Atoll 3.5 ^new^ Link
Rising sea levels and increased ocean temperatures pose significant threats to the existence and development of atolls. An Atoll 3.5 could represent a form that is resilient or on the path to resilience in the face of these challenges.
| | Atoll 3.5 | Atoll 3.6+ (5G Ready) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 5G NR Support | No (Planning only) | Full (FR1/FR2) | | Massive MIMO | Basic (8T8R) | Advanced (64T64R beamforming) | | Memory Footprint | Low (2–4 GB RAM) | High (16+ GB RAM) | | License Cost | Legacy (Lower for maintenance) | High (New modules) | | Bug stability | "Rock solid" | Frequent patches | atoll 3.5
What it will do is reveal why you fell in love with music in the first place. It strips away the pretense of high-end audio and delivers performance where it counts: dynamic headroom, harmonic richness, and rhythmic drive. Rising sea levels and increased ocean temperatures pose
Why would an engineer choose 3.5 today? Stability. It strips away the pretense of high-end audio
The standard Atoll 3.5 is a pure analog amplifier. It has 5 line-level RCA inputs (CD, Tuner, Aux, DVD, Tape) and a pre-out/main-in loop. If you want to connect a TV or a computer, you will need an external DAC. (Note: Some late-production 3.5 models included an internal DAC board, but they are rare).
Offers improved indoor modeling features, optimizing the combined planning of indoor and outdoor Radio Access Networks (RAN).