Living in the 21st century is a promise land, an endless playground of opportunities full of virtual dreaming and a products, that supposed to make our lives easier and more compelling. Even in high-end audio :).
We’re been told how this vastness is a luxury itself and how should just enjoy the progress and discover all the latest possibilities given us by the technological breakthroughs. While I can relate and agree to a certain point with the electronic industry, general saying the same for high end audio “niche” industry would certainly put me into the shady box. No 50 shades of grey needed ;)…
Have we come far? Yes. Have we progress so extendedly and profoundly? Heck no. Progression with high-end audio did encounter some needed bumps and perhaps its fair to say that we’re finally getting somewhere with the exotic and boutique ventures. Yet, we’re still spinning the old black vinyl records, trying to solve the problems with digital audio and deal with so called state of the art digital amplifiers to name a few discussion cues.
REDGUM
Even before getting deeper into this integrated amplifier from down under, I’ve done my homework and explored a bit more about the company. By any means this is not your ordinary brand as its no ordinary product. Of course in most positive sense of the word. These days I do prefer finding out rare gems pushing the bar higher with their own vision and pursuits of the sound rather then dealing with mass production mediocrity and REDGUM alerts with more then enough attention points.
I’ve asked REDGUM team to answer few questions to reveals what so different and special about the RGi120ENR…
RGi120ENR is very different sounding and performing integrated. Can you elaborate on why it sound so different?

The unanticipated beauty of being at a live performance is that it is also calibrating our brains to “know” the sound of each voice or instrument. So that when we get back home and experience that “rightness” again from a well-captured recording, it means the brain critic has been able to tick the box of “I know that sound! All present and correct!”, and take a back seat. Only then can the listener relax fully into the moment (or momentousness) of the music … (and you sure can’t fool REDGUM owners who are also musicians!) … rather than the brain needing to continue to check it all out on a technical level.
Speaking of technicalities, one I should also mention, is the focus on supporting an extended frequency range – 0.8Hz to 100+kHz. As this was present from the very first design, that made REDGUM amplifiers SACD-ready 6 years before that hit the market. 😉 But such detail at the top cannot be added in isolation. Untrained ears can substantiate that balancing an extended top with good bass extension, along with all of the middle in between, gives the most believable reproduction so your brain decides it isn’t a reproduction!
On the topic of bass, another factor that is definitely palpable is the high Damping Factor from REDGUM amplifiers.( And that’s as measured at the speaker terminals.) And that bass needs to be offered with its sub-sonics as we need to hear and feel it to make sense of it.
Bring it all together with Dual Mono’s ability to adjust for an image that snaps the performer into position as “flesh and blood” … maybe that’s enough as I think you get the sense that it isn’t just one factor! And if they really work together, one can then boldly say that a REDGUM’s neutrality is distinctive … even if it is a new kind of oxymoron! ; )
Your signature heatsinks clearly stand out. They seems too have a story of it own?
“Yes, it is a case of “cool” steam ahead with that heat sink! I once went off to China for 2 weeks leaving our biggest Monoblocks, the new Magnificata (>350/>550/>900W / ch into 8/4/2Ω) in my partner’s care to try and destroy them in my absence as she put a musical programme together for The Melbourne Audio Club presentation. The ultimate test was on a series of stinking hot days and the air con was left off. i.e. 40+°C outside/ 39°C inside the room and with the amp running at orchestral “ffff” for the whole day. The heats sinks just tipped blood heat. ; )
Firstly, the name …
We call it the SignWave heat sink because it was designed for our bigger Signature Series (ENR) amplifiers, and because the front edge line formed by the fins looks like a sine wave. (As to the “ENR” it sounds just like I sign my name – IanR – hence it is used to denote our Signature amplifiers!)
This heat sink was introduced in 2005 on our first Signature Series amplifier, the RGi120ENR (now the Articulata in the Amplifolia range), then the Monoblock power amplifiers followed suit. And since our 21st Birthday, with the re-designing of the biggest Monoblock (RGM300ENR) into the Magnificata Monoblock System (in the Amplifolia range), all of its 3 units (pre and powers) include this distinctive heat sink.
As to the “Why?” …
”Technically”, I just love the look! ; )
As to the “Where?!!” … well, I could say it is just a reflection of how Aussies are seen by the Rest Of The World. We hang by our feet as we “live in a land Down Under”, so why not have a heat sink Down Under?! ; )
More formally stated, our design always leads to this questioning as to why not have the fins on the sides or the back. Agreed, fins dissipate heat most efficiently when they are vertically orientated. But when you factor in the sheer size (as in surface area) of this heat sink, it then doesn’t need such a lot of air flow to keep it cool. And the openness of the “sine” curve allows a generous clearance for air to convect through and up from the heat sink. In fact, with one of those “through” directions always being forward, this creates a real positive for dissipation when units are positioned in cabinets.
So, as the flat “back”/top surface of the heat sink then becomes the base of the amplifier, even driving low impedance loads long and hard means the metal never gets warmer than blood temperature. A case of because the area of the heat sink is “overkill” to the nth degree, the amp doesn’t raise a sweat with the more difficult loads. This was the only technical test it needed to deliver on, so we knew after one long, hard session it had passed with flying colours! Along with being rock solid as a heat sink!
As implied, the initial impetus for this design was to meet the changing market urging the use of drivers with ever lower impedances. So that there was plenty of heat sinking to “future proof your system”, it seemed only logical to re-design our bigger ENR versions (prior to the Black Series) to use a heat sink as the whole base plate of the amplifier.
A little detour: I find it interesting to reflect on how “how much?” heat sinking has changed over these two decades, going way back before Car Audio had an effect. (For this I have to refer to our original wood-fronted REDGUM amplifiers.) When the first Integrated (RGi120) model was released in the 1993, there was never a sense of any need for fan cooling!! (And that heat sinking design, as an internal column, remained the same, and effective, for the smaller Integrateds till 2014!) However, later in the ’90’s, some RGi120 owners, after a couple of years of use, began reporting their amps had started “cutting out on thermal!”. Once they checked, it was an embarrassed “yes”, they had let the volume levels creep up over time. But not a surprise, thanks to the amp’s lack of distortion!

Why you implemented Mosfets?
The short answer is “Why live with the “sudden death syndrome” of transistors when you can afford robust MOSFETs!!!?”
MOSFET amplifiers can still function even when there are dead MOSFETs in the output stage, so the music doesn’t have to stop when “Party time!” might otherwise have cooked a transistor amp. A MOSFET’s positive temperature coefficient protects the circuit from heat damage – they are self-limiting because thermal runaway cannot occur. Unlike transistors.
With a MOSFET being a solid-state valve that is a special form of transistor, it has the advantages of both, but none of their disadvantages with the exception of price! Of course, the design process has to be a little different and I took my time to be sure of their worth.
Having repaired amplifiers over more than 20 years as sole “Official Warranty Service” agent for several brands that used MOSFETs, I was able to follow their improvement. By the time it came to the core design period of the amp (1991-93), there were Audiophile- quality ones available that were ‘faster’ and ‘stronger’ than those being used in then- current designs and which were helping to give MOSFETs a bad name.
From then on, over the years, as more powerful Audiophile ‘FETs have come onto the market, they have been incorporated as a matter of course into our amplifiers. But as it was done without any change to their model names, this is how the “bracket creep” in power and capability has occurred over the years. It recently got to the point with our 21st birthday that we finally had to draw a line with the Amplifolia models and give them all higher power ratings!
In sum, using ‘FETs as the pivotal point in your design puts you up into another sonic “ball game” altogether. So if a REDGUM adds anything to the pleasure of listening, it is because we aim to add nothing!! An effective amplifier design should not leave its mark on the sound.
Dual volume? Not at all the usual path?
I have been in Audio for so many years and seen all the fads come and go! And the “latest” fad that was around at the time of the amp’s initial design period (1991-93) was Dual Mono amps. They didn’t stand the test of time with the market because the need to adjust a second volume control was considered a fiddle. But selling them meant I, too, fiddled at length and found how Dual Mono transformed the ability to present the image! And so it became a key feature of every REDGUM amplifier.
Actually, Dual Mono offers a greater degree of flexibility to the listener than is perhaps immediately obvious, and that is even without very careful adjustment. But one can still go all out to reveal that absolute “last iota” of detail.
Being able to independently adjust the volume level for each channel means you cannot suffer the drawback of the more traditional Volume-Balance control designs where the “other” channel drops out quickly and totally!
The most demonstrable benefit of Dual Mono is the ability to bring the position of the performer back to centre stage (should the recording present them as off-centre). By varying the positioning of the control knobs up to 10 degrees, thus adjusting the “balance” between the channels, it is possible to move the image of the performer about 30cm/1 ft back to a more central position. (Our worried brains seem to like this feature!)
A further subtle but vital advantage of Dual Mono is that the infinite variation within room acoustics can be directly compensated for. This micro-adjustment is possible by just moving one or both of the volume controls. (Gone is the need for the speaker forward-backward shuffle, repeatedly moved by hand to find the best position for a good image. Now you can nail the image with one speaker sitting out in your open-plan room while the other speaker sits in a corner!!)
Instead of what appears to simply be a change in the volume level via the Dual Mono controls, actually the listener is subconsciously adjusting for the effect of the room acoustic as heard in terms of how the image snaps into position. In this way, our ears tend to be the best judge of what sounds balanced (as in the best image), rather than accepting what visually lines up as “balanced” via the knob positions.
It might have seemed that I was a stick-in-the-mud over too many years by maintaining this design choice. And it did cost us some customers! But it was done to support the optimal sonic result gained via that imaging potential. Any mainstream reservations were removed once we released REDGUM’s Dual Mono remote control in 2007. As it also works in Couch Potato mode – Volume Up/Down – it does what every family user expects. And now with our Android App offering these same remote functions, you don’t have to keep an eye on the dog any more! (Yes, we really have had to replace remotes because “the dog ate it!”.; )
RGi120ENR is bursting with power output even with speakers with heavy demanding load. How did you achieve this?
One can only go straight to the tech talk on this!

Though purpose-designed to power ultra-low speaker impedances, the Black Signature Series amplifiers remain clones of the original wood-fronted Amplifolia designs. Hence, they share those designs’ ability to drive into impedances as low as 0.7 ohms (our suggested minimum impedance).
Below 1 ohm, a slight sound degradation can be expected; at less than 0.5 ohm there is obvious distortion.
Tell us more about the “gain” volume attenuation…
Again, straight to the tech talk! As passive preamps have no gain (or added noise or distortion), in order to achieve the necessary listening levels the power amplifier section needs to be a little more sensitive than standard. By having ‘just enough’ overall gain, the extra hiss, hum and distortion generated in the ‘whole’ amplifier itself is reduced to minimum.
DESIGN
Its hard to lock down the looks of the REDGUM RGi120ENR into any typical labeling. Down under intrinsic? Stealth black and positive contemporary yet with magnetizing art noir traces. Even the heatsinks are “down under”. It’s surely as distinctive as it sounds and on top of that I’m not sure if I can recall any other integrated with remote function of volume control for both channels being set separately or at once.
REDGUM’s 21st Birthday was celebrated with a New Generation of Integrated amplifiers – the Black Signature Series! And here hew go… REDGUM RGi120ENR uses same PCBs and Dual Mono remote control as the Amplifolia range and looks back to the “wood panel” heritage previous design.
SOUND & LISTENING
Having my ear waxed lately with plentora of class D integrated amplifiers promising the level on unheard realism and intimacy I was more then happy to dive into the REDGUM coherent and musically potent sound. Here is where real immediacy came forward without self proclamation. Aural evidences spoke for themselves.

I’ve tested the REDGUM RGi120ENR mosts critically with Ubiq Audio Model One and Kaiser Kawero Chiara loudspeakers. Both, very different, yet similar with their chosen voicing. Certainly my favorite speakers in their respective range and above.
Both speakers can reveal a grand view into the live musical energy impact, with especially Ubiq Audio Model One being able to pushs things step further with its size when you put them into a bigger rooms.
The one and only true tour de force in high-end audio is a healthy comparing of the music reproduction vs the real music. We can always jump ahead into the vastness of audiophile attributes, that might or might not convey the music for what it is. To often these sets of virtual conditions rather conceal with the music then operate in the language of the music.
To often that is the case with a LOT of amplifier on the market. On the contrary REDGUM manages to enlighten the music flow for what it truly is. An interactive, emotionally empowered energy transfer that relate much more to the tone, timbre and color then to the variety of dissecting pin-points of the sound so “righteously” promoted promoted by the media in past few years. There is no doubt about needed recreational focus points needed for viable reconstruction of sound atmosphere, including magnitude of delays, decays, reverb points with REDGUM integrated.
In sole functionality these attributes do little or nothing without the a proper objectiveness level and magnitude of constitutional rulers of the sound. We seems to connect much closer to the real, natural vibrancy of the instruments then to the clinical bits of the sound. Timbre works closely to the way we recognize pure taste of the food, smell etc. Raw pointers are instant measures of our perceiving nature. Very similar to the way our sound/music recognition systems decipher pureness of the tone.
RGi120ENR intimately embraces the epicenter of primal musical DNA especially connected with the basic ground points. Due to its gain potency the illusory projection of live musical events via REDGUM integrated resolves in a believable realism not easily found in the today’s amplifiers. Here is where the brand sonic orientation differ by far igniting the core of my sonic values.
REDGUM integrated has nor typical valvish sound too often associated even with the contemporary solid state devices or typical old school tube amplifiers, neither it goes to the land of so much pushed forward and marketed plane of transparency. Balanced voicing of RGi120ENR is something you do not encounter that easily, making it a stand out.
I like and love what REDGUM RGi120ENR is capable of. This is a differently approached, no nonsense integrated amplifier concept operating clearly beyond dutifulness and with an engaging factor in pure service of the listener. It adds its value exactly where it matters. The music!
RGi120ENR was designed from ground up to drive speakers with ultra low impedances, translating to whooping 0.7 ohms of continuous load… With 175W per channel into 8Ω and transient 310W Short term RMS this integrated is far from giving just a hint or a scent of the original musical message. If one expects more, then this fall into the modus operandi of this Australian might integrated, translating to more musical presence and vibrancy.
REDGUM RGi120ENR is musically bursting “beast” among contemporary integrated amplifiers’ camp, surprisingly priced very, very reasonably. After some lengthy time lapse I’m happy to report about the affordable integrated being true to what its supposed to truly stand out – musical potency and engaging factor.
I’m quite a gain junkie and finding the “hot ride” its not really an easy task, especially with such “all in one” package. REDGUM RGi120ENR offers convincing alternative experience and great value proposition opening up the grand high-end audio sonic probabilities encompassed into very specific, potent and musically involving experience.
Transparency can be to quickly confused with the real neutrality. RGi120ENR unique way of dealing with, gain, transients and non the less acoustical ambient reconstruction clearly comes from specific REDGUM implementation of the MOSFETs. High current delivery combined with complete electronic design and resolved power supply approach encompasses sound direction distinctively close to the live musical experience. I cannot give out better compliment to the integrated. Considering the price and design logics, RGi120ENR is a unique gem bursting with refreshing purity.
REDGUM organically flourish the music presenting more of a realism then abstract sonic experience. I will alway prefer any amplifier for being able to transcribe music closer to the realistic acoustical music then to follow the sound origination being false, pretensive and full of predicaments
Hats off to REDGUM team for their efforts and continuity!
Text: Matej Isak
Price: AUD$4000
TECHNICAL
175W/ch into 8Ω Transient 310W Short term RMS
265W/ch into 4Ω Transient 630W Short term RMS
500W/ch into 2Ω Transient 1260W Short term RMS
H 15 x W 41 x D 37 cm / H 6 x W 16 x D 14.5 in
18.4 kg / 40.8 lb shipped
7 Year Warranty because it’s Made in China with painstaking care!
CONTACT
REDGUM Audio Pty Ltd
ABN 45 093 132 515
401 Belgrave – Gembrook Road
Emerald 3782, VIC, Australia
TEL: 61-3-9001-6788
FAX: 61-3-9018-4328
EMAIL: sales@redgumaudio.com
WEB: www.redgumaudio.com