HA-L7A: Yamaha’s First Audiophile-Level Headphone Amplifier Announced

Posted on 28th September, 2023

HA-L7A: Yamaha’s First Audiophile-Level Headphone Amplifier Announced

The Japanese company has announced its first-ever headphone amp, the HA-L7A, using Yamaha's patented technologies, such as its Floating and Balanced Power Amplifier.

The amplifier has an interesting L-shaped design, with two toroidal transformers mounted on the main frame above the power supply board to minimise the power supply path. The power supply also has independent transformers for the minute-signal circuitry in the front stage as well as the amplifier section in the second stage.

Yamaha HA-L7A

The HA-L7A runs on the ESS ES9038PRO DAC chip, with a dedicated master clock and crystal oscillator with ultra-low phase noise. The chip has a built-in eight-channel D/A converter that applies four-channel conversion to the left and right sides. With an output of 1,000mW + 1,000mW, the amplifier is powerful enough to drive most premium headphones, in addition to Yamaha's new flagship YH-5000SE headphones.

Yamaha HA-L7A

Yamaha has also implemented its Floating and Balanced Power Amplifier technology here, optimising it for the headphone amplifier with four sets of output stage circuits floating above the ground. Headphones can be driven without alternating between balanced and unbalanced to avoid sound quality discrepancies from different output terminals. All circuitry is also independent of the ground, eliminating external ground-related noise, so we are told.

Yamaha HA-L7A

Made out of aluminium, the chassis is sandblasted for a textural feel, with the master volume and mode selector dials located on the rightmost edge. Next to those dials, there's an OLED display for information such as the input source, sampling frequency, volume and which Sound Field preset is active. The chassis is made with rigid parts, including an 8mm thick extruded aluminium top, with the toroidal transformers mounted on a 2mm-thick steel plate to eliminate any adverse effects from vibrations. Weighing in at 5.3kg, the HA-L7A has dampers between each steel foot and the bottom panel for even more vibration dampening.

Yamaha HA-L7A

Yamaha's Sound Field effects can be found in the company's AV receivers and headphones, and in the HA-L7A, six presets are optimised for different use cases such as music, videos and more. In addition, the amplifier supports DSD 11.2MHz, or DSD256 if you prefer, as well as 32-bit /384kHz PCM files. There's also a Pure Direct function that bypasses all circuitry not present in the original source, such as DSP processing and DAC converters for analogue audio.

Yamaha HA-L7A

As for connectivity, the HA-L7A offers a 4-pin XLR balanced headphone jack, a 4.4mm balanced port, an unbalanced 6.3mm port, as well as a variety of other ports on the rear, including coaxial, optical, USB-B and built-in XLR and RCA pre-out/line-out ports. With those, the HA-L7A can even be used as a D/A converter or preamp.

Priced at £3,499, the Yamaha HA-L7A will be available in Q4 2023.

Visit Yamaha for more information

    Gallery

    Cheryl Tan's avatar

    Cheryl Tan

    After diving down the custom IEMs rabbit hole since she was 18, Cheryl has embarked on a long journey trying out as many audio products as possible ever since. She’s still waiting for the day a company can create a pair of true wireless earbuds that sound just as good as wired earphones.

    Posted in:Hi-Fi Headphones
    Tags: yamaha  connected distribution 

    JOIN IN THE DISCUSSION

    Want to share your opinion or get advice from other enthusiasts? Then head into the Message Forums where thousands of other enthusiasts are communicating on a daily basis.
    CLICK HERE FOR FREE MEMBERSHIP

    00002477