HeadAmp GS-X mini Balanced Headphone Amplifier/Pre-Amp

A few questions:

I’ve seen these used go for $1300 (w/Alps pot) & $1500(w/DACT)… Is the incremental $200 for the DACT worth it or really needed? Or is the DACT less about sound quality or more about control/feel of volume changes?

Are there any other HP amps around the $1500 range that compete or surpass the Mini from a technical capability perspective? Specifically looking to match with my 1266 Phi TC hps.

I’ve been looking at a few other amps:

DACT is really nice however… it’s only 24 steps. If you want finer control versus 0 questions on channel balance… choose what is right for you. If you wish to use IEM or the HP-3 on this amp… Alps hands down (as a DACT owner).

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Thanks I’ll save the $200 and go alps then! I had a shot at this one balked and then regretted it… Was listed right when I was buying my Holo gear so was gun-shy on shelling out all the cash at once :money_mouth_face:

I think the question about different amps in this range is less about whats better and more about the sound profile you want.

With abyss stuff the gsx mini seems to be a good match with their diannas. Its recommended a few times by DMS in his videos and he does work for abyss now.

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My problem with dms and abyss in general is either dms is reviewing a sp200 or a Magnius or abyss is recommending the Xi eleven audio formula a or a wa 33.

The mini gsx is the only option in the sub $2k range they even suggested. I’m sure there are 20-30 amp options in the $1k - $2k range but neither abyss nor dms are trying them.

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Tone down the salt a bit, and more importantly other engineers LOVE matching Diana Phi’s with this amp. I will say that after playing around with a few DACs, this amp is a little picky with DACs but mostly fairly transparent. I do wish DMS would comment on the entire signal chains as I believe too many people do not focus enough on DACs.

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He mentioned in one of his videos recently he has a DCS Bartok on his desk, which is going to be out of the price range of almost everyone here.

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Definitely not trying to be salty just pointing out an obvious gap in product coverage reviews. Watching DMS’ channel and you get Kia Rio and Nissan Versa reviews (amp/dacs) and then go to the Abyss channel or an abyss headfi thread and it’s all Ferraris and McLarens. There is a gap in the Genesis, Acura, Lexus price range of gear being not reviewed other than the mini GSX. It’s not salty just a product coverage/pricing gap.

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Well I mean abyss only really makes those mclarens and ferraris, and if you buy an expensive car, you gotta now pay for that expensive insurance, expensive parts and maintenance, and expensive modifications and options you might want, abyss isn’t going to tell you to cheap out on amps and dacs since they know you will get a poor experience with their headphones, they are not really a budget oriented company (obviously). Abyss does work with both woo and xi audio so I highly doubt they are really going to go through and recommend and push many other products in that range (I would assume they have heard a ton of amps and narrowed things down), to both avoid conflicts of interest and keep a more careful curated selection of gear they think has good synergy with and brings the best out of their products

DMS is (hopefully) not a business trying to sell products when he does reviews, so what he reviews is I would assume somewhat dependent on what his audience wants and can buy. I would also assume he stays out of the high end at times specifically because he works for abyss and might be trying to avoid some bias in reviewing the higher end gear

There are a solid handful of good amps that come to mind in the 1-2k range that work well with abyss headphones (mainly the dianas), I just really wouldn’t expect the manufacturer or a reviewer connected to review most of them, I would expect more independent reviewers to do stuff like that

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I think there is a secondary thing here, most of the aforementioned 1-2K amps are from companies that have more traditional models using local distributors and usually promoting through the more traditional publications.

They just don’t send stuff out to a lot of Youtube reviewers, they’d probably expect local distributors to do that anyway, and the price points are high enough that it’s not conducive to him buying them to review.
There is a reason that you see a lot of Chinese gear on YouTube, it’s there primary marketing, and at the lower end of the market you’ve seen US manufacturers follow suit.
It just hasn’t happened to the same extent with the more expensive gear or at least the distributors are a lot more selective.

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That’s also kinda true yes, but honestly for most headphone amps they can still be bought and found online (whereas some 2ch stuff sometimes cannot or is really hard to deal with online) and you can find info on them in forums but I would agree that some of the amps in that range are using more traditional advertising and marketing which doesn’t always reach the target market that it needs to. Also a fair amount of these 1-2k range amps tend to be smaller projects that really don’t have the money to advertise or send out stuff (like ecp audio for example) that just rely on word of mouth almost, so small number high quality amps that really can’t take the normal review chain

They will pretty much send this stuff to anyone with a decent audience, it really can just be mainly marketing, they are trying to more appeal to the common person who has started with chifi and doesn’t have a ton of experience, so basically something that they can look at the specs or have some reviewer call it a giant killer or whatnot to get sales, not really relying on providing quality audio for experienced buyers and natural growth, more focusing on specs and on paper look and mass marketing for more mass appeal. Of course there is both good or bad chifi, but both the good and the bad still tend to take this approach

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Sorry didn’t mean to derail this thread. I do want the mini gsx just wondering if the amps I listed in a similar price range would work with the 1266s

I can’t find much info online about the rogue brystan and yulong hp amps. They are all in the same range and at least rogue and brystan have great brand recognition in full speaker amps. Just once I take a shot on one I’m done from budget perspective so it’s got to count. And with the gsx that is the only one that even gets a mention from reviewers.

The rogue amp was nice but admittedly I would only buy it for use as both a preamp and headphone amp, personally as a stand alone headphone amp idk if it’s worth it

The bha-1 is an older but respected headphone amp, sounds pretty nice

Most things I’ve tired from them have been ok but not really super impressive imo

I have a friend who, right after finishing residency and becoming a Doctor put every penny they had into buying a Million Dollar home.

Within a month the double high garage door broke and they were stuck with a $20,000 repair bill. They had to put it on a credit card, lol.

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Ive been looking at houses for too long now and if it has an inground pool its off my list usually. People dont realise the time and money needed for them.

I also went lcd-24 over pursuing a 4 as although i love the wood on the 4 and used the difference wasnt that much, it would of needed 1k more amp and probably more dac too.

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INTRODUCTION

I’ve had the HeadAmp GS-X Mini headphone amplifier on loan for nearly two months, and it’s been anchoring a lot of higher end review work in that span. So, it is time to give it its own write up. A caveat I want all readers to be aware of: this is the first amp in this price range I have any real experience with and writing a review of any piece of gear in a new price tier up is always a challenge; context is lacking. In terms of describing this amp’s place in the market, the best I can do here is comment on what this amp does above and beyond amps up to about $1200. I cannot comment on what it does compared to other amplifiers near it in price. A bonus commentary I can make, though, is how synergy starts to increase in importance as gear gets into this price range (ok, starting a bit lower) and higher. Alright, let’s dive in…

TL;DR

The GS-X Mini is a well-built, powerful, headphone amplifier that has a very no-nonsense honesty about its sound. It has the power to drive just about any headphone and drive it well and the grace to handle very easy loads just as well. With the right headphones its sonic highlights include detail retrieval, macrodynamics, and overall control. Its spatial presentation is on the intimate side and its imaging falls just sort of what many would consider holographic, but overall the Mini is a strong contender at $1800.

FEATURES & BUILD

OK, the name “Mini” is a bit of a misnomer, IMO. While the build is compact, it’s not necessarily small and there is a fair amount of weight here. Yes, there are headphone amplifiers out there that get crazy big and are not desk friendly. This amp isn’t quite that bad, but it has a non-negligible footprint and also needs room to breathe; it gets hot and has ventilation holes all over its top plate. That said, the construction is solid with an all-metal chassis. The front faceplate has a brushed finish and comes in several colors. The one loaned to me is a green that falls somewhere between apple Jolly Rancher and “You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry”:

Unfortunately, the green is discontinued.

The Mini is a fully-balanced amplifier. The back panel has one set each of balanced 3-pin XLR inputs and RCA single-ended inputs as well as a matching complement of pre-outs. The front panel has simple toggle switches for power, gain (hi or lo), headamp or preamp, and XLR or RCA input. The center of the front panel has a large volume knob. In the base configuration, that volume knob is attached to an ALPS RK27 potentiomenter. HeadAmp offers an option of a DACT CT-24 stepped attenuator for $200. The stepped attenuator makes turning the volume knob a clicky experience. The unit I have on loan has that stepped attenuator. There are also balanced 4-pin XLR and ¼” single-ended headphone outputs, as well. The power spec is a bit hard to find but it seems to be in the neighborhood of 4 Wpc from the balanced output. The amplifier is a Class A amp.

KNOW YOUR REVIEWER

My preferred genres are rock/metal and classical/orchestral music. I’m getting to know jazz more and enjoying quite a bit. I also listen to some EDM and hip-hop. My hearing quirks include a high sensitivity to midrange frequencies from just under 1KHz to around 3Khz, give or take. My ears are thus quick to perceive “shoutiness” in headphones in particular. I describe “shoutiness” as an emphasis on the ‘ou’ sound of ‘shout.’ It’s a forwardness in the neighborhood of 1KHz and/or on the first one or two harmonics above it (when I make the sound ‘ooooowwwww’ into a spectrum analyzer the dominant frequency on the vowel sound is around 930Hz, which also means harmonic spikes occur again at around 1860Hz and 2790Hz). In the extreme, it can have the tonal effect of sounding like a vocalist is speaking or singing through a toilet paper tube or cupping their hands over their mouth. It can also give instruments like piano, but especially brass instruments, an added ‘honk’ to their sound. I also get distracted by sibilance, or sharp ‘s’ and ‘t’ sounds that can make ssssingers sssssound like they’re forssssssing esssss ssssssounds aggresssssssively. Sibilance does not physically hurt my ears nearly as quickly as shout, though. It’s distracting because it’s annoying and unnatural. Readers should keep these hearing quirks in mind as they read my descriptions of sound.

SOUND

Test Equipment

DACs used include Holo Audio Spring 2 Level 2, Chord Hugo 2, Schiit Bifrost 2, Soekris dac1321. Headphones used include HiFiMan Arya and Edition X V2 (HexV2), Audeze LCD-2 prefazor (revision 1), Sennheiser HD6XX, Beyerdynamic DT880 600Ω. Those were all rather briefly used. I spent much more time with the foursome of Fostex TH900 with Lawton Purpleheart chambers, Audeze LCD-24, Abyss Diana Phi (DiPhi), and HiFiMan HE1000V2 (HekV2) on this amp.

I listened to the Mini almost exclusively from the balanced headphone output but used both the XLR and RCA inputs. The only difference between the inputs I noticed was the need to adjust the pot for the different input voltages.

General Comment

From the drop, I can say that the Mini was the workhorse over these past two months as I evaluated the 4 high-end/TOTL-ish headphones mentioned in the preceding paragraph and compared the four DACs from the same paragraph. It had the power, control, and detail retrieval necessary to help pick out what made each of those fancy cans tick. That doesn’t mean that all 4 headphones sounded their best on it, just that I quickly grew to trust that the Mini was simply being honest with me about what it saw in the signal because the resolution was always strong. I drop this comment here so that what follows may be considered relative to this reality.

Sound Signature

Picking out a catch-all description of sound signature for this amp – such as ‘warm’ or ‘energetic’ – was a challenge. That’s because synergy matters. The entire sound profile can be audibly different depending on what headphone is plugged into this amp. I think more often that not it comes across as neutral-bright, but know that I am hedging on that quite a bit. I say it because to my ear the upper mid-range and treble regions sounded a bit more emphasized than the lower mids or bass regions. This emphasis varies in degree. Many of my familiar headphones sounded slightly brighter and sharper (“sharp” not necessarily having a bad connotation here) than I am familiar with them sounding. However, this pattern is not immutable. My TH900 Lawtons, built on Fostex’s 1.5T biodynamic driver, can be treble-sharp at times. In fact, you’re just a quick Google search away from reading many accounts of listeners struggling with the aggressive treble of 1.5T-based headphones. On the Mini, they sounded bright and detailed but never sharp or piercing. Similarly, the DiPhi is an aggressively detail-forward headphone at times. The Mini smoothed that out and the treble is again bright and detailed without being sharp or fatiguing. However, more relaxed headphones like the LCD-24 or the HekV2 tended toward more sharpness and could at times be sibilant and piercing on the Mini moreso than the other amps I have on hand to listen with.

The bass, while not emphasized from a frequency-response standpoint, has good punch and texture. The amp sounds very in control, delivering an impactful leading edge with good decay and low frequency detail. Yet, it can still rumble when it needs to. There’s also good bass texture. In my HiFiMan Arya review I mentioned how the Arya was the first headphone to really introduce me to bass texture. The Mini was the amp driving the Arya as it did so.

To my ears the mids didn’t really announce themselves as being a standout or being a weakness. In fact, I noticed transparency in the mids more than anything else. For example, the Mini was able to showcase that the Holo Spring 2 dac is a little smoother yet more present in the mids than the Hugo 2, where the Hugo 2 was a little more laidback in terms of frequency response but more energetic and active in the mids. The difference is very subtle between those two, but the Mini had the chops to show me that difference.

Spatial Presentation

The Mini’s soundstaging is on the intimate side. Fans of big, wide soundstages are not likely to be pleased here. The stage isn’t too small or too cramped, it’s just not expansive and doesn’t always deliver that concert-hall-size of stage that helps with things like symphonies, pipe organ music, or grandiose movie soundtracks. The imaging, separation, and layering within that more intimate stage are solid, but don’t jump out at me as being a huge step up from the $1200 Violectric HPA V200. In my opinion, the intimate soundstage isn’t inherently a problem. It works well for some genres of music and some listeners just like it. I mean, an intimate soundstage has worked just fine for the Sennheiser HD6?? series for 25+ years now. I personally would have liked a bit more holographicity (spell check hates that one, lol) from the imaging, though, especially at $1800-2000.

Detail Retrieval

The resolution of the Mini is one of its standout qualities. It extracts a lot from the music. Texture is one such thing that I mentioned earlier. But that texture isn’t just in the bass. The resinous-ness of bows on strings is resolved beautifully. Any dissonance of an out-of-tune piano is presented. Did that drummer just click the sticks together? Yes, probably. And the Mini doesn’t hide it. This aspect of performance is the main reason I described this amp as my workhorse while evaluating headphones and DACs over the past couple of months. I just got the sense that it told me what was in the signal moreso than the other amps I’ve been working with to this point.

More on Synergy

I mentioned the treble response of various headphones in the Sound Signature subsection. I want to expand on synergy here. The Mini, along with the other high-end pieces I’ve had come in over these first 3 months of 2021 (Spring 2, Hugo 2, HekV2, DiPhi, LCD-24, TH900 Lawton) really drove home the importance of synergy. Those are all really great pieces of gear in their own rights. They don’t all play nicely together, and even if they get along well different combinations bring out or relax different aspects of the sound to greater extents than I’ve heard on entry-level and mid-fi gear. In my LCD-24 review I stated that I preferred that headphone with the Vio V200. The Mini’s aggression didn’t go well with the 24 and it became sharp and sibilant and shouty more than it did on the V200. Similarly with the HekV2. The HekV2 has a midrange recess around 1KHz that makes shout not a problem for me, but it’s already brighter in the treble than the 24 and that got emphasized even more on the Mini than with V200, Monolith Liquid Platinum, or Cayin HA-1Amk2. To my ear the HekV2 also has more low-end punch/slam on the V200 than the Mini. But, that’s the only headphone for which I can say that is true. Every other headphone punched harder on the Mini. Also, headphones that I expected to be more aggressive (TH900, DiPhi) were still very detail-forward but also smoother and more listenable on the Mini than the V200. There are two points to make here: (1) as price of gear goes up synergy becomes increasingly important and (2) if you’re considering buying the Mini you need to do your homework and be very careful what headphones you pair it with. With the Mini, my experience swung from not very enjoyable (HekV2) to meh (LCD-24) to pretty rockin’ (TH900 and DiPhi).

WHAT DO YOU GAIN WITH MINI COMING FROM MID-FI?

I’ve commented on this some throughout the Sound section, but will collect more thoughts here. My go-to personal solid-state amp has been the Violectric HPA V200. The V200 is wider in its soundstaging and right on the heels of the Mini in imaging, separation, and layering. The V200 has a warmer signature that is more headphone-invariant (but not entirely invariant) than the Mini is with its signature. The biggest sonic advantages the Mini has over the V200 are its resolution and timbre. It extracts and presents more detail, and makes things sound just slightly more true-to-life than the V200…when it’s paired with a headphone it gets along with. The Mini is more textured throughout the entire frequency spectrum. The TH900 Lawton and the DiPhi slam a lot harder with the Mini than the V200. Those two probably experience the biggest change in that behavior than any of the other headphones I tried. It’s also worth mentioning that ergonomically the Mini has some real advantages over the V200. The V200 has more gain settings, but they are toggled with dip switches on the back of the unit. The V200 also has both XLR and RCA inputs, but no selector switch at all – it defaults to the RCA input if both are receiving signal. The V200 also lacks a preamp section. So, while the V200 is sonically the closest to the Mini in technical performance in my personal collection, it’s also not nearly as easy to use as the Mini.

Compared to amps under $1000, the Mini is a bigger step up in everything but soundstage size. The size of soundstage isn’t necessarily a sign of quality, it’s more of a preference thing. But in every other technical area, the Mini outclasses my mid-fi amps rather noticeably. Those mid-fi amps include Monolith Liquid Platinum, Lake People G111, and Cayin HA-1Amk2 (tube amp). The one exception to this might be that the Liquid Platinum, especially when paired with the Bifrost 2 and with Amperex PQ Gold Pin tubes in it, can have amazingly natural timbre for the price point. Even so, the Mini has just the slightest of edge in timbre over that combo. Still, outside of that one specific aspect of one specific pairing though, you simply get increased technical proficiency across the board with the Mini.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Do your homework and make sure that whatever headphone(s) you plan to use with the Mini are headphones that the Mini gets along with. Assuming you’ve done that, yes, the Mini is a compelling headphone amplifier. It has excellent resolution and synergizes with some headphones in special ways that should be strongly considered if you’re shopping for an amp in this price range. It also comes in an attractive, well-built, and easy-to-use package. I will appreciate this amp for a long time because of what it has taught me about this hobby. I will miss it when its gone.

Thanks for reading, all. And enjoy the music! :beers:

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Thank you sir for another well detailed and well thought out review…

Now here is where you let the “Mic drop” !!!

Booyah!

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Booooooooo!

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Fantastic review. The “know your reviewer” section is something that’s critical yet missing in 99.9% of reviews. Also, comparisons with multiple gear and headphones is quite welcome. If you start a YouTube channel I’ll subscribe on day one.

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After reading this review, I see why I like my Vali 2+ so much in contrast. That limiting sound stage is REAL.

Note: The amp has a weird thing that I don’t think WaveTheory articulated well that others mention. For some headphones when the power doesn’t match up (especially for a single ended headphone) upper mids get a bit grainy which is weird. MUCH less noticeable out of the balanced output but moderately noticeable.

I tell people, the GS-X Mini is the THX amp you thought you bought that actually doesn’t suck.

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