Aman Audio  ·  Canandaigua, NY

The Work
Speaks.

I started Aman Audio because I needed to work with my hands — and because there's no better way to learn a circuit than to fix one that's broken.

How I Got Here

I always knew I wanted to work in sound. For a while that meant acoustics — I seriously looked into it — but the job market pointed me toward computer science instead. I'm glad it did. My background in CS, particularly in theory, gave me a way of thinking about problems I didn't fully appreciate until I started working on circuits. The debugging mindset, the cause and effect, the satisfaction of tracing something back to its root — that was always audio for me first. Coding taught me to think that way everywhere else.

I grew up in Rochester and spent five years building relationships in the music community there before moving to Canandaigua in 2025. That time included working alongside Rob Storms, who co-founded SoundSource, and John Nau of Nau Engineering — probably the most respected amp shop in upstate New York. John took me under his wing. We built amps together, and he's still the person I call when something has me genuinely stumped. That relationship shaped how I approach this work more than anything else.

Why Repair

I've always needed to work with my hands. There's something about using them to solve a problem — and then getting to hear the outcome — that I can't replicate any other way. A circuit is honest. It tells you exactly what it's doing if you're patient enough to listen.

I love Fender-based circuits and I'm deeply fascinated by the transistor revolution — class A/B design specifically. The thing that gets me is how little you actually need to make a great-sounding amplifier. A lot of what I do outside of repair work is messing with component values just to hear what changes, building tools for the bench, and talking to other techs about process. The troubleshooting itself is the thing.

The Repair That Taught Me the Most

A Mesa Boogie 2:90 stereo simulcast came in essentially destroyed. I spent a month and a half on it — well over a hundred hours. Not because I was making money on it, but because it was too good an opportunity to pass up.

I had to carve carbon out of burnt board sections by hand. Every surface-mount socket had issues that took hours to trace. At one point I spent days chasing a noise problem in the right channel before finally pinning it to pin 3 of a 12AX7 — something I would have missed cold if I hadn't become intimately familiar with that circuit over the weeks before.

That amp left working. I didn't charge nearly enough. But what I took away from it — in diagnostic instinct, in patience, in knowledge of that Boogie circuit — I couldn't have bought any other way.

Mesa Boogie 2:90 Simulcast

100+

Hours spent on a single repair

6

Weeks from first look to working amp

1

Pin on one tube causing channel noise — found after days of tracing

How I Work

Honest Assessment

Before any work begins you'll know what's wrong, what it'll cost, and whether it's worth fixing. I won't recommend work that isn't necessary, and I won't pad an estimate to cover my time on a learning curve.

Direct Communication

This is a one-person shop. When you bring your gear to Aman Audio, you're talking to the person doing the work — no handoffs, no surprises, no phone tag with someone who's never touched your amp.

Built for the Long Run

I'm not looking for one-time customers. I want to be a reliable resource for people who take sound seriously — the kind of shop you come back to, and that you'd recommend without hesitation.

Let's Get
Your Gear Working.

Drop me a message with what you've got and what's going on. I'll give you an honest read on what it needs, what it'll cost, and when I can have it back to you.