LinnIkemi CD Player usedLinn Ikemi CD PlayerLinn Ikemi classic CD Player, just fully serviced, new belts and aligned and sounding wonderful. One owner piece, and has XLR / Balanced and RCA outputs and ready to be enjoyed buy you. ...1295.00

Linn Ikemi CD Player

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Condition
8/10
Payment methods
Ships fromLos Angeles, CA, 90077
Ships toUnited States and Canada
Package dimensionsunspecified
Shipping carrierUPS
Shipping costSpecified after purchase
Original accessoriesRemote Control
AverageResearch Pricing

Linn Ikemi classic CD
Player, just fully serviced, new belts and aligned and sounding wonderful.


One owner piece, and has XLR / Balanced and RCA outputs and ready to be enjoyed buy you.

Sound Stage review: http://www.soundstagenetwork.com/revequip/linn_ikemi.htm
Linn Ikemi CD
Player

by Marc Mickelson

                       

 




Review Summary





Sound
Smooth and refined
top end along with a present and resolved bottom; offers "a gentle but unadorned
quality to music"; "conjures a large soundstage and resolves very well."






Features
Trickle-down
technology from Linn’s flagship Sondek CD12, including "2-D" processing and
Linn’s proprietary servo-controlled transport mechanism; single-ended and balanced
analog outputs; coaxial, AES/EBU and TosLink digital outputs along with Sync Link
connection.







Use
Small and light,
will fit almost anywhere; remote will control other Linn products too.







Value
As one of the finest
integrated CD players you will find, the Ikemi’s value, given its price, is very
high; but you should consider what the very near future has to offer too before deciding
on a CD-only player.

Somebody ought to tell Linn that CD is out and DVD-A and SACD are in. Then
again, they probably know about the alphabet soup of new digital formats and don’t
care. This is Linn after all, the company whose Sondek LP12 turntable has changed some
over the course of its 25+ years in existence, but its guiding design principles (and
look) have remained the same. But the real question is why it hasn’t changed
radically, and I suspect the answer has to do with not fixing what isn’t broken. The
LP12 design is sound and sounds great, so why mess with success?


But this doesn’t address why Linn has chosen to release the Ikemi and less costly
Genki CD players now. As I recall, Linn’s first foray into digital came over a
half-dozen years after CD’s introduction, so maybe the company is now hitting its
stride with digital hardware. More likely is the introduction last year of the CD12,
Linn’s only digital component to earn the Sondek moniker. The Ikemi is the product of
the research and development that went on with the CD12, and so it is trickle-down
technology at work. It also comes in at the sane price of $3595 when compared to the $20k
CD12.


But perhaps the greatest reason that Linn has decided to release the Ikemi now is that
they still believe in the CD. HDCD as well as the progression of recording techniques --
and recording companies paying closer attention to sound quality -- have helped produce
CDs that generally sound better than those of just a few years ago. CD seems to be going
through a renaissance of sorts, and the Ikemi doesn’t seem so out of place after all.


What’s an Ikemi?


As I’ve mentioned, the Ikemi benefits from the work done in the development of
Linn’s top-of-the-line CD12 player. Most notable is the inclusion of Linn’s
proprietary "2-D"digital signal processing "for lowest possible
jitter." The Ikemi also uses Linn’s proprietary Brilliant power supply and
precision-machined transport mechanism with a rigid circuit board that locates all servos,
decoding circuitry, control circuitry, software, motors, pulleys, belts and optical
sensors together. The slim CD drawer is milled from solid aluminum and is the only visible
part of the proprietary CD mechanism. The Ikemi uses Delta-Sigma conversion and includes
HDCD decoding. It’s also very quiet and elegant in operation, a soft
"thunk" heard when the CD drawer closes.


The Ikemi measures 3 1/4"H x 12 1/2"W x 12 3/4"D and weighs a mere 9
pounds, so it is easy to place on any equipment rack. It has two sets of single-ended
line-level outputs as well as a single set of balanced outputs. Digital outputs include
BNC coaxial, AES/EBU and TosLink. Linn has also included a Sync Link connection so the
Ikemi can be used as a transport with a similarly equipped external DAC and have its
internal clock slaved to that of the DAC, reducing jitter. Linn used this same feature
with its Karik/Numerik combo, but there’s no need to run out and buy a Numerik to use
with the Ikemi. Linn admits that the Ikemi outperforms the Karik/Numerik -- and it costs a
little more than half the price too. Also around back are a Knekt remote input/output for
use with Linn’s Knekt system and an IEC power-cord receptacle.


Using the Ikemi is a piece of cake, and the remote that comes with it will control
other Linn products too. One remote feature that’s not intuitive, however, is
accessing directly tracks beyond number 9. With most CD players there’s a
"10+" button that you press first to play track 12, for example. With the Ikemi,
you press and hold down the "1" button for two seconds, then press the
"2" button. At first I thought I had to step through the tracks with the forward
button until I found the right one, but the informative manual that comes with the Ikemi
explained how to do it correctly.


System


The Ikemi played along with a whole host of equipment, much of which I’ve written
about: ProAc Response Four speakers, Lamm ML1 and ML2 mono amps, Lamm L1 line stage.
Signal cables and power cords are from JPS Labs, Audio Magic, API, ESP and Tara Labs. I
also used JPS Labs, Marigo and ESP power-distribution strips for serving up the juice to
the equipment. My equipment sits on Target equipment stands and/or Bright Star products.


For comparison purposes, I had the Mark Levinson No.39 CD player around as well as my
reference Timbre TT-1 2000 DAC and the Bel Canto DAC1/Pioneer DV-414 combination.


Sound thinking


Although the Linn Ikemi is a smallish and lightweight CD player, it is the product of
much considered thought. Linn, it seems, does nothing that’s not deliberate and
calculated, and the sound of Linn equipment, at least the products I’ve heard, is
similar in some broad ways -- and often in terms of the small touches too. Does the Ikemi
fit into the Linn family?


In the traditional ways, yes. While you won’t mistake Linn gear for tubes, you
equally won’t think of it as having a distinctly solid-state character either. The
treble of Linn equipment is too refined and its bass generally not as fully realized as
that of other products that seemingly do only the bottom end really well. But while the
Ikemi does have a sophisticated and refined top end, its bass makes no apologies, thumping
nearly as impressively as that of the various reference products I had on hand as well as
out of character for the Linn products I’ve heard over time.


Bass done well is not just a single entity, however. While it should display weight and
depth for sure, there’s also definition to consider, and this is most apparent at
frequencies above the lowest that a component will reproduce. The midbass of the Ikemi is
palpable, and the lowest end of the Ikemi has all three elements happening. Walter
Becker’s 11 Tracks of Whack [Giant 24579-2], especially "Hard Up
Case," will let you know what your speakers can do down low. With the Ikemi in my
system, the dual 9" woofers of the ProAc Response Fours move in and out in unison,
the bass tone losing no depth or weight from what I hear with my reference Timbre TT-1
2000 DAC. There is also excellent definition, the bass portraying more than one muddy
note. While the Audio Research CD2, as I recall, did
bass with more power and drive, the bottom end of the Ikemi is definitely present and
accounted for.


Images via the Ikemi don’t have the palpability of my Timbre DAC, but then this is
the Linn sound at work. As I noted earlier in the year about the Majik
integrated amp: "image outlines are not as distinctly rendered as you will
encounter." Consequently, however, the Ikemi is very, very impressive with jazz,
where a huge and airy soundstage is cast and delineation of instruments is acute. The Blue
Note RVG remasters are terrific, and I’ve enjoyed all of the ones I own on the Ikemi,
especially one of my all-time faves, Eric Dolphy’s Out to Lunch [Blue Note
7243 4 98793], which is so far improved from the original CD that there are no comparisons
to make. The Ikemi conjures a large soundstage and resolves very well, giving more
peaceful music (anything but poorly recorded rock) a clear canvas on which to play.


In general, there is a gentle but unadorned quality to music made by the Ikemi.
Everything is very well resolved, but not thrown at you, harsh or grainy (unless the disc
is intrinsically this way). Unlike classically "musical" components, the Ikemi
is not lush or voluptuous. In fact, some might think its presentation thin, even a touch
cold. But then the highs have such a natural way of trailing off that they sound both
highly detailed and friendly at the same time -- not at all blunt or rolled. Great stuff.


With certain recordings -- those whose sound is very good to begin with -- the treble
balance of the Linn Ikemi and the Bel Canto DAC1, which
I’ve reviewed and praised, are virtually identical, which is to say they’re both
smooth and sweet on top. I would say that the Bel Canto DAC1 is a slight bit more sweet,
but nothing to call much attention to. The Ikemi does bass in a more powerful manner and
handles images in about the same way. But the treble is what I keep coming back to --
it’s so extended and liquid that you’ll feel gypped that this couldn’t have
happened earlier in the development of digital sound.


HDCD decoding is very good overall and competitive with that of the Mark Levinson
No.39, if a little less detailed and airy. I use Lucinda Williams’ great Car
Wheels on a Gravel Road
[Mercury 314 558 338-2] to test a player’s HDCD prowess
because I know the disc very well -- I listen to it at least every few weeks. The skin
sound of the drums on the title track is very resolved -- the tick of the stick, then the
pop of the drum -- and Williams’ voice hangs effortlessly between the speakers. And
on "Jackson," Steve Earle on guitar sounds like Steve Earle (which doesn’t
have anything to do with the Ikemi, but does with the music itself -- I digress). I’m
not sure I can adequately explain this, but if you are a fan of Earle, you’ll know
what I mean. The HDCD decoding of the Linn Ikemi is a nice addition and made me seek out
the HDCDs in my music collection.


Comparison


The Mark Levinson No.39 is certainly one of the most heralded
CD players there is, and comparing the Linn Ikemi to it is an exercise in describing the
sound of two very good units. Down low, the No.39 has a bit more fullness, and this creeps
its way into the midrange too, where voices have more body. There’s more heft to the
presentation overall. The No.39’s highs are not as sweet as the Ikemi’s,
displaying more extension and air but not sounding as friendly. The Ikemi and No.39 are
equal in their ability to draw you into a performance, but they do it in different ways,
the Ikemi via its modest but sweet disposition, the No.39 by way of its sheer deftness
throughout the frequency spectrum.


While the Linn player doesn’t beat the Levinson outright in terms of detail and
air, it is certainly competitive, and given its cheaper price, this is very good news. I
will generalize a bit and say that solid-state systems may benefit from the gentler sound
of the Ikemi, although I suspect that an all-Linn system would also sound very fine with
the Ikemi as source, strength matching strength.


Conclusion


I listened to the Ikemi shortly after it arrived, liked what I heard, then put it away
for a while to clear my aural palette (and complete a few other reviews). Coming back to
it reminded me of what I admired -- and deepened my appreciation. The Ikemi is another of
the new breed of top-flight CD players; it sounds unlike the digital of only a few years
ago and splendid overall. Nothing about its presentation is a compromise, and in its
endearing smoothness it is a cut above what you’ll hear from most CD playback
available today. While at $3595 it isn’t cheap, it will certainly compete with
separate players and DAC/transport combos that cost a lot more.


With so many interesting and impressive digital products out now -- and still to come
-- Linn has taken a risk by introducing the Ikemi, although I’m sure they see it as
part of an evolutionary process that takes time to develop fully and doesn’t rely on
perfect timing. I would certainly seek out the Bel
Canto DAC1/Pioneer DV-414
combination to hear alongside the Ikemi as well as a player
like the Mark Levinson No.39, which, to be fair, costs quite a bit more money. In the end,
though, the Ikemi offers a taste of both of these CD front-ends and may be the CD
player to have in these waning days of the format.


...Marc Mickelson

[email protected]




Linn Ikemi CD player

Price: $3595 USD.

Warranty: Five years parts and labor.


It is best to call David and visit: www.weinhartdesign.com with questions

in Los Angeles Showroom 310-472-8880 or on my cell after hours and

weekends 310-927-2260 any time from 10AM - 10PM.




Weinhart
Design has lots of other items new and used and if you're in Los

Angeles or visiting please accept my invitation to experience our World

Class Audio Showroom and please visit our web site @ 
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your new and pre owned needs.





 Changing the Way You Listen, 


          David Weinhart
       Weinhart Design, Inc.
         President & CEO

  [email protected]
   www.weinhartdesign.com

  The Audio and Video Expert
2337 Roscomare Road, Studio #1
 Los Angeles, California 90077
   Showroom) 310-472-8880
      Cell) 310-927-2260

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