The Article
YAMAHA’S WXC-50 & WXA-50: AMPLIFIERS…From Any Angle
27th November 2016
A pair of rinky, dinky amplifiers from Yamaha offer just enough facilities for a small footprint chassis, including MusicCast. Paul Rigby reviews the WXC-50 pre-amplifier and the WXA-50 integrated amplifier
Both of these amplifiers arrive in an almost identical chassis, giving the pair a distinct ‘family’ resemblance that will allow both to easily fit into a living room environment. Both arrive with MusicCast Wi-Fi streaming as standard and come with a 48bit digital volume control. Both can also be mounted vertically to further minimise the overall footprint. They also support AirPlay and, where available, Spotify, Napster, Sirius XM, Juke and Pandora as well as DSD 5.6MHz and FLAC/WAV/ AIFF 24bit/192kHz. Finally, they both span 215 x 51.5 x 245.9mm.
The first of the two amp boxes, the WXC-50 pre-amplifier. You can also turn off the Pre-amp mode and use the device as a simple network audio player. This box weighs 1.44kg. The 70W WXA-50 weighs in at 1.94kg. Check out the accompanying images to see a rundown of controls, sockets et al. The aerial is the home of the screw-in, multi-position, Wi-Fi aerial.
IN USE
To play the USB stick of digital files, I decided to download and install the associated and in-house developed MusicCast app on my iPhone 6S. USB file control was a lot friendlier via the app than punching buttons on a chassis and hoping for the best. Download and software installation was easy but the final set-up was overly difficult. It took me around 20 minutes when it really should have taken me, what, three?
MusicCast is not a Bluetooth system but utilises a Wi-Fi connection. To install it, you press the Connect button on the front of either chassis for five seconds until the adjacent connection light flashes. Then you open the app itself and follow the onscreen prompts which involves bouncing between it and the phone’s Wi-Fi Settings screen. In that Settings screen, you wait for the MusicCast option to appear as one of the choices within the available local Wi-Fi connections list. Well it did, eventually. Nothing was seen until my third try but I finally connected without a problem once it made an appearance.
Back to the app but my trial was not yet over. The app failed to complete the install sequence another three times but I got there at the fourth attempt. Why these issues occurred can only be conjecture. Was it down to my phone? Was it Yamaha’s fault? Was it something to do with my Wi-Fi signal? Was it something else? I can only say that no other, non-Yamaha, device had issues in my listening room or anywhere else in the building at this time.
Nevertheless, once connected and installed, the app worked flawlessly. It showed the song title, sleeve art (not for WAV rips though), CD-type music controls plus EQ controls. My only gripe is that I would have like to have seen a report on the quality of the file type being played. For example, when playing the jazz piece, St. Thomas from Sonny Rollins, this is a 24bit/96kHz file but this information was never revealed by the app. I wish I could have seen that information on the app screen. I don’t mind the lifestyle facade that Yamaha is trying to promote here. I can even live with the irritatingly Apple-like paternalistic ‘we’ve-decided-that-you-don’t-need-the-information-so-we-won’t-give-it-to-you’, non-techie approach to the app but it would have been nice to have found the said figures buried somewhere, for those who really want it.
SOUND QUALITY
I began the sound tests playing a the CD version of Earth, Wind & Fire’s Let’s Groove. This group was a busy outfit on stage and within their arrangements. There is plenty going on here and it takes quite an amplifier to sort everything out. Even behind the conglomeration of the principle voices and instruments, there are plenty of subtle and tiny effects that pop up here and there.
Have you ever seen those word association tests that psychologists use to diagnose the mental state of a patient? You say ‘good’, I say bad. You say ‘black’, I say ‘white’, you say ‘The Himalayas’, I say ‘Marilyn Monroe’. You know the sort of thing. Well, if you said, ‘bass’, I would say ‘Yamaha’. Such is the company’s reputation and concentrated effort to effect a low frequency-based personality. If any knows how to ‘do’ bass, Yamaha’s yer man.
Through the WXA-50, I was most impressed by that signature Yamaha bass. Impressed, not because there was a lot if it – there was – but because of how the bass power was integrated within the soundstage. The amount of focus placed upon the bass gave it a sharp, short, ‘bam!’ of an arrival. The punch was in then out in a jiffy, giving the bass a tremendous transient speed and response that provided drive to the entire track. The tightness of the bass was allied to its careful positioning in the soundstage. There was no hint of blooming or any threat of it infecting the midrange. This meant that secondary percussion, such as wooden block strikes, on the track My Love from the same group, where not only recognisable but also integrated their own reverb tails. Any bass smearing at all would have veiled such delicacies.
Midrange was incisive, for the price, digging out all of those little sound effects that I mentioned above, allowing the ear to seek them out without too much trouble. Yes, there was a slight spotlight shining on the upper mids during vocal crescendos but mainly at high volumes. It wasn’t a big problem, though. For the most part, I enjoyed the tremendous clarity that the midrange afforded and, for the price, the detail that it presented.
Turning to Sonny Rollins and his track, St. Thomas running via the USB port from a USB stick at 24bit/96kHz and controlled via the MusicCast app, I was impressed by the midrange insight that, for the price, provided space and air for the complex percussive sequences on this track. Drums were punchy but also characterful, tracking the complexity of the different drums well while cymbals strikes were relatively fragile, despite that slight spotlight giving the treble a tad of stridency at high volumes. Again, though, I saw this effect mostly at higher volumes and considering the price tag it was not a great problem.
Finally, I turned to Bluetooth and Marvin Gaye’s Mercy Mercy Me played as a MP3. Yamaha has implemented MP3 streaming well and the processing produced a pleasant and, considering the poor quality of the inherent file type, relatively sweet presentation that never grated or hurt the ears. Vocals were comparatively well rounded, avoiding the thin and edgy sound from other, less well realised, hardware.
Next up was the preamp, the WXC-50. For this test, I turned to ‘old technology’ and a pair of Class A power mono blocks. The small in stature but wholly meaty Valvet Classe-A Mono-amps A1r, to be precise. I’ve always enjoyed their open-ended and focused output and they have been used when shelf space has been lacking. As such, they pair up very well with the similarly low footprint WXC-50. Hooking up is easy with the A1r mono blocks sliding into the Pre Out sockets at the rear of the Yamaha chassis.
The reason for connecting the A1r blocks was to show that the Yamaha can connect to older hardware or hardware lacking in modern connective facilities. The thought of using the A1rs with a USB source and as part of a streaming set-up was an intriguing one.
I began with a slightly more traditional source, CD and back to Earth, Wind & Fire. The combination of the dynamic and high energy track, Let’s Groove, the bass rich Yamaha and the punchy A1r produced the sort of low end that can punch through brick walls and keep on going further than Godzilla in a bad mood. That, of course, is another benefit of the Yamaha preamp, you can tailor its musical personality, depending on what you connect to it. Yes, that slightly strident edge to the app mids was evident at higher volumes and during crescendos but, once more, at normal volumes it was no great concern.
Generally speaking, mids were insightful, detailed and with a slightly clinical edge that enabled the WXC-50 to dig deep into the mix to extract even the most subtle and shy of effects that often resided within the complex arrangement of this song. Solid state fans will adore the sound from the Yamaha, which could easily become a dictator of a small, wayward country, such is the measure of strength, power and no compromise approach it has to sound.
Turning to the USB port and Sonny Rollin’s higher resolution source via St. Thomas, the Yamaha successfully fed a relatively open and spacious signal, for the price, to the monoblocks. The result combined an energetic yet detailed output that was full of texture and character, especially from the Rollins saxophone while the percussion produced a musical and dynamic presentation, brimming with energy and motive power. Piano was a little strident at times but that was of no real surprise at this price point. The piano has to be the most difficult of instruments to control for any budget component and the Yamaha made a good fist of the chaotic and disorderly frequencies from it.
Finally, taking advantage of MusicCast and streaming Marvin Gaye’s Mercy Mercy Me from iPhone 6S I was once again impressed as to how the Yamaha delivered the low quality MP3 to the ear. That is, in a relatively mature, dignified and listenable manner. Tonal balance was pretty good for a MP3 while Gaye’s delivery was smooth and easy on the ear.
CONCLUSION
Both units offer an attractively small footprint that bodes well, obviously, if you are bereft of desk and shelf space. The little integrated amp offers just enough connections to satisfy most music fans. This little amp also offers a big sound: powerful and detailed for the low price it demands. Excellent value.
The preamp, meanwhile provides a goodly selection of features that is ideal to upgrade older technology or extend the facilities of a hi-fi system lacking in certain areas.
YAMAHA WXA-50 MUSICCAST WIRELESS STREAMING AMPLIFIER
Price: £430
Web: uk.yamaha.com/en
Tel: 01908 366700
GOOD: value for money, small footprint, focused bass, detailed mids
BAD: slight midrange stridency at high volumes, temperamental MusicCast app
RATING: 7
YAMAHA WXC-50 MusicCast Wireless Streaming Preamplifier
Price: £300
Web: uk.yamaha.com/en
Tel: 01908 366700
BAD: midrange stridency at high volumes, MusicCast app connection
RATING: 7
To watch of video of both units in action, click HERE.
REFERENCE SYSTEM
Apple iPhone 6S
Astell & Kern AK120 digital player
Leema Elements CD Player
Rega Brio-R amplifier
Spender S3/5R2 speakers
Acoustic Research Radiance One Speakers
Black Rhodium/Chord Shawline cables
Hello ,
Your review made me think about getting this pre amp when I was in search of a DAC just with an optical input to get the tv in mainly for youtube and Netflix.
BT and streamer options were spot on as well.
So a whole new world of music opened.
until that time my set up included a
Rotel RC 995 as the center of
Thorens TD 160 , pc, deck , marantz 63 kiss etch. Now i have no use for the rotel which was used mainly for the phono stage and the remote..
My wxc 50 works good all around but
my loaded pc acting as a server causes the music cast app to freeze, has never read all my music folders , only way to play music is to actually open browser and navigate from there. It is not a USB DAC , you cannot connect trough wire but that is ok since you supposedly play all your files trough the network.. but my Yamaha does not read the flac files, says not supported for queuing or playing,
This has become very frustrating, 90% of my 6TB collection is in flac form.. i am thinking about getting a NAS to address this problem but I am not sure if this will solve anything. .
Also what do I need to setup a second zone ?
I mean with amp and speakers already in place ( the bedroom,) some music cast device, but not a wireless speaker..
Thanks for the update,
Cheers from Greece,
Akis
Hi Akis – let me ask Yamaha about this one. Be back ASAP.
This from Yamaha, Akis, “MusicCast should have no problem playing FLAC files, do we know what server program is being used on the PC? In a second room if an amp & speakers are already present, you could look at either the WXAD-10 or WXC-50 to act as the MusicCast source/control.”
Hey, thanks for the answer !
Windows Media player 12 acts as a library.
That should be enough, right ?
I can play all the files natively on the PC..
Also, some things like dimmer and the jitter cannot be adjusted, stays always on level 1.
I tried to uninstall the app with no luck.
Flac files are not supported üòï
Do you know If this problem is solved
with a NAS ?
And WXAD-10 it is then !
A quick addition from Yamaha for you, “Windows Media player 12 should work. Does copying a FLAC file onto USB stick, then playing from the USB input on the WXC-50 work? What input is being used when Dimmer & Jitter not selectable? Can we check the product is running ver. 2.60 firmware.
NAS drives are of course another option, however without knowing the cause, I cannot confirm it will solve this.”
The flac files have no problem being played on the USB. That’s a start 🙂 And excellent sound indeed. Firmware version up to date . So it’s a software thing most probably on the PC, how can this be fixed? All codes have been downloaded. The library showing in the app is not even a third of what is inside.
Also, same thing happens if I try to access the Ubuntu laptop on mini DLNA. Shows the first folder in the app but absolutely no music after that..
Thank you Paul,
Cheers Yamaha.
Final comments from Yamaha, I reckon. Hope this helps, “I‚Äôm not sure where we can go from here, clearly something is not right. I too expect it to be settings on the computer. This unfortunately is difficult to support over email, as you can imagine. The guys in AV Tech support agreed that using a NAS drive is a better more reliable solution in sharing & broadcasting music. However we cannot guarantee it will fix the problems this customer is having.”
Hi Paul,
I am planning to get a network player to stream and play from a NAS, with a possible extension to other rooms. The amp is a Marantz PM6006. The Yamaha WXC-50 seems a very attractive option, although I probably wouldn’t make much use of its preamp features. I was wondering if the smaller WXAD-10 streamer is too much of a downgrade in sound quality? Do you know how the two compare? Should I still go for the WCX-50? Or maybe can you suggest an alternative? I was also looking at the Arcam rPlay, although the PlayFI app seems less user friendly than the MusicCast platform. Budgetwise, I’d stay in this range.
Thanks for any comments or suggestions you might have.
Best, Samu
If streaming is the priority, Samu, then I would buy a specialist box like the rPlay which will offer high quality sound output alongside your Marantz.
Thank you for the advice, I’ll check the rPlay then!
Hi Paul ,
Trying to simplify (& minimise footprint in a cupboard) my hifi while moving away from a home cinema setup…. Would the WXC-50 be a good pairing with a compact power amp (like the Edge A2 you reviewed) to drive a pair of MA silver floorstanders? I will also be feeding in audio from my beloved old Thorens TD150 via a phono pre-amp and like the idea of streaming this to my dining room as well! Worried the R-n602 or the WXA-50 may be a bit budget / not good enough sound???
You don’t mention that all important word ‘cash’ so I’m not sure if you’re looking for a low cost work-around or whether you have a budget to utilise here Neil. The Yamaha is a great way to pack in lots of features but I wouldn’t use it as a specialist pre-amp to drive something of the quality of an Edge power amp. I’d go for something a mite more specialist for that area. Do you have a budget figure at all? Again, if sonics are a priority, I would buy a specialist streamer box and then plug that into a pre-amp.
Hi Paul,
Very good point – i would prefer to save up over time (and continue to use my existing Yamaha Aventage Amp chromecast audio for a while) if it meant better sound in the long-run. I would be aiming to spend absolute max ¬£1000 for amp streamer. Anything below this I would invest in an upgraded cart for my thorens 🙂
Convenience is a big decider – I was thinking of using the WXC-50 auto-on power amp / 12v trigger to do everything from my phone, as well as add in an additional WXA-50 to power some smaller speakers in another room, hence the drift towards the musicast ecosystem….I tend to listen to vinyl / spotify roughly 50/50.
Thanks,
Neil
Hi Neil – yep, if a convenience/lifestyle thing is what you’re after then go for the Yamaha. The company also has plenty of other components that you can also buy that will plug into the system as a whole.
If sound quality is a priority, then a separate pre-amp of more audiophile nature plus a separate streamer is more what you’re looking for. The streamer? An Arcam rPlay is good at around ¬£300. As for pre-amps for the remaining ¬£700? Here’s a few ideas (I’m not necessarily recommending the retailers, I’m using the links as a handy reference)
https://www.audiodestination.co.uk/amplifiers/preamplifier/parasound-zpre3-two-channel-preamplifier
https://www.audiodestination.co.uk/amplifiers/preamplifier/pro-ject-pre-box-rs-preamplifier
Hi Paul, thanks for your review! Could you please help me with this question: Can I use the WXC-50 to output to multiple systems. My use case is the following: I have 3 sources coming into to my pre-amp (TV, Network, AUX), and I’d like to be able to output to my active speakers (Nubert Nupro 500) via optical AND to my headphone-amp (Shiit Magni 2) via RCA. Basically, if blasting music via speakers is no option (late night etc) I want to switch to my headphones on my Shiit.
Can the WXC-50 deliver? I know it has several output options. But can I manage what output it activates, or all all outputs activated simultaneously? Thanks so much! Cheers, C
Thanks for the question, Calvin – so what’s your set-up, you have the Yamaha, Schiit and speakers. Anything else?
In the meantime, Yamaha also added this for you, “…the WXC-50 can output to multiple systems via Aux out, Preout (fixed or variable), digital coax (fixed or variable), optical (fixed or variable) & like you have pointed out Bluetooth transmission. There is no way of managing the outputs, they are all active simultaneously. With the exception of Bluetooth transmission which is switched on / off.”
Hello Paul,
I am from India. I own an audiophile grade Apart Champ 3D Amplifier with 4 Apart Champ6 speakers and Apart Sub2400.
The amplifier has only XLR input. I would like to use this system for music listening needs but want a music streaming player like WXC-50. I would like to play music over wifi and possibly also wired through LAN . cabling (may need to put in a NAS or Laptop to store the music)My knowledge about music systems and their connectivity is very limited though I enjoy listening to music. Will this configuration work? Would you have a better suggestion for me. You help would be highly appreciated.
Thanks for your question, Biswajit – do you have a budget that I can work with?
Hi Paul. This is a busy thread.
Anyway here’s my question. Do you think the WXC-50 would be a good enough pre amp to run the AE1 actives?
Thanks.
Depends on your budget, John. If you can, I’d go for something better but, if cash is an issue then of course…