This is a novelty page designed to parody silly "hacking" done in TV Shows and Movies.
There is no real hacking going on. Please be careful where and how you use this.
While there is no widely documented production model named the "FX" in Musical Fidelity’s official timeline , the name often refers to a rare or non-commercial variant related to the power amplifiers from the 1990s. The Musical Fidelity F-Series
Fire up a track like Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car or Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories . The first thing you notice is the lack of grain . Cheap class D amps (the type found in $100 mini amps) produce a hard, glassy top end. The FX, being analog Class A/B, delivers a smooth, organic midrange. Voices have "chest" and texture. musical fidelity fx power amplifier
is characterized by its ability to drive difficult loads with ease . While there is no widely documented production model
: Older units may suffer from degraded MA insulators and thermal paste on the MOSFETs. In some cases, the original thermal paste can become electrically conductive over time, potentially causing shorts. Cheap class D amps (the type found in
Rated at 600 millivolts , allowing it to pair effectively with a wide range of preamplifiers.
This "stealth" design allows the FX to be hidden behind a TV console, placed on a bookshelf, or stacked with its companion pre-amplifier (the FX-LPS, for vinyl users).
It delivers approximately 98 watts per channel into 8 ohms before clipping.