Canor Audio AI 1.10
Image source — © Canor Audio
What is it?
Ask AI to scan specialized sites and forums, evaluate the impressions of using the product, its advantages and disadvantages and get a summary.
Model name
AI 1.10
Type
Integrated Amplifier
Analog inputs (balanced)
N/A
Analog inputs (single-ended)
5
Input sensitivity (mV)
500
Input impedance (balanced) (Ω)
N/A
Input impedance (single-ended) (Ω)
30 000
Output impedance (balanced) (Ω)
N/A
Output impedance (single-ended) (Ω)
N/A
D/A conversion
N/A
Phono MM/MC current-sensing input impedance (Ω)
N/A
Output power (8Ω) (W)
2 x 20, 2 x 40
Output power (4Ω) (W)
2 x 20, 2 x 40
Gain (dBu)
N/A
Frequency response low +/- 3dB (Hz)
10
Frequency response high +/- 3dB (Hz)
50 000
Signal to Noise Ratio (dB)
95
Total Harmonic Distortion + Noise (%)
< 0,05
Damping factor
N/A
Dimensions (mm)
435 x 170 x 485
Weight (kg)
26
Official link
Hybrid integrated amplifier 2 x 150 W with a tube pre-stage and a discrete volume control based on resistive arrays and relay switching. The output stage is transistor, operating in Class D with analog power supply.
A transistor integrated amplifier in pure class A with an output power of 50 Watts with the possibility of bridging to implement the monoblock mode of 100 watts each without an additional pre-amplifier. The volume is controlled using resistive attenuators with relay switching (separate for each channel). In the monoblock mode, the volume controls are synchronized according to the Master-Slave principle.
An integrated tube amplifier with an innovative pure class A circuit with automatic current offset of the output stage, which is implemented on KT88 lamps with the ability to quickly switch the "triode-ultralinear" modes. A pair of amplifiers can be used in a bridge connection as monoblocks with double the power.
The Canor Virtus A3 hybrid integrated amplifier provides an output power of 100 watts per channel when operating on a load with a nominal resistance of 8 ohms and 150 watts for a load of 4 ohms. The power amplifier uses differential feedback, which reads the audio output at both the positive and negative speaker terminals to ensure maximum linearity.