were driven to redefine what is possible today in phono reproduction, and we are happy to report that your own experience conforms closely to both our own listening experience as well as the feedback received from all our other customers to date.

(Full description, design approach, and technical data on our phono and tape reproduction products is available online at www.NextGenAudioSystems.com. )

Stay tuned as well for announcements regarding our upcoming plug-in tape repro card and matching headblock preamp for the the Studer A810/812/820 series (based on our top-regarded NextGen A80R/C cards), and also a replacement tape repro card for the Nagra IV-S, each of which re-define what is possible in audio performance from these machines.

jeff polan
I would be very interested in the tape repro card for the A812 and the A80.
 
The NextGen A810/A812/A820 tape plug-in repro cards and new headblock preamp are nearly completed development; these are based on our A80R/C tape repro cards which have received outstanding reviews on WBF and elsewhere. The A80R/C cards are available for both 30/15 ips and 15/7.5 ips machines. Check out our website and/or message me from our site for full details. NextGenAudioSystems.com
 

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