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What Hi-Fi?
What Hi-Fi?
Technology
Andy Madden

Rotel Michi Prestige X430/Q430

Rotel Michi Prestige range electronics on a hi-fi rack in a listening room next to various speakers.

The revival of Michi back in 2019 after a 26-year hiatus has seen some impressive results for Rotel’s high-end sub-brand.

We have spent quality time with a couple of members of the Michi family since its return, including the Q5 CD player (£5499 / $7499) and the X3 stereo amplifier (£4700 / $5300), both of which made quite the impression on our review team.

Such has been its success that Rotel now wants to bring Michi to more potential customers, plugging a gap between where its standard two-channel electronics ends and the sub-brand begins.

Step forward the new Rotel Michi Prestige Series, which combines two products at launch: the X430 (£4499 / €4999 / $4999) stereo amplifier and the Q430 CD player (£3599 / €3999 / $3999).

I was recently invited to the company’s Chinese headquarters and factory for a first look, where I was also able to hear the pair in action – and on first acquaintance at least, the initial signs are very promising.

Build

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

Having seen them being put together on the factory floor and up close in Rotel’s demo room, both units have the look and feel of Michi products – they’re obviously part of the same family.

Both aluminium chassis look and feel nicely put together, the all-black design is nicely understated and, combined with the solid glass front panels on the X430 and Q430, seeing the two side-by-side they're an impressive-looking pairing.

Rotel has gone from a top-loading CD player design on its Q5 to a loading drawer on the Q430, but the mechanism seemed smooth sliding in and out, while the knurled volume dial on the X430 felt solid to the touch with a smooth resistance when twisting.

Features

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

The X430 boasts a solid array of features and includes a high-grade ESS Technology ES9039Q2M DAC.

If you want the amplifier to take care of the audio from your TV, there’s an HDMI ARC socket while you also have a solid array of more traditional connectivity options, including three pairs of analogue inputs and a balanced input.

There’s also a moving magnet phono stage for a compatible record player (it would have been nice to have a moving coil option too, though), three optical digital inputs and a trio of coaxial digital inputs.

Play a lot of music from a laptop? You can use the amp’s USB-C input, which is compatible with DSD, PCM and DoP files.

Should you want to stream the odd track from a smartphone or tablet, there’s also aptX Bluetooth connectivity.

Finishing off the spec sheet, you have twin subwoofer outputs and two pairs of terminals for driving two different pairs of speakers.

The glass front panel includes a customisable full-colour TFT display, which includes the option of choosing between a Spectrum or VU meter view. During my time with the amp there was a slight bug in the software whilst in VU meter mode so it was hard to make a call on the quality of the display.

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

The Michi Q430 CD player also features a TFT display, which can show album artwork in addition to normal track information. You’ll also find an illuminated power button (it should be white, but the test sample I saw had a green ring) and control buttons for operating the player on the front of the unit.

It uses an eight-channel 32-bit ESS Sabre ES9028PRO DAC, optimised for stereo playback.

In terms of connectivity, you have both balanced XLR and RCA outputs to choose from, but Rotel’s added extra flexibility by including a coaxial digital output. This means you could opt to use it as a CD transport if your system happens to feature a suitably high-end DAC.

Both machines feature a power transformer built by Rotel in-house and also use custom-engineered capacitors and ultra-low-noise power supplies to improve performance.

Sound

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

The X430 has a claimed power output of 210W per channel into an 8-ohm load, and in my demo with the speakers, it was powering a pair of Bowers & Wilkins 802D floorstanders. On the sideline, waiting to step in if needed, were a pair of refined-looking Sonus Faber Amati towers.

Now I have to insert a couple of caveats here: I was listening to the Michi pairing in a room whose acoustics were completely new to me, and Rotel did inform us that both machines, although very close, weren’t finished production samples.

With that out of the way, I started with Hey Now by London Grammar and the first impression I got was one of spaciousness as instruments and vocals float into the soundstage at the start of the track. Even with a rack of electronics placed between the speakers, I got the impression the image was spread quite wide but with good focus and positioning.

When the bass kicked in, it seemed to sound very muscular and powerful. Fired out from the Bowers & Wilkins speakers, each note hit hard and with weight, but the pair also seemed to show precision and poise. Low frequencies didn’t appear to sound flabby or ill-defined.

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

Next up was Lose Control by Teddy Swimms, another track that the Michi system seemed keen to express. His soulful voice appeared to have plenty of detail and texture – Swimms has a very emotive, expressive vocal delivery and the Rotel pairing appeared to enjoy communicating it and delivering with serious intent but without shouting at you.

It’s not the biggest test of timing, but the track seemed to start and stop in the right places, that powerful, muscular bass coming to the fore again, but without overpowering the rest of the track.

I switched over to something with a more classical vibe, Holst's The Planets suite, and the system did a good job of handling the rollercoaster-esque dynamic shifts in Mars, from the dark brooding buildup at the start, to the crescendo of string and wind instruments further along the track.

The Michi pairing didn’t seem to hold anything back and delivered a controlled, poised performance, painting each of the different orchestra strands with even brush strokes.

Initial verdict

(Image credit: What Hi-Fi?)

Is the new Michi Prestige Series a hit? We’ll have to wait until we can test the X430 and Q430 in isolation in our test rooms to be able to give you our proper verdict.

However, initial signs are very promising. If they produce the goods under our test conditions, the lack of competition around their particular price points could make them an attractive option if you can’t stretch to the Michi Reference Series.

MORE:

Rotel’s Michi Prestige Series hi-fi electronics kicks off with a stereo amplifier and CD player

Our pick of the best stereo amplifiers and best CD players for all budgets

How to build the perfect hi-fi system

The best 25 CD players of What Hi-Fi?'s lifetime

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