Classé Audio Seventy Stereo Power Amplifier
The natural mate to the Classé Audio Four preamp — same era, same Canadian build philosophy, same understated black faceplate aesthetic. The Seventy is a 70-watt-per-channel stereo power amplifier from Classé's classic period, running in high-bias class A/B with the kind of parts quality and build integrity that defined what Classé stood for before the company scaled up.
Seventy watts from a high-bias Classé design is not the same proposition as seventy watts from a mass-market receiver. The output stage runs warm, the current delivery is real, and the amplifier behaves like a class A design through most of its usable range. Speakers that reward a stable, high-current source — particularly those with complex or low impedance loads — will respond to it differently than they do to amplifiers with comparable rated power but less headroom in the output stage.
$3000 MSRP
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Return Policy
Return Policy
We offer a 3-day return window on all purchases. Returns made to a credit or debit card will incur a 5 percent processing fee. Shipping costs, both to and from, are the responsibility of the customer if applicable.
After the 3-day window and up to 3 weeks from the date of purchase, items may still be returned, subject to a 20 percent restocking fee.
For shipped orders, customers must notify us within 3 days of receiving the item to initiate a return. Once the item is received back in the same condition it was sent, we will issue a refund minus all shipping charges and a 5 percent credit card processing fee.
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The natural mate to the Classé Audio Four preamp — same era, same Canadian build philosophy, same understated black faceplate aesthetic. The Seventy is a 70-watt-per-channel stereo power amplifier from Classé's classic period, running in high-bias class A/B with the kind of parts quality and build integrity that defined what Classé stood for before the company scaled up.
Seventy watts from a high-bias Classé design is not the same proposition as seventy watts from a mass-market receiver. The output stage runs warm, the current delivery is real, and the amplifier behaves like a class A design through most of its usable range. Speakers that reward a stable, high-current source — particularly those with complex or low impedance loads — will respond to it differently than they do to amplifiers with comparable rated power but less headroom in the output stage.