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Pathos InPoL Legacy - INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER

Stereophile

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July 2025

Back when gasoline had lead in it and amplifiers came with circuit diagrams in the back of the manual, there was an unspoken understanding that power meant weight.

- ROGIER VAN BAKEL

A professional camera was a Graflex Speed Graphic or a Hasselblad 1000F, built like a small battle-ship and nearly as heavy. Powerful car engines were cast-iron V8s with cylinders you could stick a fist in. And of course, serious amps had transformers that could double as boat anchors.

These days, amplifier design often emphasizes efficiency. Class-D amps in particular have come a long way. Many are terrific, and they're undeniably practical. But there's still something uniquely satisfying about a design that prioritizes timeless expression over economy of electricity or space.

What you can expect from this no-holds-barred amp is vitality. Spirit. Brio.

The Pathos InPoL Legacy, a class-A design, is unapologetically massive and so gloriously overbuilt that moving it requires a tactical plan and a chiropractor. It is the most ambitious product that Pathos has ever built—a $55,000 set-no-limits behemoth that's as much a monument to excess as an argument against half-measures. It communicates in warm, golden tones that there's still magic in thermionic emission, even (or especially) when it arrives in a 309lb (!) package.

What you can expect from this no-holds-barred amp is vitality. Spirit. Brio. Ciao, bella

In my review of the solid state Audia Flight FLS10 (see the February 2025 Stereophile), I nattered that an integrated amplifier “helps declutter a room, appealing to minimalists.” Ha. There's nothing minimalist about the integrated Pathos InPoL Legacy. It weighs as much as an offensive lineman. It's 34" deep—almost three vinyl albums laid end to end. My equipment console would tolerate neither its heft nor its depth, so I relied instead on a superbly built 3'deep, 22"-wide Pagode amp platform from German company Finite Elemente.

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