Note: May 17, 2025 (9:38pm PT) The Magni Piety is sold out. Christian from NITSCH is working on whether he can get more, and we'll provide the community an update if he is able to. In the meantime, if you would like to be notified about this amp coming back in stock, please email us at communityfeedback@apos.audio.
The Best Schiit You’ve Never Heard
Two years ago, Christian Tanimoto III listened to one of the best amps he’d ever heard. As the former Audiophile Senior Product Manager at Massdrop, Christian had heard a lot of incredible amps, but this one was different. For starters, it wasn’t sold in stores—it wasn’t slated to be sold at all. It was an experimental prototype for what eventually became the Schiit Magni 3. And he wasn’t listening to it in the carpeted hall of an audio convention but in a back office at Schiit HQ, where it had literally and figuratively been shelved. Its reliance on out-of-production transistors made it infeasible for Schiit to produce at scale. That might have been the end of the amp’s story, but when Christian left Massdrop and later started NITSCH—a new company centered on small-batch and rare gear—he knew this amp would make a great first launch. Read more here.
Solid state practicality, tube-like sound
The Piety’s design is a new take on the Continuity circuit used in the Jotunheim 2. Its output stage features a massively paralleled transistor design (a lot of transistors in each amp) that results in triode-like measurements. In plain English, the Piety is half the size of a Jotunheim 2, uses smaller transistors, and was tweaked for a tube-like sound.
Measurements aren’t the whole story
In many ways, the Piety’s design is the opposite of the Magni Heresy (Piety vs Heresy, get it?). While the Heresy uses op-amps, the Piety uses discrete parts. While the Heresy aims for the lowest distortion of any Magni, the Piety embraces distortion characteristics, gain curves, and square waves that resemble tube amps.
Why isn’t Schiit selling it?
Schiit needs to produce Magni models at a higher volume--an order of Magni-tude over the Piety’s limited run (sorry, we couldn’t help ourselves). A limited run wasn’t feasible for Schiit, but they’ve given NITSCH the greenlight to assemble them and sell them alongside Apos.
Product highlights
A new variation of the Continuity™ circuit design
Limited edition solid brass potentiometer knob
Two-step gain switch
Powder-coated steel chassis in unique NITSCH colorway
Designed and hand-assembled in California
Specs
Potentiometer knob material: brass
Frequency response: 20Hz - 20kHz, ±0.6dB
Maximum power
16Ω: 1.2W RMS per channel
32Ω: 1W RMS per channel
50Ω: 0.8W RMS per channel
300Ω: 400mW RMS per channel
600Ω: 200mW RMS per channel
THD+N
High gain: <0.013% at 1Vrms 32Ω
Low gain: <0.009% at 1Vrms 32Ω
IMD
High gain: <0.0012% at 1Vrms 32Ω, CCIF
Less gain: <0.001% at 1Vrms 32Ω, CCIF
SNR
High gain: >94dB, A-weighted, referenced to 1Vrms
Low gain: >104dB, A-weighted, referenced to 1Vrms
Crosstalk: -90dB, 20Hz - 20kHz in either gain
Output impedance: <0.6Ω at either gain
Input impedance: 50kΩ
Gain: 1.8x or 6.3x, selectable via rear switch
Topology: fully discrete, massively paralleled transistors, new take on Continuity
Protection: Standard failsafe DC power input and muting relay
Power supply: “Wall wart”-style 14-16VAC transformer, 1A
Power consumption: 6W
Size: 5” W x 3.5” D x 1.25” H
Weight: 2 lbs
What’s included
1 × NITSCH x Schiit Magni Piety
1x solid brass knob
1x black plastic knob
1 × Wall-Wart 14–16VAC, 1A
2 Year Manufacturer's Warranty
Featured reviews
"It sounds wonderful. It thickens the mids without adding a significant bass boost." -Paul Wasabi
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