| Lexicon ZX-7 Multi-Channel (300 watts x 7) Power Amplifier |
| Written by John E. Johnson, Jr. | ||||
| Monday, 21 January 2008 07:52 | ||||
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Harman International owns a number of very fine audio companies, including Mark Levinson and Lexicon. Each of the companies benefits from trickle down technology that is developed at Mark Levinson, which is the top of the line.
Specifications
The Design The only control is the On/Off push-button that moves the amplifier from Standby to On. The rear panel has XLR and RCA input jacks for each channel, one pair of binding posts for the outputs, and two AC power cord jacks with on/off toggles. These switch power on to the two toroidal transformers. Two are required because the ZX-7 can output 3,000 watts into 4 ohms, which means one 20 amp circuit won’t handle it. You need two. This amplifier is big and very heavy. Don’t try to lift it by yourself. I had a friend help me shift it into position for the listening and bench tests. I have had enough torn shoulder rotator cuffs from trying to move big amps by myself. The last one took two years to heal. In Use You know from past reviews that I am a big action movie fan, and The Kingdom is just such fare. Whether the bullets were whizzing at good guys or bad, I ducked for cover. Deep bass explosions were no problem for the high current capability of the ZX-7 either. I set the Lexicon SSP to not crossover anything to a subwoofer when using the Carver ribbon speakers (electrostatic speakers really need to be crossed over at about 50 Hz even when using full range panels), and the 12” woofers in each Carver were really moving some air.
Eastern Promises is not a bang, bang, boom, boom film, but it certainly has action. The soundstage was perfect, and voices were crisp and clear, without being overly sibilant.
In general, the sound had just enough snap to it, so that everything was clear and detailed to a very enjoyable level. It got pretty warm during use. It's a Class A/B design, and I suspect it is biased about 10 watts into Class A.
Surround sound music, such as Mozart Flute Concerto and Symphony No. 41 (Telarc SACD) sounded wonderful too. Some consumers wonder why anyone would need so much power, and the reason is overhead. Most of the time you probably would be listening at 10 watts or less, but along comes a big transient, and 300 watts will give you about 13 additional dB of dynamics. All instruments remained distinct, even at high output, suggesting low IMD, and that turned out to be the case, as you will see in the bench test results section below. If you want to test an amplifier (speakers and subwoofer too), try organ music like this Telarc SACD. No problem for the ZX-7. If you want to play it with the most efficiency, let your subwoofer do the 20 Hz - 50 Hz stuff, and use your SSP or receiver crossover to high pass everything else.
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