| Earthquake
Cineova Grande 5-channel Power Amplifier
Earthquake Sound Corporation is a division
of Hohmann International Group. They
manufacture mobile, home and pro audio
electronic components with a factory
in Menlo Park, California and associations
in Asia. The Earthquake brand is well
known in car audio and the company
also makes huge quantities of OEM electronic
devices which are incorporated into
other manufacturers products
or sold under other brand names as
complete components.
Earthquake has recently
started to branch out into markets
by introducing home theater speaker
systems, subwoofers (see WSRs
Essential Subwoofer Buyers Guide for
reviews of two of their models) and
the flagship home theatre amplifier
reviewed here.
The Cineova Grande multichannel amplifier
submitted for this review is an impressive
piece that should bring some well-deserved
attention to the Earthquake brand name
in the home theatre arena. The Cinenova
amplifier is made in the USA.
Outside
The Earthquake Cineova Grande is a
huge amplifier that weighs 125 pounds.
It is bigger and more powerful than
other amplifier in this review group
and, for that matter, most other
amplifiers in the review series.
It has bold, dramatic appearance
and is nicely finished.
The front panel is made from a thick,
aluminum extension. Six polished horizontal
fins and the Cineova Grande badge are
produced by CNC machining on the face
of this extrusion and the result is
an elegant, if somewhat less than subtle,
three-dimensional look. There is a
power switch at the lower left of the
front panel with an integral LED power
indicator and five LEDs labeled LF,
Center, RF, LS, RS are centered on
the lower section of the panel. These
LEDs show when the indicated channel
is over-driven (clipping) but I never
saw them light up and I doubt that
most users will either. Driving an
amplifier with this much power into
clipping is likely to damage your speakers
and your ears
Large sturdy handles on the front
panel makes it a little easier to move
this behemoth around but positioning
the Cineova Grande on a shelf is still
a two man job. (There is only one of
me so I placed the amplifier on an
amp stand between my front speakers
for the listening session.
The back of the amplifier is divided
up into six segments. The power input
segment at the right edge that contains
a 20amp AC connector for a removable
power cord, a 20amp circuit breaker
for additional electrical protection.
And a 25-pin parallel port with audio
input connection for each channel plus
two trigger connections.
Each of the five amplifier modules
has its own connector plate and these
segments constitute the remainder of
the back panel. There are single-ended
RCA input connectors and five-way binding
post speaker output connectors for
each channel. There are fuse holders
for plus and minus rail fuses on each
module connector plate along with LEDs
to indicate when a rail fuse is blown.
Each amplifier module has a selector
switch to engage a built-in high-pass/low-pass
filter. The user can select high-pass,
low-pass or bypass and choose a crossover
frequency between 20Hz and 5kHz.
The 12 gauge steel cover is very
heavy and it is attached by no fewer
than 23 socket head cap screws.
Inside
The chassis layout of the Cineova Grande
is similar to the other amplifiers
in this review segment, but everything
is scaled up in size. There is an
enormous 40 pond, 3.6kVA, ferrite
core toroidal power transformer positioned
vertically just behind the front
panel. This transformer is constructed
with special attention paid to the
inductance of the primary windings.
The transformer primary is said to
have ideal inductance characteristics
allowing it to act as a power line-filter,
which can smooth the "power
factor" notch from the AC line.
The toroidal transformer has independent
secondary windings for each amplifier
channel. The transformer mount is
isolated with ten layers of pressed
foam for mechanical hum suppression.
The amplifier modules start just behind the power
transformer an extend to the rear of the unit. They
are arranged side by side in the densely packed interior
of the chassis. Each of the five amplifier modules
is completely independent and easily removable. Earthquake
has trademarked the acronym EZXS to describe the easy
access to the amplifier modules, which can be individually
removed and serviced without dismantling the entire
amplifier.
Each amplifier channel has rectification
and 24,000µf of capacitance.
JFET inputs, bipolar drivers and bipolar
outputs are utilized. Components are
mounted on multi-layer, glass-epoxy,
double-sided printed circuit boards
with ground plane isolation and heavy
copper traces. There are 10 output
devices per channel.
Each amplifier module has a built-in,
fully buffered high-pass/low-pass variable
filter. Each module can run full-range
or can be low-pass or high-pass filtered
at frequencies between 20Hz and 5kHz.
The Cineova Grande is rated at 300
watts per channel into eight ohms,
600 watts per channel into four ohms
and 1000 watts per channel into two
ohms, with all channels driven. Its
robust construction should allow it
to easily meet the four-ohm spec making
it one of the most powerful multi channel
amplifiers that Ive reviewed.
The two-ohm spec is quite reasonable
for a typical duty cycle but youll
need special wiring to wring more than
five kilowatts from the wall.
Sound
The power of the Cineova Grande amplifier
was indeed very evident in my listening
test. This amplifier seemed to loaf
along effortlessly at levels where
others were beginning to sound strained.
Bass control was exemplary as the
amplifier took complete command of
the loud speakers.
I used stereo and multi channel music
recordings to evaluate the sound of
the Cineova and I watched a variety
of movies with this amplifier as a
power source. It performed admirably
in all circumstances.
The Earthquake amplifier performed quieter than
the others in this group. This increased (perceived)
signal-to-noise ratio allowed more details about the
signal to become clearly audible. There was a sense
of clarity and ease to the sound that others couldnt
quite match. Lateral image focus was excellent and
a sense of depth or three-dimensionality was very well
presented. The sound was smooth and musical up to very
high levels whether listening to a music CD or watching
an action film on DVD. The CineNova started to sound
just a little hard on extreme peaks at the top end
of its power range but this only occurred at extremely
high levels in testing, never in normal listening.
The Cinenova Grande equaled or exceeded
the dynamic power of any amplifier
I've reviewed. The Cine N ova easily
matches or beats anything I've heard
in the $4k price category.
Conclusion
The other amplifiers in this group
each deliver a lot of high quality
sound for the money. This one provides
a little more of everything for a
little more money.
The Earthquake
amplifier delivers far more real world
power than most other contenders for
the high power throne and it sounds
better too. It's significantly more
powerful than the others in this group
and it delivers slightly more refined
sound. While the manufacturer's suggested
retail price of this amplifier is $4,000,
the street price may be lower. You
won't get more value for your money
anywhere. Highly recommended |