Vincent SV-236 vs Rowland Concentra 2?


I'm looking for an integrated amp to drive my Proac D15 speakers in a medium sized room (16' x 19'). A used Concentra 2 would be at the upper end of my budget, whereas the Vincent SV-236 would be no problem.

Can anyone comment on the relative strengths of each? How much more (if anything) would I get by stretching for the Rowland and which would be more compatible with my Proacs? Are there any other integrateds should I consider for these speakers?

I listen to all types of music, so I'd like to avoid gear that lends itself to particular musical genres. I prefer a warm, smooth sound -- I'm pretty intolerant of brightness, grain, and sibilance in case that helps.

Thanks for the help!
chouca
The Concentra 2 is of the best vintage of Rowland products and there is still very little solid-state gear that can compete with it. I have not heard the Vincent and it may be a fine product, but the Rowland has sound quality and build quality that reflects the $6k price -- despite being an integrated, it is truly high-end piece of gear. Its sonic signature also appeals directly to your performance priorities -- it is smooth and grain-free (as well as being very transparent, which is my priority).
I second Raquel's comments, though I have not heard the Vincent either. I recently downsized for personal economic reasons, from top of the line BAT seperates to a Rowland Concentra II integrated. To be honest, I was a bit surprised at how small of an actual 'sacrifice' this was.
Yes, the BAT seperates were better, but not by nearly as much as I had anticipated. The Concentra is very transparent and revealing with no trace of SS hardness or grain. I felt it gave me over 90% of the performance of my BAT seperates for 25% of the cost.
Of course I cannot tell you what will work best with your Proac D15's, since I have not heard them.

Happy hunting,

John
I would probably save up for the Concentra since that is one of the best integrateds money can buy, if not the best.
Proac are revealing speakers and the better you feed them, the better they sound.
Another amp i can highly recommend with the Proac would be the Audio Research VS55integrated amp. THese worked well with the Proac D25 so it should drive you D15 a lot easier.
Good luck