🎶 Elevate Your Vinyl Experience!
The Schiit Mani 2 Phono Preamp is a high-performance audio device designed for MM, MC, and MI cartridges. It features customizable gain and loading options, low noise operation, and passive low-frequency filtering, all crafted in the USA for superior quality.
C**N
Very nice, and well priced.
Really nice phono preamp, especially for the price. Compact, musical, reasonably neutral, easy to setup and start using. Good detail in the sound.Has a welcome set of adjustments for input capacitance loading and for gain.Pairs well with a Nagaoka cartridge and a Yamaha A-S701 integrated amplifier.
J**J
Magical little box
The Mani 2 is a substantial upgrade from your turntable's or receiver's built-in phono preamp.Frequency response and dynamic response were greatly enhanced, as well as stereo imaging compared to my turntables built-in preamp. Volume was boosted too.Dark Side of the Moon now sounds like surround sound, only using two speakers in stereo. Tool's Fear Inoculum is mesmerizing, sparkling and rich compared to the built-in preamp.I suspect part of Mani 2's secret is it's 16v power supply. It's large. It wouldn't fit in the power strip underneath my media cabinet.A true wallwart.This preamp is high gain and is susceptible to interference. I experienced noise at first using some cheap RCA's. (modem, wifi6 router, 800w receiver nearby)I had to rob some higher-end cables from my DAW...Problem solved. Noise gone.If you buy this, have high-end cables or buy some.I like the extreme power light. I can easily tell that it's on.I do not like the rear mounted power switch. It's a toggle switch which is nice but it's just bizarre they put it in the back. Lame.You'll need to place this device accordingly.The underside has lots of dip switches for people with 4 figure turntables or moving cartridges. If you have a regular turntable, you don't need to mess with any of that.
B**E
1977 HT 350, Polk T15s, Cheap old Sony + Schiit = pure gold
I’ve been running my Hitachi HT-350, Sony STR amp, and Polk T-15s for a while. Solid components, but they never fully delivered the sound I knew was hidden in my vinyl. Enter the Schiit Mani 2: a true Kraftmultiplikator (force multiplier), designed to elevate every other piece in the chain. It’s the Drachen that breathes life into your music.The transformation was immediate. Nine Inch Nails’ “The Way Out Is Through” erupted with newfound power—each layer of industrial sound meticulously articulated, yet raw and alive. With Sinéad O’Connor’s “Feel So Different,” the Mani 2 unveiled her vocals with a precision and emotional depth that felt almost sacred.When I spun Dark Side of the Moon, the solo in “Time” became an otherworldly experience—every note soaring with rich, unyielding sustain. Tommy James’ “Dragging the Line” delivered punch and rhythm, the bassline disciplined yet bursting with vibrancy. And Pipeline by The Ventures? Pure clarity. The guitar riffs sliced through the air, the reverb so clean it could’ve been crafted by a Swiss watchmaker.The Schiit Mani 2 doesn’t overpower your setup; it strengthens it. It’s the Kraftmultiplikator that takes an old system and refines it into something extraordinary. For anyone seeking perfection in analog sound, the Mani 2 is your answer. Unverzichtbar.
L**C
A-B with Pro-ject Phono box S2
I recently upgraded my turntable to a Pro-Ject Pro X2 with a Sumiko Moonstone cartridge. I listen through Elac Uni-Fi 2.0 UB52 speakers driven by a Denon AVR4500 receiver/amp/pre-amp. I suspected the AVR's phono pre-amp was not on par with the turntable and speakers so I decided to add a dedicated, but affordable, phono pre-amp. I narrowed the field down to 2, the Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 and the Schiit Mani 2, based on price, various reviews, MM/MC capabilities, etc. The two pre-amps are very similar on what they offer and very nearly the same price.I was a little biased towards the Pro-Ject because I figured they made my turntable so they should offer an affordable pre-amp to match it. I could not have been more wrong. We set up the Pro-ject pre-amp first and listened to Miles David Kind of Blue. The sound was way better than that through the AVR, so my wife and I were very excited. "How could it get better than this", we asked ourselves. The improvement was enough to put smiles on both of our faces - there really is a very noticeable improvement in sound stage, instrument separation, etc. We almost decided to end the test there and just send back the Schiit, but we didn't. When the needle came down on Mile's record and we heard the sound of the Schiit, our jaws dropped - again. The difference between the two pre-amps was about as noticeable as between the AVR and the Pro-ject pre-amp. We could not believe our ears, so we A-B'd the same album 2 more times. I even did a blinded test with my wife, who is no audiophile, and she unhesitatingly picked the Schiit. We went on to A-B against, Pink Floyd's DSOM, Beethoven's 6th, 5th and 9th symphonies (2 different orchestras), a Moody Blues album, the Eagles Hotel CA, John Coltrane's A love Supreme, Creme and, wait for it...KC and the Sunshine Band. There was a noticeable difference in all albums except the KC, Eagles and Creme albums. There was still a preference to the Schiit, but the difference with these albums was not as notable as the difference in the jazz and classical albums. In no case did the Pro-Ject impress better than the Schiit.We tried several impedances on the two pre-amps (both are adjustable with dip switches) but could not get the Pro-Ject to impress as well as the Schiit.What we heard: there was clearly an improved sound stage with the Schiit. The sense of "being there" was so much nicer. The upper mids were noticeably more pronounced with the Schitt while the base was brought out more without being boomy (we do have a 10" SW on our system). The highs were more...sparkly... with the Schitt, a little more, though, and they would have bordered on too sparkly and cause ear fatigue. This did not happen and while those highs and upper mids were well defined and present, we did not experience any ear fatigue during our extensive A-B testing or the album-listening frenzy of the ensuing days as we began gong through our collection.Look, I'm no audiophile and our overall system is only solidly mid-tier, maybe verging on upper mid-tier, but these are only $200 pre-amps but we know when we hear differences and there were clear differences between the AVR, Pro-Ject and Schiit. One might say the Pro-Ject was more rounded, but I think that's another way of saying it's muted. The Schiit sound was more open, present, balanced and makes the bands/orchestras feel the most "in the room".I will stop far short of saying he Pro-Ject is not a nice pre-amp. In fact it might suit some people's tastes better than the Schitt. But for what I think a pre-amp is supposed to do for your music, the Schitt, to us, does it far better.
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