Okay okay, enough with the pictures, how about the sound?!
I know, I've made you wait for it. Here it is. In both systems the Aero showed very strong character, immediately recognisable as the opposite of my usual source of late, the Mark Levinson no.390s. In fact, I thought I had heard this kind of sound before. I thought of Audiomeca. I wasn't quite sure at the beginning, but there really turned out to be an Anagram module inside, being responsible for the majority of the soundcharacter. Of course, the Aero uses miniature tubes in the output stage, and the Audiomeca uses solid state opamps, but still, the similarity was so big that I had to do the comparison.
But first let me tell you more about the sound of the Aero. It is fast, lean, dynamic and detailed, and has bass that is both tight and deep. It is overall however slightly dry and toned down colorwise, it lacks some meat on the bones so to say, especially in the mids but still it has very open and fluid highs. This was true with CD and SACD. I'll write more about the differences between these formats later. The funny thing is that most people think that Mark Levinson is analytical and dry. I originally thought this too, but tried a few of their components anyway. Mark Levinson, at least my no.390s, is anything but dry and sterile. It is in fact full, volouptuous, rich, creamy and smooth and at the same time supremely detailed. The Audio Aero has a completely different flavour. It is not creamy or rich. Instead it is extremely enthusiastic and outgoing. It will get your feet tapping. Guaranteed.
Is it better than the Levinson? Worse? I cannot divide it into these camps just that easily. I think that it has the same level of sophistication as the Levinson, it's just a different kind of presentation.
The Levinson is very forgiving. If you play mediocre cd's, it manages to still make them enjoyable. Not so the Audio Aero. It is very clean sounding, without excess colour or sauce. If your cd is crap, it will sound like that. But if you play good cd's the resulting sound will be very insightful. Luckily the player doesn't punish you, well maybe a bit. It is just so very forward and enthusiastic (like Audiomeca) that it can sometimes be too much of a good thing. But all in all, some cd's were more interesting on the Audio Aero, and some were better on the Levinson. A balanced result I'd say.