Tech
Ruark R710 CD Hi-Fi Console Brings 1970s Music Centre Energy to High End Vienna 2026
Ruark has uncovered the R710 CD Hi-Fi Console at High End Vienna 2026, and the pitch is not hard to understand. This is a modern music centre inspired by the classic 1970s console era, but rebuilt for listeners who use CDs, streaming services, Internet Radio, Bluetooth, TV audio, headphones, and external loudspeakers in the same system.
The R710 joins Ruark’s growing 100 Series family alongside the R410 all-in-one system, R610 Music Console, and R810 High Fidelity Radiogram. It also arrives as Ruark continues expanding beyond compact lifestyle audio with the new Talisman-R floorstanding loudspeakers, which we previewed at AXPONA 2026. That context matters. The R710 is not just a pretty box with a slot-loading CD player hiding behind the wooden slats. It is Ruark making a stronger play for the listener who wants a complete hi-fi hub without building a shrine to black boxes and cable anxiety. These blokes are so thoughtful that they even include 10 feet of speaker cable in the packaging.
Built-In CD Playback Returns to the Console
The R710 includes an integrated slot-loading CD player that supports Red Book CD-DA and CD-R discs. That gives Ruark a clear point of separation from some of its other 100 Series products, where CD playback depends on an external component. If the internal CD player offers the playback quality of Ruark’s existing R-CD100 CD Player, the value of this console starts looking a lot better; like finding a clean seat on the Central line and realizing nobody has spilled lager on it.
Streaming, Internet Radio, AirPlay 2, and Google Cast
Ruark has loaded the R710 with the streaming options most users actually need. Apple AirPlay 2 and Google Cast are built in, along with Spotify Connect, TIDAL Connect, Qobuz Connect, and Internet Radio. The console is also UPnP/DLNA compatible for playback from networked media servers.
That combination makes the R710 flexible without forcing every user into one control method. Apple users, Android users, TIDAL users, Qobuz users, Spotify users, and Internet Radio listeners are all covered. Democracy, but with better woodwork.
Hi-Res Playback and Burr-Brown Digital Conversion
The R710 supports high-resolution audio up to 32-bit/192kHz, with FLAC, AIFF, ALAC, and WAV supported up to that resolution. MP3 is supported up to 48kHz/320kbps, while AAC is supported up to 96kHz/320kbps.
Ruark also specifies Burr-Brown 32-bit/192kHz DAC and ADC stages. That is useful because the R710 is not only dealing with digital sources. It also includes analog inputs, including a moving-magnet phono stage, so the quality of both digital-to-analog and analog-to-digital conversion matters inside the system.
400 Watts of Class D Amplification
The amplifier section is rated at 2 × 200 watts into 4 ohms at 0.01% THD. That gives the R710 considerably more drive than a typical compact all-in-one music system and positions it as a proper hub for passive loudspeakers.
Ruark also includes adjustable bass and treble, switchable Loudness EQ, and switchable Stereo+ processing. The goal is clearly not just source flexibility, but enough control to make the R710 work in much larger systems beyond the existing speaker lineup. Think Spendor, Neat, Q Acoustics, ProAc, Wharfedale, and Acoustic Energy.
HDMI ARC/eARC and Real System Connectivity
The R710 includes HDMI ARC/eARC, which makes it suitable for TV audio without adding a soundbar. It also includes optical input up to 24-bit/96kHz PCM, stereo RCA line input, RCA selectable line/pre-out, mono RCA subwoofer output, and gold-plated 4mm multi-way speaker binding posts.
There is also an MM phono input rated for cartridges up to 8mV, giving turntable owners a direct path into the system. That makes the R710 a more complete music console than the word “console” might suggest.
Bluetooth, Headphones, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, and USB-C
Wireless support includes Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax, Ethernet via RJ45, and Bluetooth 5.1 with aptX HD, SBC, and AAC. Ruark also includes Bluetooth headphone support and a 3.5mm wired headphone output.
The USB-C port provides 5V/1A charging and multi-format audio file playback. That gives the R710 another practical source option for listeners who still keep music on local storage rather than trusting everything to the cloud. A wise move. The cloud has commitment issues.
Display, RotoDial, and Physical Control
The R710 uses a 6.8-inch high-contrast colour TFT display with auto dimming, along with Ruark’s familiar RotoDial control system. A rechargeable wireless remote is included.
That interface matters because one of Ruark’s strengths has always been usability. The R710 is designed to be operated from the front panel, the remote, or modern streaming apps without making the user feel like they are configuring enterprise networking gear during a power outage.
Finishes, Dimensions, and What Comes in the Box
Ruark lists two standard finishes: Fused Walnut cabinet with Fused Walnut facia, and Charcoal Lacquer cabinet with Fused Walnut facia. The cabinet measures 105 x 375 x 310mm, or approximately 4.1 x 14.8 x 12.2 inches. Including feet, controls, and cables, it measures 125 x 375 x 345mm, or approximately 4.9 x 14.8 x 13.6 inches. Product weight is 6.6kg, or about 14.6 pounds.
Inside the box, Ruark includes the R710, a 2m AC power cable, quick start guide, rechargeable wireless remote, and two 3m oxygen-free copper 400-strand speaker cables.
The Bottom Line
The Ruark R710 CD Hi-Fi Console is not just another retro-inspired box with a pretty face. For £2,199, it combines a slot-loading CD player, 32-bit/192kHz hi-res support, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Spotify Connect, TIDAL Connect, Qobuz Connect, Internet Radio, MM phono input, HDMI ARC/eARC, wired and Bluetooth headphone support, subwoofer output, and 2 × 200W of Class D amplification into one compact console.
What makes it unique is the mix: CD playback, modern streaming, TV integration, real loudspeaker power, and Ruark’s furniture-grade industrial design in one system. It is aimed at listeners who want fewer boxes without surrendering physical media or proper stereo playback.
U.K. pricing is £2,199, with Ruark working toward October availability. U.S. pricing has not been announced yet, which means American buyers will have to wait for the inevitable exchange-rate pain parade.
For more information: ruarkaudio.com
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