Mark Levinson Stereo Amplifier No 53 User Manual

No53  
REFERENCE POWER AMPLIFIER  
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No53  
REFERENCE POWER AMPLIFIER  
BORN OF LISTENING  
linear counterparts – by several orders of magnitude. As  
New Mark Levinson products are not introduced with  
the seasons, or according to arbitrary marketing  
schedules. They’re introduced as new technologies,  
which have shown promise on paper, are perfected and  
proven through rigorous in-house development and  
o
points of comparison, the Mark Levinson N 33 is rated  
at 300 watts into 8 ohms, measures 31 x 14 x 31 inches  
o
and weighs in at 435 pounds, while the N 53 – at 500  
watts, 21 x 9 x 21 inches and 135 pounds – is nearly  
twice as powerful, substantially more compact and 300  
pounds lighter.  
o
evaluation procedures. In the case of the N 53, a highly  
experienced evaluation team was assembled to conduct  
blind and sighted listening tests of a novel switching  
amplifier prototype, measuring it against past and  
present Mark Levinson linear power amplifiers as  
well as a range of competitive products.  
o
The N 53 is capable of generating truly phenomenal  
power levels to support both the instantaneous and  
continuous demands of virtually any speaker load. More  
o
impressive, the N 53 accomplishes this feat while main-  
taining a constant, thermally balanced operating temper-  
ature. Although always warm to the touch, the operat-  
As the development process wore on, power amplifiers  
deemed sonically inferior were removed from further  
testing. Several judges were surprised to learn that the  
new switching amplifier was never among them. In  
o
ing temperature of the N 53 will not vary – or exhibit  
even the slightest change in performance capability –  
regardless of how long or hard the amplifier is driven.  
o
fact, the early N 53 prototype emerged as a winner,  
with several panelists awarding it top honors for speed,  
dynamics and clarity. It was, to say the least, an  
unexpected result. For a mere prototype switching  
amplifier to hold its own against linear amplifiers that  
were deemed to be the very best the marketplace had to  
offer – time-honored Mark Levinson models included –  
meant we knew we were dealing with a  
The downside of switching power amplifiers? Because  
they switch output devices on and off in very rapid  
succession to mimic the input signal – one set of output  
devices drives the positive half of the waveform, and a  
separate set drives the negative half – switching noise  
and dead bands become significant design challenges.  
paradigm-shifting design.  
SWITCHING OFF SWITCHING NOISE  
Convinced that the minor quibbles that had come up  
during the initial listening tests could be overcome, the  
In most switching power amplifier designs, a brick-wall  
filter is placed above the audio band to remove switch-  
ing noise. But because of the filter’s physical proximity  
to the audio band, this has a significant adverse effect  
on phase relationships, the smoothness of frequency  
response and imaging. In short, it degrades overall  
sound quality. To overcome this challenge,  
o
N 53 project was commissioned, and development of  
the first new Mark Levinson Reference power amplifier  
in more than a decade began in earnest.  
THE TECHNICAL CHALLENGES  
Mark Levinson engineers devised Interleaved Power  
Technology (IPT), a patented method of raising the  
All power amplifier designs have inherent pros and cons  
based on their design topology, and switching designs  
are no exception. On the plus side, switching amplifiers  
are more powerful, smaller and run cooler than their  
o
amplifier’s switching frequency. In the case of the N 53,  
the switching frequency is raised to an extremely high  
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2MHz, delivering two major sonic advantages. First, it  
pushes the fundamental switching noise and associated  
harmonics so far above the limit of human hearing that  
they have no direct effect on sound quality. (In fact,  
most audio testing devices can’t even measure such  
frequencies.) Second, it allows for easier removal of  
switching noise from the signal with much gentler notch  
filters, which have no negative effect on the crucial  
audio band. The result is frequency response that is  
ruler-flat across the entire audio spectrum, dipping only  
a few dB at 100kHz. That’s impressive performance for  
any power amplifier. For a switching power amplifier, it’s  
nothing short of remarkable.  
o
Toward that end, the N 53 chassis is a compact vertical  
design with four separate internal compartments to  
shield and isolate different kinds of circuitry. The power  
supply – an extremely low-noise toroidal transformer  
with an oversized 2.8kVA transformer and four  
47,000µF low-ESR capacitors – is placed in the bottom  
compartment to reduce interference from magnetic  
fields and high-current devices. The two middle sections  
contain four amplifier modules, which are arranged sym-  
metrically and mirror-imaged to maximize separation.  
The top compartment includes the control circuitry,  
which has an independent regulated power supply that’s  
shielded from the rest of the amplifier to prevent audio-  
circuit interference.  
ELIMINATING DEAD BANDS  
Eight large coils – two per amplifier module – essentially  
create four separate power amplifiers, which are respon-  
sible for the exceptionally high power levels, large  
The other technical challenge for switching power  
amplifiers are dead bands – silent gaps in audio output  
created when the output devices driving the positive  
half of the signal and outputs driving the negative half  
are both turned off. This occurs every time the audio  
waveform crosses from positive amplitude to negative  
amplitude, or back again (about forty thousand times per  
second for a 20kHz audio signal). Because even the best  
output devices cannot switch on and off instantaneously,  
a signal gap is created between each half of every wave-  
form. Large gaps are highly detrimental to the audio  
signal, but even the tiniest gaps have a negative impact  
on sound quality – listeners will perceive that something  
isn’t right.  
o
dynamic and stunning clarity of the N 53. Working  
together, these amplifiers raise the effective switching  
frequency from 500kHz to 2MHz, producing the best  
sound quality ever achieved in a switching amplifier.  
Special attention was paid to the signals that pass  
between different boards. Extensive use of low-voltage-  
differential signaling (LVDS) for control signals maxi-  
mizes their integrity, while all analog signals remain  
balanced for superb noise rejection.  
ITS YOUR TURN TO LISTEN  
With the technical hurdles of switching power amplifiers  
Dead bands can be minimized by keeping both sets of  
outputs off for as short a time as technically possible.  
But doing that increases the possibility that opposing  
output devices may come on at the same time –  
doubling the voltage they draw – which could easily  
damage or destroy them. Engineers are forced to arrive  
at a middle ground between sound quality and reliability  
when designing switching power amplifiers.  
behind us and with the internal layout finalized, the  
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N 53 development team headed back to the listening  
room. We listened with different types of music. We  
listened with different speakers, electronics and cables.  
o
We listened in different rooms. We compared the N 53  
to other Mark Levinson power amplifiers. We compared  
it to the power amplifiers of our competitors. We  
listened blind, we listened sighted and we flew in  
customers from around the world to listen with us.  
Only then, when we were convinced that we had  
coaxed the last ounce of performance from this  
Mark Levinson engineers saw this as unacceptable and  
o
instead developed a patented technology for the N 53  
that permits both sets of output devices to be on  
simultaneously for short periods of time. Dead bands  
are completely eliminated, without in any way  
compromising the life expectancy of the output devices.  
o
revolutionary design, did the N 53 go into production.  
Now we invite you to listen to the world’s new  
Reference standard, and experience the incredible depth  
and detail it uncovers in any source material.  
OPTIMIZING THE LAYOUT  
The primary function of any Mark Levinson  
Reference product is to reproduce sound at the purest  
level possible. With power amplifiers, the challenge  
is to amplify the incoming audio signal without  
distorting it and to effortlessly drive a wide range of  
loudspeaker impedances at any volume level with the  
forcefulness and grace that Reference-quality sound  
reproduction demands.  
The modulator board is the “brain” of the system. It is located at the top of the  
amplifier in order to provide shielding from the main amplifier section.  
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This side view shows the  
four different compartments  
of the amplifier: the power  
supply section at the bottom,  
the middle section with the  
four amplifiers, the top section  
with the control circuitry  
(modulator), and a separate  
enclosed box (top left) that  
houses the analog input board.  
No53 Reference Power Amplifier  
Input and output connectors  
One balanced XLR input  
One unbalanced RCA input  
Two pairs of “Hurricane” loudspeaker output binding  
posts with banana-plug sockets (banana-plug socket  
not available for some models)  
Control connectors  
Two Link2 ports (one input and one output)  
One Ethernet port  
One 3.5mm mono (tip/sleeve) mini plug trigger  
input, 3-12Vdc  
One 3.5mm mono (tip/sleeve) mini plug trigger  
output, 3-12Vdc  
3-Pin IEC standard power connector  
Rated output power  
500W @ 8Ω, 1000W @ 4Ω  
Power ratings are measured as RMS power from  
20Hz to 20kHz with no more than 0.1% THD  
+
Frequency response  
Signal-to-noise ratio  
Input impedance  
Voltage gain  
Within 0.1dB from 10Hz to 20kHz  
–85dB, reference level: 2.83 Vrms (1W @ 8Ω)  
100 kΩ (balanced); 50 kΩ (unbalanced)  
26.8dB  
Input sensitivity  
2.89V for maximum rated output power  
Power requirements  
100V~, 120V~, 230V~, 640W, factory-set  
for destination country  
Dimensions  
Height: 20-3/8" (530mm)  
Width: 8-7/16" (214mm)  
Depth: 20-3/8" (518mm)  
Weight  
Net weight: 135 lb (61.3kg)  
Shipping weight: 165 lb (75kg)  
Operating environment  
Operating temperature: 0º to 35ºC (32º to 95ºF)  
Storage temperature: –30º to 75ºC (–22º to 167ºF)  
Relative humidity: 95% maximum without condensation  
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©2008 Harman International Industries, Incorporated.  
All rights reserved.  
Mark Levinson and the Mark Levinson logo are trademarks  
of Harman International Industries, Incorporated, registered in the  
United States and/or other countries.  
Features, specifications and appearance are subject to  
change without notice.  
Part No. ML53LIT 8/08  
www.marklevinson.com  
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