BETA
RADAR is in beta — expect errors. Accuracy and coverage improvements are shipping daily.
LIVE
Waiting for new listings…
0 other audiophiles online

Our Thoughts RADAR AI

£925 is slightly above the market median of £914 and just over the 75th percentile at £919, so it reads as a mild premium rather than a bargain. In other words, it’s a touch ambitious, but not wildly out of line if the condition is genuinely good and the package is complete.

That can still be a worthwhile buy because Crimson gear is typically well-liked for its clean, musical presentation and solid build, and this sort of pre/power pairing is the kind of kit buyers often keep rather than flip. If it’s been serviced, includes the right interconnects, and presents cleanly from a careful owner, the extra £6 over the top quartile is easy to justify for a known, cohesive setup.

Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.

About Crimson Audio

Crimson Audio is a UK-origin audio brand with roots in the late 1980s; one company history states that Crimson Products Ltd. began in 1987, and that ownership later passed in 1996 to its worldwide distributor, Virtual Reality Audio Systems Ltd. The brand’s public footprint is somewhat fragmented, so the heritage is best understood as a small British specialist rather than a large mainstream hi-fi manufacturer.

Its core focus appears to be audio transformers and related professional/studio hardware rather than domestic hi-fi components. Current product descriptions emphasize premium transformers for use in mic preamps, mixers, stage boxes, and direct boxes, while other Crimson-branded offerings have included audio cables. That makes the brand more relevant to recording and pro-audio buyers than to shoppers looking for speakers, turntables, DACs, or headphones.

In market terms, Crimson Audio sits in a niche boutique position. It is presented as a maker of premium components at relatively reasonable prices, which suggests an engineering-led, specialist brand rather than a mass-market one. For hi-fi buyers, Crimson is more likely to appeal to those seeking distinctive, utilitarian British audio design and studio-grade parts than to anyone shopping for a broad consumer-audio range.

See all Crimson Audio listings on RADAR.