Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Headphone Amps

Burson Audio Conductor Stellar Headphone Amp, DAC and Preamp Debuts: Thunder from Down Under

Burson’s Conductor Stellar packs an ESS9039PRO DAC, 8W Class-A power, and upgradeable design. Can rivals match this much performance for $1,800?

Burson Audio Conductor Stellar Class A Headphone Amplifier

Burson Audio has been building serious headphone amplifiers since the early days of the Head-Fi revolution, long before personal audio became the center of gravity for the hi-fi industry. The Australian company earned its reputation the old-fashioned way: powerful Class A designs, fully discrete circuitry, and desktop components that deliver clean power, expansive soundstages, and connectivity options that make them easy to integrate into modern listening chains.

Now Burson Audio is expanding its lineup with the new Stellar Series, a range of compact Class A desktop components designed to bring more of the company’s flagship engineering to a slightly more approachable tier. The first model, the Conductor Stellar (Standard Edition), combines a high-resolution DAC, Class A headphone amplifier, and desktop preamp into a single chassis priced at $1,799.

Positioned between Burson’s entry-level Playmate 3 ($599 at Apos Audio) and the flagship Grand Tourer range, the Stellar line pulls key elements from the company’s top-tier Voyager Series; Class A muscle, discrete circuit architecture, and the unmistakable Burson house sound—while packaging it all into a more compact and accessible platform.

The timing also makes sense. We recently reviewed the Burson Audio Conductor GT4, and it remains one of the finest desktop DAC/headphone amplifier combinations currently available, delivering the kind of effortless power and wide open presentation that has long defined Burson’s approach to personal audio.

burson-conductor-stellar-lifestyle
Burson Conductor Stellar

Burson Conductor Stellar: Class A Headphone Amp, DAC and Preamp

At the center of the Burson Audio Conductor Stellar is the ESS9039PRO DAC, paired with Burson’s fully discrete output stage and Max Current power supply architecture. Burson rates the unit at 8 watts of pure Class A output, which is substantial for a desktop headphone amplifier and enough on paper to handle a wide range of headphones, from more sensitive in-ear monitors to far more demanding full-size designs.

The headphone amplifier section has a 0.5-ohm output impedance, which should help it maintain better control with a broad range of headphone loads, while the pre-out and DAC-out stages are rated at 1 ohm and 20 ohms respectively.

burson-conductor-stellar-front

Burson is also using a transistor-based amplification stage built around four Onsemi MJE15032 transistors per channel. Those output devices are configured for high Class A bias, which is consistent with Burson’s long-running design approach in the headphone category.

The company also says the Conductor Stellar includes a dedicated low-noise amplification module for IEMs, aimed at reducing hiss with high-sensitivity earphones. Supporting that is the new Silent Power Module 2, built around the LT3045 voltage regulator, which Burson specifies at 0.8 µV RMS noise. In practical terms, the goal here is lower background noise and cleaner low-level detail, especially with sensitive headphones or lower listening volumes.

burson-conductor-stellar-back

From a connectivity standpoint, the Burson Audio Conductor Stellar is built as an all-in-one desktop control center. Digital inputs include USB-C, optical Toslink, and coaxial SPDIF, with USB handled by an XMOS platform supporting up to DSD512 and PCM up to 32-bit/768kHz. Coaxial and optical inputs support up to 24-bit/192kHz. Wireless playback is handled by Bluetooth 5.0 using the Qualcomm CSR8675 chipset, with support for LDAC, aptX HD, and AAC. It is also listed as Roon Tested.

On the output side, users get balanced XLR and single-ended RCA preamp outputs, balanced XLR and single-ended RCA line outputs, plus headphone connections in 4-pin XLR, 6.35mm, and 3.5mm formats.

Burson’s published measurements point to a design focused on low noise and wide bandwidth. Physically, the unit measures 210 x 200 x 75 mm or 8.3 x 7.9 x 2.9 inches, and weighs about 5 kg or 11 pounds, which makes it compact by desktop Class A standards, though not exactly featherweight. Class A and “small desktop box” usually have a tense relationship. Physics always sends the bill.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

burson-conductor-stellar-internal

The Three Versions Explained

The Standard version is the entry point into the Stellar range. It ships with NE5532 IC op-amps, the SP01 power module, and a 24V/5A power supply, and it does not include a remote control. This is the version aimed at buyers who may want to experiment later with Burson’s upgrade path rather than paying for everything upfront.

The Deluxe version moves things up with V7 Vivid Pro op-amps, the SP02 power module, Burson’s Super Charger 5A external power supply, and an included remote control. Based on Burson’s own positioning, this is the model intended for buyers who want a more fully optimized setup straight out of the box without stepping all the way to the top trim.

The Max version sits at the top of the range and includes the V7 Vivid Pro op-amps, SP02, and remote as well, but replaces the Super Charger with Burson’s Fusion Core power solution. That makes it the most fully loaded version in the Stellar lineup and the one aimed at users who want the highest-spec factory configuration without adding upgrades later.

All three versions share the same core platform, inputs, outputs, chassis dimensions, and overall functionality. The main differences come down to the op-amp configuration, power supply implementation, and whether a remote is included.

burson-conductor-stellar-headphone-amplifier-angle-left-with-remote

The Bottom Line

At $1,800 for the Standard version, the Burson Audio Conductor Stellar lands in a price tier where most competitors force you to start making trade-offs. Some offer excellent amplification but limited connectivity. Others focus on DAC performance but lack the power to properly drive demanding headphones. Burson is trying to avoid those compromises by delivering a true Class A desktop amplifier with 8 watts of output, a flagship-grade ESS9039PRO DAC, balanced and single-ended connectivity, Bluetooth with LDAC, and a dedicated low-noise IEM stage in one chassis.

The other differentiator is upgradability. Burson’s modular op-amp design and multiple versions mean users can start with the Standard configuration and evolve the system over time rather than replacing the entire unit. That approach remains relatively rare in this category.

Who is it for? Headphone listeners building a serious desktop system who want enough power to drive virtually any headphone, flexible digital connectivity, and a path for future upgrades without jumping immediately into the $3,000–$5,000 range.

What’s missing? Network streaming and a built-in display interface beyond the basics, both of which are appearing more often in this category.

Still, when you look at the landscape, it becomes clear where the Stellar fits. Getting this level of Class A power, connectivity, and upgrade flexibility from competitors such as Schiit Audio, Feliks Audio, Ferrum Audio, or Chord Electronics typically requires multiple components or a significantly larger investment. Burson’s pitch is simple: put most of it in one box, keep it upgradeable, and deliver the kind of clean Class A power the company has been known for since the early days of Head-Fi.

Where to buy:

For more information: bursonaudio.com

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

Latest Products

2026 ASUS ROG Gjallar Gaming Soundbar

New Products

ASUS ROG Gjallar brings 2.1.2 Dolby Atmos, HDMI 2.1, 4K/120 passthrough and a wireless subwoofer to desktop and console gamers.

2026 Marshall Stanmore IV and Acton IV Wireless Speakers Front Black 2026 Marshall Stanmore IV and Acton IV Wireless Speakers Front Black

New Products

2026 Marshall Acton IV and Stanmore IV add Auracast, LDAC, upgraded sound, tactile controls, and repairable parts to the brand’s Bluetooth home speaker lineup.

Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker

New Products

Secret Chord Analogue Vinyl Record Tracker tracks stylus wear, record cleaning, cartridge hours, and vinyl playback history for serious collectors.

2026 Volumio Primo V3 Music Streamer with Tablet 2026 Volumio Primo V3 Music Streamer with Tablet

Music Streamers

Volumio’s third-generation Primo V3 adds a faster processing platform, ESS ES9039Q2M DAC, NOS mode, eight DAC filters, selectable RCA and XLR output levels, and...

Shanling M0 Pura Portable Music Player in-hand Shanling M0 Pura Portable Music Player in-hand

DAPs

Shanling M0 Pura packs hi-res playback, dual DACs, microSD storage, Bluetooth, and USB DAC support into a tiny $129 DAP.

Final DX10000 CL Collectors Edition Headphones Final DX10000 CL Collectors Edition Headphones

New Products

Can Final’s $8,499 DX10000 CL justify its True Diamond driver and closed-back flagship design, or is the price the real headline?

Gift Ideas?

Amazon Prime Day 2026 Gift Guide

Daily Deals

Amazon Prime Day is a four-day shopping event from June 23-26, 2026 offering the biggest discounts of the year on consumer electronics.

You May Also Like

Headphone Amps

Can Topping’s $119 DX1 II outfeature Schiit and FiiO with 4.4mm balanced headphone output, PEQ, optical I/O, and console support?

Headphone Amps

The Apos x Community Gremlin is a compact fully balanced Class A hybrid amp that delivers impressive warmth, tube rolling flexibility, and big performance...

Headphone Amps

Burson’s Soloist Stellar is a $1,500 Class-A headphone amplifier delivering up to 8W of power, a dedicated low-noise IEM stage, and upgradeable op-amps for...

Headphone Amps

Can iFi’s $4,499 iDSD PHANTOM be the ultimate headphone DAC/amp and streamer, with tube/solid-state modes, DSD2048, K2HD, and Class A power?

Articles

Our picks for the best desktop and portable DAC/Amps for audiophiles of 2025 include Burson Audio, JDS Labs, FiiO, iFi Audio and Rotel.

Headphone Amps

The Burson Conductor GT4 is a $3K audio sledgehammer—insanely powerful, deadly neutral, and hot enough to fry eggs. Upgradeable, versatile, and built like a...

Dongle DACs

Portable, balanced, and surprisingly competent: iFi GO blu Air DAC/amp proves good things come in tiny, $129 packages.

DACs

$319 hi-res desktop DAC/AMP with balanced/single-ended outputs, Bluetooth 5.4, USB, optical, coax, and I²S connectivity.

Advertisement

ecoustics is a hi-fi and music magazine offering product reviews, podcasts, news and advice for aspiring audiophiles, home theater enthusiasts and headphone hipsters. Read more

Copyright © 1999-2026 ecoustics | Disclaimer: We may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.