The Eighties were a glorious time for budget integrated amplifiers. Sales (and the resultant profits) were huge, leading manufacturers to fight tooth and nail for a larger piece of the pie. The great news for buyers was an escalation in sonic ability that hasn’t been repeated since. The RA820BX we have here, kindly loaned to us by Rotel UK, is an excellent example of the kind of product made at the time.
However, our story doesn’t start with Rotel at all. It begins with a small, then London-based company called New Acoustic Dimension, better known as NAD. In the late ’70s, NAD launched the now legendary 3020 integrated amplifier. This was an unassuming thing with basic features and a fairly flimsy build. The amplifier was unexceptional in most regards apart from the fact that it was affordable, and sounded great. How affordable? Looking back through What Hi-Fi?’s archives, we find that it sold for a modest £71 in 1979.
The 3020 was designed to drive real speaker loads rather than just produce great figures in lab tests, and managed to deliver a blend of warmth, boldness and musicality that impresses even today. It took the market by storm, but before long every rival manufacturer had its own contender. Most fell short of the performance standards set by the NAD – but by adding a more substantial build quality and a tauter, analytical sound, the RA820 succeeded brilliantly.
Constantly moving
This story is from the May 2023 edition of What Hi-Fi UK.
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This story is from the May 2023 edition of What Hi-Fi UK.
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