Tomasz Karasiński

Tomasz Karasiński

Trained as an aviation engineer, working as a professional journalist with a passion for good music. In his free time, he designs websites, takes photos of airplanes, and indulges his passion for shooting sports. Likes both cheap and expensive gear, tube and solid state amps, large and small speakers, digital and analogue sources. Doesn't like crap.

Cambridge Audio Evo 300

Cambridge Audio is expanding its Evo series, a range of all-in-one systems designed for listeners who want a real hi-fi setup without building a traditional stack of separate components. This approach has become one of the most interesting directions in modern home audio. More people now listen through streaming services, connect their systems to a TV, sometimes return to vinyl, and still want to keep passive loudspeakers and full-scale stereo sound. From the beginning, Evo was created for exactly that kind of user - connect speakers, configure the network, and use a single device that combines an amplifier, streamer, DAC, and a broad range of inputs. Now the British manufacturer is taking the concept further with the Evo 300, the most powerful and most advanced streaming amplifier in the history of the series.

Yamaha RX300A & RX500A

Yamaha has introduced two new AV receivers, the RX500A and RX300A, designed to serve as modern hubs for home entertainment - from cinema and music to gaming. The manufacturer is clearly targeting users who want to build a system around conventional loudspeakers and an AV receiver, but also expect the convenience associated with modern TVs, consoles and streaming devices. The RX500A is a 7.2-channel design, while the RX300A is a 5.2-channel model, but both support Dolby Atmos, four HDMI inputs compatible with current video and gaming standards, Bluetooth Multipoint and automatic room correction. These are not AV receivers designed only for home cinema in the traditional sense, but rather versatile control units intended to bring films, series, sport, games and everyday music listening together in one relatively easy-to-use system.

iFi Audio GO link 2 Max

Not so long ago, a headphone socket on a smartphone was taken for granted. Today, many users have to choose between wireless headphones, a basic USB-C adapter, or a more serious dongle DAC with its own converter and headphone output stage. Not everyone wants to move entirely to Bluetooth. Good wired headphones still make sense. They do not need charging, they introduce no wireless latency, they do not depend on codec support, and they can often deliver better sound quality than wireless models at the same price. The problem is that more and more devices no longer give users a proper place to plug them in. The iFi Audio GO link 2 Max is designed as an answer to exactly that problem - a small USB-C adapter intended not only to replace the missing headphone socket, but also to improve on the average audio circuitry built into a phone, laptop, or tablet.

Sennheiser Momentum 5 Wireless

Sennheiser has introduced the fifth generation of its most important consumer wireless headphones. The new Momentum 5 Wireless is not an attempt to rewrite the story from the beginning, but rather to refine a formula that has become one of the most recognizable reference points in the premium segment over the years. The manufacturer has kept what is essential to the series - large over-ear earcups, extensive wireless connectivity, a characteristic sound and very long battery life - while introducing changes to noise cancellation, sound personalization, codec support, sustainability, packaging and product longevity. The result is a headphone that should be not only more technically advanced, but also more convenient in everyday use and better prepared for several more years of service. "When designing Momentum 5 Wireless, we focused on refining the entire user experience without moving away from the formula that made the previous generation successful. The new improvements increase the functionality of the headphones while preserving that special magic you feel every time you press play." - said Sreenath "Sri" Unnikrishnan, Product Manager at Sennheiser.

Indiana Line Lira 2, Lira 5 &Lira 7

Indiana Line is expanding its Lira series, the highest loudspeaker line in its catalog, with three new models designed to make both stereo and home cinema systems easier to configure. The new additions are the compact Lira 2 standmount speaker, the slim Lira 5 floorstander and the Lira 7 center channel speaker. Together, they extend the range not only in terms of size and application, but also by allowing users to build a complete system based on the same design principles and a consistent sonic character. In practice, this means the Lira series can now be used for a smaller listening-room setup, a more discreet stereo system or a full multichannel installation in which the front and surround channels follow the same engineering philosophy.

Denon AVR-X2900H DAB & AVC-X3900H

Denon has introduced a new generation of X Series AV receivers, unveiling two models aimed at users who want to move clearly beyond entry-level home cinema. The AVR-X2900H DAB and AVC-X3900H are intended for systems where power, control, configuration flexibility and room correction matter more than simply adding surround sound to a living room. They also make sense for installers working on more complex home cinema and multiroom projects. That distinction is important, as Denon recently presented the AVR-S980H as a more accessible gateway into modern home theater, while the new X Series models sit higher in the range as more refined, scalable and configurable solutions, designed to be matched more precisely to the room, the loudspeakers and the listener's expectations.

Pylon Audio Jade 10

Poland means different things to different people. For some, it brings to mind mountains, lakes, forests, turbulent history, beautiful cities, pierogi, kielbasa and stuffed cabbage. For others, it is a modern, entrepreneurial country - energetic, ambitious and full of people who, after decades of catching up, no longer feel the need to prove anything to anyone. They simply get on with it. They build companies, invest, design, manufacture and enter markets that, not all that long ago, seemed completely out of reach. You can see it in technology, industry, services and design, but also in far more specialized fields, including audio. Surprising as it may sound, Poland is home to well over a hundred manufacturers of audio devices, accessories and components - from large, increasingly recognizable brands to tiny, highly specialized, sometimes almost one-person workshops making unusual loudspeakers, amplifiers, cables, power distributors, isolation platforms, feet, supports and objects whose purpose sometimes has to be explained even to people who have followed this hobby for years. Some of these companies have long since stopped being curiosities for local patriots and have become serious players on the international stage. Fezz Audio tube amplifiers, J.Sikora and Muarah turntables, Mytek converters and digital devices, Lampizator's eccentric creations, Albedo and Audiomica Laboratory cables, JCAT network accessories, Enerra and Gigawatt power strips and conditioners - these are only the most obvious examples. When it comes to loudspeakers, however, the undisputed leader is Pylon Audio.

Bowers & Wilkins 800 Series Diamond D5

Bowers & Wilkins is introducing a new generation of its flagship loudspeaker line - the 800 Series Diamond D5. This is one of those launches whose significance in the high-end world hardly needs explaining, because the 800 Series has long represented far more than just the top tier of the brand's catalog. It is Bowers & Wilkins' technical statement, a benchmark for its engineering teams and a family of loudspeakers used not only in domestic stereo systems, but also in multichannel installations and professional studios. The new generation arrives as the company celebrates its 60th anniversary, which is why Bowers & Wilkins presents it as the result of six decades of research, measurement, experimentation and steady refinement of a single goal - to reproduce recorded music as faithfully as possible.

The Art of Choosing Your First Turntable

The decision has been made - we are buying a turntable. Everyone around us seems to be talking about the beauty of analog sound, so sooner or later we decide to begin our own vinyl adventure. Common sense may object a little, because what exactly is the point? Records are delicate, they have to be handled with care, and every twenty minutes or so you need to get up and turn the disc over if you want to hear the rest of the album. How does that make any sense in an age when a phone can give us access to millions of tracks, let us skip from one to another with a single tap, or simply keep playing for hours without any effort on our part? Users of streaming services could probably listen until retirement age and still not discover even a small fraction of the music available to them. So who actually needs a turntable?

Vienna Acoustics Mozart SE Signature

In the world of loudspeakers, some designs command respect through advanced engineering, exotic materials and impressive specifications. Others do not look like spaceships, make no use of materials seemingly borrowed from z science-fiction film, and yet win people over with beautiful, musical sound and the simple fact that one can imagine living with them every day. Vienna Acoustics belongs firmly to the second group. The Austrian manufacturer has never built its identity around simulations, calculations and graphs alone, focusing instead on what makes its products appealing to the eye and the ear. The company was founded in 1989 by Peter Gansterer and Peter Haferl, whose goal was to bring together two worlds - solid engineering and the kind of aesthetics usually associated with fine furniture. Based in Rust, a small town in Austria's Burgenland region, the company now employs around 40 people. Among audiophiles, it is known for distinctive loudspeakers with exceptional cabinet work. Its catalog is dominated by models designed for stereo systems, and the names chosen for individual models will feel familiar to any music lover. Liszt Reference, Beethoven Concert Grand Reference, Haydn SE Signature, Mozart SE Signature - there is clearly a theme here. The last of these is the latest incarnation of one of the most important floorstanders in Vienna Acoustics' history, and also a very good example of just how differently hi-fi can be understood.

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