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Review – Cabasse Stream 100 Amplifier and Surf Loudspeakers

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French based Cabasse make the renowned Sphère loudspeaker system, but they also produce more modestly priced items.Here Dominic Marsh takes a listen to the Stream 100 amplifier (£499) and Surf loudspeakers (£379)

Stream-AMP-front-top-4-channels-stereo-on

“Paired with the Surf speakers they produced a powerful and pleasing sound that I could not really level any criticism at, save a slight rolling off at the extreme top end and I do mean extreme, which shouldn’t perturb the average listener. ”

Read the full review of the Cabasse Stream 100 amplifier and Surf Loudspeakers

 

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Review – Zeta Zero Venus Picolla Loudspeakers

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At just under £20 000 the Polish Zeta Zero Venus Picolla are a substantial investment, but they are gorgeously built and something of a work of art Janine Elliot thinks? How do they sound?zetalifes

“The sound was very large, covering the soundstage with mighty detail and with smoothness only ribbons can do. Vocals were precise and inviting and all sounds carried a good depth in front and behind, and a reasonable width. Some people see in colours and for me the colour was a healthy green; not red or yellow brightness or a dull or boring blue or grey. This was exact, just as it should sound.”

Read the full review of the Zeta Zero Venus Picolla Loudspeakers

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Dave and Daryl Wilson Talk About the New Alexx Loudspeaker

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Dave and Daryl Wilson discuss the new Alexx, its new technologies and architecture—and its relationship both to the speakers that precede it, as well as the upcoming WAMM.

Alexx is the fourth all-new loudspeaker from Wilson in as many years so sit back and enjoy.

 

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New Speakers – Wilson Alexx

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Alexx is the fourth all-new loudspeaker from Wilson Audio in as many years. “It may be intuitive to assume the Alexx replaces the company’s MAXX, in that it is Wilson’s latest entry into the large speaker segment just below the Alexandria, but, in reality, the comparison with the MAXX begins and ends there. Instead, the Alexx is an altogether more complex and sophisticated loudspeaker” say the company.Wilson_alexx2

Alexx incorporates Wilson’s latest thinking on loudspeaker design in the areas of time-domain geometry, driver configuration, and driver development. It is the latest beneficiary of Wilson’s ongoing analysis of low-resonance cabinet strategies via laser vibrometer and Alexx draws from both recent designs such as the Alexia and the Sabrina, as well as the WAMM—Dave Wilson’s up and coming “Magnum Opus”—with which it was developed concurrently.wILSON_alexx1

All-new “MTM” Driver Geometry:

The “MTM” (Midrange-Tweeter-Midrange) geometry generally refers to a driver arrangement where two midrange drivers flank a tweeter vertically. Wilson has invariably employed a modular approach which the company say has several benefits, one being the ability to optimize the enclosure properties for each driver. The separate modules in the MTM can be made to be adjustable—both in terms of the relative position of each driver module one-to-another in the time domain, as well as having the ability to optimise each driver’s dispersion characteristics within the array.

Alexx’s midrange is divided between two different drivers, each covering a portion of the mid-band area. The seven-inch is the Wilson mid, first introduced in the Alexandria XLF. The 5.75-inch is the midrange driver most recently found in the Sabrina. The frequencies covered by the two drivers are therefore expanded upward, the two together covering a broader portion of the midrange. Each of the two drivers is optimised for the portion of the mid-band best suited to their strengths.Wilson_alexx_4

All-new Woofer Design:

The all-new ten-and-half-inch and twelve-and-a-half-inch woofers incorporated into the Alexx were first developed for the WAMM project and work together with Alexx’s ultra-low resonance woofer enclosure, which now features an angled baffle for better time-domain integration.

Adjustability  of the  Upper Modules in the Time Domain:

For the first time, a Wilson array features two stair steps, one for each of the two midrange modules. This allows for precise adjustment of both the time-alignment of the drivers, as well as the axis relationship of the driver to the listening position.

The adjustment mechanism of the lower mid module and the tweeter module and the tweeter is similar to what is found in the Alexia, and evolved from a similar system for the upcoming WAMM.Wilson_alexx3

XLF (Cross-load Flow) Port System:

Alexx joins the Alexandria XLF with its ability to move the port to either the front or rear of the bass enclosure. While this does not change the anechoic behavior of Alexx in the deep bass, it does enable it to more seamlessly interface with a larger number of rooms. Typically, in bass-lossy rooms, the port will be located on the rear; within bass-heavy rooms, the port moves to the front of the enclosure.

Other Important Details:

The latest version of the Convergent Synergy Tweeter is deployed in the Alexx and in this configuration is crossed over slightly higher as a direct result of the concentric two-driver mid strategy.

The resistor plate, which contains the protection and tuning resistors, is now located on an upper bevel on the rear of the speaker enabling easy sight lines and access.

Price   (U.S. MSRP)—$109,000.00 (pair)

 

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TAGA Harmony Diamond F-200 Floorstanding Loudspeaker

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TAGA Harmony, a European manufacturer of speakers and audio electronics, has unveiled Diamond F-200, the brand’s flagship floorstanding model.taga8jan_20162

After the success of the company’s Platinum Special Edition series TAGA Harmony received a lot of requests from its customers to design loudspeakers with an even more high-end look and sound.  TAGA Harmony decided to take on that difficult but at the same time tempting task. A team of dedicated engineers was appointed for this project which ot a code name “Diamond”.

Their goal was to use all the knowledge and experience in research, development and manufacturing of speakers to build an exceptional floorstanding speaker showcasing the best technology and achievements of TAGA Harmony.  The result is visible at the first glance on the beautifully crafted cabinet with its curved, clear, elegant lines and luxurious design, accentuated with high grade natural wood veneers finished with high-end clear gloss piano lacquer.

SPECIFICATIONS

Design: Floorstanding, 3-way, 4 drivers, Bi-wiring, Bi-amping25mm MDF S-TLIE enclosure

Crossover points 450Hz, 4kHz

High-Frequency Driver: 30mm (1.18”)O-TPTTD, E-TPAF
Midrange Driver: 165mm (6.5″) E-TPACD
Bass Driver: 2 x 203mm (8″) TNPPCD
Recommended Amplifier Power: 100-400W
Frequency Response (+/- 3dB): 30Hz-33kHz
Impedance: 6 ohm
Sensitivity: 91dB
Dimensions (H x W x D): 120 x 28 x 52 cm
Weight (net): 112 kg pair

Finishes:

Real Wood Rosewood Veneer – With Clear Gloss Piano Lacquer

Real Wood African Walnut Veneer – With Clear Gloss Piano Lacquertaga8jan_2016

TECHNOLOGY

CABINET

Speaker cabinet design and construction is one of the most critical elements influencing sound performance.

Based on Taga’s own TLIE (Taga Low Interference Enclosures) technology, TAGA Harmony have developed a new high-end solution to increase stiffness and limit any unwanted resonances of the cabinet.

The new technology is called S-TLIE Super Taga Low Interference Enclosures.

Super rigid and thick 25mm MDF boards are used for side, rear, top and bottom walls and 30mm for the baffle (front panel). The internal structure is divided in two chambers in an approximate ratio 80% of volume for woofers and 20% for a midrange and tweeter.

Internal bracing is used to further strengthen the whole structure and achieve even greater rigidity.

The walls are firmly anchored to the 80mm backbone beam highly strengthening the whole construction.

The bent shape of the side walls as well as the curved top plays a significant role in lowering unwanted vibrations, diffraction, turbulences and standing waves effect.

The high-end African wood veneers, painted with 9-layer clear piano lacquer is luxurious and enduring.

The cabinet sits on a 2-layer discrete metal base with oversized spikes. The 2-layer design increases isolation from the floor, the transparency of sound and provides better definition and the basis for the bass.

The whole cabinet is tilted back slightly to time-align all the drivers – it brings the tweeter’s output into the best and correct alignment.

Supplied extra aluminum spike supports provide super stability for the speakers and protect the floor from being scratched.

To keep the elegant and sleek appearance of the front panel there are no grill sockets thanks to a magnetic mountable grill.

TWEETER

The high-end 30mm (1.18”) O-TPTTD (Oversized Taga Pure Titanium Tweeter Dome) is 20% bigger than in the company’s Platinum Special Edition series to allow even higher power handling and more accurate, clear, smooth and detailed performance. Ferrofluid cooled and heavy duty 28mm CCAW and silver wiring voice coil as well as 2 magnets (Φ80 &   Φ70) help the tweeter to bear high power.

The E-TPAF (Enlarged Taga Pure Aluminium Faceplate) and metal grill helps even further dispersion of high-frequencies.

MIDRANGE

The 165mm (6.5”) rigid and ultra-light E-TPACD (Extended Taga Pure Aluminum cone Driver) midrange (with a bullet shaped phase plug,  aluminum chassis and oversized 2-magnet structure Φ100/Φ90) where the butyl suspension can move very fast and frequently allowing mid-range frequencies to be very rich, spacious and sweet. The bullet shaped phase plug is to align the phase of the audio signal and to smooth the midrange frequency response. The extended low and high frequency range (from 46 Hz – 18 kHz) helps overlapping with frequencies of the woofers and the tweeter to offer the best sound consistency and integration.

WOOFERS

The two 203mm (8”) TNPPCD (Taga  Non-pressed Paper Cone Driver) woofers – each equipped with three oversized 2xΦ123 + Φ100 magnets and  aluminum chassis. They are extremely rigid and utilize vibration-free solutions. The heavy duty 4-layer pure copper ribbon voice coil allows high power handling. TNPPCD drivers offer deep, precise and detailed bass performance. Thanks to a larger surface area to push air – the sound can be played at much louder levels.

CROSSOVER / INTERNAL WIRING

High quality, close-tolerance and precisely selected crossover components and internal are used with TAGA Harmony utilizing  high quality of OFC internal wiring connecting crossovers with drivers, assuring that incoming audio signals from a receiver or amplifier will not lose any important details on the paths to drivers.tagaxover

SPEAKER BINDING POSTStaga8jan_20163

The high quality, gold-plated banana binding posts accept raw speaker cables up to 10AWG and most popular types of connectors. They offer bi-wiring and bi-amping for wider dispersions and spaciousness, higher sonic accuracy and more precise sound. We use high-end 4N pure oxygen free copper wire jumpers terminated with gold-plated banana and spades connectors.

 

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World Debut Of The New ‘Masterpiece’ Gamut Zodiac Loudspeaker At CES 2016

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If you’re already a fan of Gamut’s RS Series then you’re in for a treat. The new hot-off-the-press Zodiac is a further development of the pride of the RS Series, the huge RS9.Gamut Zodiac

“The Zodiac is basically my dream loudspeaker,” says Benno Baun Meldgaard, Gamut’s designer, whose passion and skills are such that in Europe he has earned the nickname ‘the best ears in the business’. In fact, if you’ve ever seen Meldgaard set up and fine-tune a system, you’ll know why he’s also known affectionately as ‘the speaker whisperer’.

In 2016 Meldgaard’s dance card has been reserved for the Zodiac, into which he has poured all of his expertise built on decades of psychoacoustics research and development, including experiencing countless classical live concerts.

“This is my Mona Lisa,” he explains. “It’s me taking loudspeaker design and engineering to the ultimate, removing any and all constraints – including cost – to create a genuine masterpiece of musicality. As an audio designer and passionate lover of live music, this is the kind of project you live for”.

A true masterpiece doesn’t typically go into mass production and the Zodiac is no exception. Just 12 pairs will be handcrafted each year, one per month, and each will bear the relevant sign of the astrological zodiac. No serial numbers here, just a star sign.

The Gamut Zodiac: highlights in brief

  • A true ‘cost no object’ handcrafted loudspeaker.
  • Only 12 pairs to be built each year (one per month/sign of the zodiac).
  • Extended frequency response of 16Hz to 60kHz.
  • Phase-aligned drive units from 400Hz to 12kHz.
  • All drive units have been newly custom-designed and individually matched by Meldgaard.
  • Highly complex cabinet showcases a new system of internal spacing, semi-separated by bespoke acoustic filters.
  • The crossover is a new innovative design featuring superlative quality components sourced from Danish experts Janzen Audio.
  • Zodiac’s designer Benno Baun Meldgaard will visit each owner within 12 months of purchase to fine-tune the Zodiac set-up in the owner’s listening room.

Gamut will be demonstrating the new Zodiac in suite 29-324 at the Venetian Hotel at CES 2016, along with a number of other ‘stars’ from the Gamut range.

Gamut at CES 2016: system on display/demonstration at CES 2016

The new top-of-range Zodiac loudspeaker
M250i mono power amplifiers
D3i dual mono preamplifier
Gamut’s new Reference cables: speaker, interconnect and power

 

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Three New Products from McIntosh Announced At CES 2016

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McIntosh has introduced three new products at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES 2016): the MX122 A/V Processor, MB50 Streaming Audio Player and RS100 Wireless Loudspeaker.

MX122 A/V Processor

The MX122 A/V Processor can serve as the brain centre for an advanced home theater system for years to come. It features many of the latest breakthroughs in surround sound and object-based 3D audio such as Dolby® Atmos, and will be upgradeable to support DTS:X™ and Auro-3D®. Besides 3D audio, existing formats like DolbyMX122 Angle Right

TrueHD, DTS-HD Master Audio™ and others are still supported. The MX122 is fully compatible with modern 4K Ultra HD video sources and can upscale lower resolutions to 4K Ultra HD. A wide assortment of inputs and outputs are included to connect current and future entertainment sources. All HDMI inputs and outputs are HDCP 2.2 and support High Dynamic Range (HDR), 4K Ultra HD at 50/60Hz, 4:4:4 color, Rec. 2020 and 3D video pass-through. The MX122 can send select audio and/or video to 2 additional zones within in the house. Users can connect to their online digital music with either the wired or wireless network connections. DSD64 files can be played from flash drives or over the network. Bluetooth and AirPlay® connectivity allows for easy streaming from mobile devices. Interfaces to popular streaming services including Pandora®, SiriusXM® and Spotify® are included while vTuner connects to 1,000s of internet radio stations. Audyssey MultEQ® XT32 will calibrate the MX122 to each home theater’s unique acoustical properties.

MB50 Streaming Audio Player

A home audio system can be transformed into a wireless audio system with the MB50 Streaming Audio Player. The MB50 features DTS Play-Fi® technology to give the freedom and flexibility to wirelessly play music at home over an existing Wi-Fi network. While utilizing DTS Play-Fi streaming capabilities, the MB50 delivers the legendary McIntosh sound quality and performance found in our other home audio products. Simply connect the MB50 to a Wi-Fi network and audio system via the analog or digital outputs and then stream music to it from the Apple or Android mobile app or Windows desktop app. Besides accessing a personal music library on a mobile device, the apps have built-in support for many leading online streaming services including Deezer, KKBox, Pandora®, QQMusic, Rhapsody, SiriusXM®, Songza, Spotify® and TIDAL (list subject to change). If there’s more than one audio system to stream to, just add an MB50 to each and then stream the same music to all systems. Or if there are multiple mobile devices with the app, different music can simultaneously be streamed to each system.MB50 Angle Left

Analog and digital inputs allow for connecting audio components such as CD players, letting the MB50 to act as a mini-preamp.

RS100 Wireless Loudspeaker

The RS100 wireless speaker allows streaming music capabilities to be added to any room. It features DTS Play-Fi® technology that gives the freedom and flexibility to wirelessly play the music on mobile devices over an existing Wi-Fi network. Simply connect it to a Wi-Fi network, install the free Play-Fi Apple or Android mobile app or Windows desktop app and then begin streaming. A single RS100 is all that is needed to start building a wireless speaker system; more can be added over time to expand the system. Up to 16 speakers can be connected to a single Wi-Fi network – enough for stereo playback in 8 separate rooms. With the Play-Fi app installed on multiple devices, each device can stream different music to each room, giving all family members or guests control over what they want to hear in their room. Besides accessing a personal music library, the apps have built-in support for many leading online streaming services including Deezer, KKBox, Pandora®, QQMusic, Rhapsody, SiriusXM®, Songza, Spotify® and TIDAL (list subject to change). Not limited to just streaming, the RS100 is flexible thanks to its auxiliary input which allows it to be used in non-streaming setups; it can quickly be switched back and forth between the two inputs to accommodate listening preferences. A subwoofer output is also included.RS100 Angle left no grille

All three products are available to order now from authorized McIntosh dealers with shipping anticipated in January for MX122 and in March for MB50 and RS100. Suggested retail price for each (VAT, shipping and any customs duties related to current standards of individual countries are excluded):

MX122: $7,000 USD

MB50: $2,000USD

RS100: $1,000 USD per speaker

 

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TAGA Harmony Revises Azure Speaker Series

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TAGA Harmony announces the launch of the revised Azure speaker series.

The name of the series was inspired by the French Riviera.

  • TLIE(Taga Low Interference Enclosure) – new elegant enclosures are now even more rigid and neutral to vibrations and colorization.       The MDF walls thickness has been increased from 12mm to 15mm in the floorstanding speaker (plus 18mm thick front panel) and from 9mm to 12mm in the centre and surround speakers (plus 15mm front panel)
  • The 2ndgeneration TPTTD-I (Taga Pure Titanium Tweeter Dome) utilises a differently shaped and lighter titanium cone as well as a double-magnet structure – it has a higher SPL, faster and more accurate movement of the dome
  • The totally new high-performance mid and woofer drivers incorporate TDSC Taga Dynamic Surround Control, which provides stable cone movement, dynamics and precision and increased system sensitivity
  • New decorative pure aluminum trim rings and tweeter faceplate to enhance sound dispersion
  • New configuration of the drivers: tweeters are positioned closer to the midrange to provide even better smoothness and integration between high and mid frequencies. The woofers in the floorstanding model were moved a little up in order to change bass definition and its dispersion.
  • The dramatically upgradedcrossovers to meet new refinements and configuration of the drivers: more delicate and rich treble, better defined midrange and more dynamic bass.
  • Now equipped with removable grills.

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Kudos’ New Titan 808 Loudspeakers Now Shipping

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Previewed at last year’s Bristol Show and officially launched at The National Audio Show and Hi-Fi Show Live 2015, the long-awaited new Titan 808 flagship loudspeaker from Kudos Audio is now shipping to audiophiles worldwide.

The Titan 808 has deliberately taken its time to come to market. Not only because of the considerable investment in research and re-engineering, but also because Kudos were keen test and refine prototypes extensively with a wide range of expert listeners.

“At Kudos, we use music as our primary tool in designing and assessing loudspeakers,” says designer Derek Gilligan. During his many years as a live sound engineer, Gilligan discovered that technical measurements, while extremely useful, don’t reflect everything that we hear.  “There’s no substitute for extensive critical listening in a variety of scenarios,” he says.

As the new flagship of the Kudos range, the Titan 808 takes the place of the original Titan 88. But while the two may share a name, the new Titan 808 is a completely unique design. Only the two isobaric bass drivers remain the same as those in the original T88. The mid-bass driver, tweeter and crossover have all been advanced and refined, while the all-new and even more complex cabinet features a stunningly avant-garde design.   

The Titan 808’s drive units are crafted exclusively for Kudos by Norwegian specialists SEAS. The two companies have worked closely together to further advance SEAS’ Crescendo K2 fabric dome tweeter exclusively for Kudos. An improved magnet system incorporating copper shorting rings, a completely new resonance chamber and a new face plate profile all combine to deliver an even “cleaner, faster and more musically detailed performance”.Kudos T808

The mid/bass driver, also exclusive to the Titan 808, has been similarly re-engineered to further enhance its match with the new tweeter and hence to produce seamless integration and response over the frequency range.

The twin bass drivers feature hard paper cones, double-coated to ensure excellent stiffness while retaining the natural damping properties of paper. A long voice coil and injection-moulded alloy framework maximise the linear excursion of the drive cone.

Kudos’ obsession with seamlessly matched drive units is driven by designer Derek Gilligan’s firm belief that one of the keys to a truly musical performance from a loudspeaker is a minimalist, low order crossover. No expense has been spared in reworking the Titan 808’s crossover, which features even higher-spec hand-matched Mundorf componentry, as well as now having the ability to be completely by-passed in order to facilitate ‘Aktiv’ operation using Linn Exakt technology (more on this below). The 808’s minimal crossover is a two-and-a-half-way design, where the bass section in the lower cabinet is rolled off early in the frequency range; the mid/bass driver and tweeter are then operated as a two-way design.  A slow roll-off from all the drivers ensures optimal coherence though the crossover regions.

Each speaker consists of an independent upper and lower cabinet, separated by precision-machined spacers and a port resonance guide. The upper cabinet houses the tweeter and mid/bass drive unit while the lower cabinet houses the two bass drivers. These are positioned in an isobaric arrangement, where the second driver is placed internally back-to-back with the first.

Considerable investment has been made in controlling panel resonance with a minimum of damping. The cabinets are made from a combination of high-density fibreboard laminates of different thicknesses. A triple laminate front baffle, profiled to improve dispersion, provides a solid mounting platform for the drive units to further eliminate vibration. Both cabinet sections are port-loaded into the gap between them and are controlled by the port resonance guide. Venting the ports into a shared and controlled fixed boundary gap reduces port resonance and minimises phase error, producing a beautifully natural and life-like sound free from the usual issues associated with reflex designs. The lower cabinet is attached to the plinth via a membrane to control energy transfer.  The plinth itself provides the best possible grounding interface with very high-density fibreboard being combined with damping compound and a 5mm steel plate, into which precision-milled stainless steel spikes are fitted.

Internal wiring from The Chord Company has been carefully selected for its high quality musicality and resistance to the effects of vibration.  In addition, Chord Company cables link the two cabinets, which are also fitted with WBT Nextgen binding posts to ensure a superb connection.

Kudos Audio have been working with Linn to bring the performance of Linn Exakt to the Kudos range of loudspeakers. Launched by Linn in 2013, Exakt allows the loudspeaker to be an intelligent, connected, software upgradeable product. Exakt enables a wide range of performance and personalisation-enhancing capabilities in design, in manufacture and in-home. In a system using a Linn Exaktbox, the original analogue crossover in the loudspeaker is bypassed and instead, the Exaktbox performs the crossover digitally, while applying Linn’s Exakt technology to eliminate distortion, correct for drive unit variation and optimise the loudspeakers’ performance for the room.  

Kudos three top-of-range speakers, the Titan 808, Super 20 and Super 10 are all Linn Exakt-enabled.

 

Technical specifications

 

Type: 2.5-way isobaric bass reflex
Recommended power: 25W – 300W
Sensitivity: 91dB / @1W / 1m
Nominal impedance: 8 ohms
Frequency range: 20 Hz – 30kHz “AIRR” (average in-room response)
Tweeter: SEAS–Kudos Crescendo K2 29mm fabric dome
Mid bass driver: SEAS–Kudos 220mm Nextel coated paper cone with 39mm voice coil
Bass driver: SEAS–Kudos 220mm double coated hard paper cone with 39mm voice coil (x 2)
Dimensions: 1115mm (h) x 275mm (w) x 370mm (d)
Weight: 66kg
Finishes: Tineo veneer (high gloss paint finishes available to special order)

The Titan 808 is available now priced at £21,250 per pair (including VAT).

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Wilson Alexx Loudspeakers Available For UK Order

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We ran an in-depth announcement of the latest loudspeakers to come from Wilson Audio, The Alexx, a few weeks ago, but we’re now pleased to be able to announce that the speakers, which will sit between Alexia and the flagship £200 000 per pair Alexandria XLF, will be available in the UK through Absolute Sounds in the Spring with a price of around £90 000.

wILSON_alexx1

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Russell K Red 100 Loudspeakers

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Russell Kauffman’s Russell K company make just two models of loudspeaker. Here Dominic Marsh and Janine Elliot take a listen to the bigger Red 100 standmounters costing £1784 in the piano gloss finish and with grilles, though less pricey options are available. 

As a reviewer for Hifi Pig Magazine you mostly get assigned what you are going to review by our editor Stuart.  But, every once in a while either he asks if we have any components we have on our ‘hit list’ we would like to review and this particular review is the result of one of those instances.

I first set eyes upon Russell K speakers during a dealer visit to Bob Hesketh at Tavistock Audio in the early part of this year.  As always, I only spotted them as I was about to leave and the looks alone intrigued me to say the least, but there wasn’t the time available then to hook them up and have a quick listen.   It wasn’t the piano gloss black cabinetry or the bright red baffles and grey cabinets that drew me towards them, it was the name “Russell K” screen printed on the tweeter surround that said to me if someone puts their own name to a product in that way, there was a real driving passion behind it for doing so.  Brave man.RK2s

Russell who?  He has worked as a speaker designer for some famous names in the industry for a good number of years, the last being Morel, so although you may not recognize the name, he has probably been the brains behind a goodly number of class act speakers.  It has always puzzled me why the large corporations harbour a massive wealth of talent under their roofs, yet manage to frustrate them so much they end up leaving and flexing their wings and being highly successful in their own right.  Russell left Morel because him being based in the UK and Morel headquartered in Israel wasn’t conducive to a fruitful working environment. Their loss is our gain it seems.

One of the (few!) upsides of a reviewer’s  job is you get to meet the people behind the brands and the overwhelming majority are nice friendly people with the same lunatic passions as the consumers of their products possess, so they mostly understand what we in the audiophile fraternity actually seek from the products we might buy from them.

Due to a busy schedule however,  I had to put a follow up call on the back burner for a while and when I did at last have to the time to make further enquiries, Russell Kauffman was not easy to get hold of with his busy schedule either.  Such is life.  Anyway, at long last I managed to get hold of Russell and ask very nicely if he would consider a Hifi Pig review of his speakers, to which he readily agreed and here below is the result.

CONSTRUCTION

According to Russell K’s website, either side above and below each bass unit is a bracing shelf containing multiple apertures with the reflex port located under the bottom shelf. The midrange energy from the rear of the bass/mid unit is contained within the two shelves which mean only bass escapes into the full volume of the enclosure. The result is a drastic reduction of midrange standing waves and almost no midrange energy making its way out of the port tube. The very low port tuning frequency of 35Hz on the Red 100 produces a bass that is extraordinarily tight and very well extended.

Another feature of the design is the complete lack of damping material in the cabinet, either in the form of bituminous panels or long haired wool or fibre type material.  Russell Kauffman says this gives rise to sloppy bass characteristics so has completely eliminated it from his designs, by using those braces and baffles to effect the necessary damping of the bass/mid drive unit.

The crossover circuitry too plays an important part in a loudspeaker’s sound characteristics, so the design brief was to keep it simple and is centered around a 12db per octave slope crossing over at 2.2KHz with only one inductance coil for the bass driver and just one capacitor feeding the tweeter, also maintaining a benign load for the driving amplifier, even low powered single ended valve amplifiers I am told.   Nominal impedance is 8 Ohms.  Connections are made via a single pair of good quality 4mm binding posts that will accept bare wire, spades or banana plugs, with no bi-wire or bi-amping facility.Red 100 Crossover

Driver complement consists of a 165mm doped paper bass driver and a 25mm soft dome tweeter in vertical alignment to the centre of the baffle, along with the reflex port near the bottom edge.  I haven’t tried this myself, but Russell assures me that if someone pokes the tweeter cone in it will pop out of it’s own accord some time later.  I will take his word for that.  However, if you have some little persons in your household with inquisitive fingers that have the propensity to explore button-like protuberances on speaker drivers, then grilles are available to protect them from the aforesaid mischievous digits.

The grilles are an extra cost option at £84.00 a pair you will note, as the standard speaker is supplied without any grilles at all.  The grilles themselves are made from a perforated metal sheet with a metal insert in each corner to hold 4 individual magnets which for their size are quite powerful.  Embedded into the front baffle during construction are 4 equally powerful magnets which line up with the grille and are hidden from view due to the baffle’s final surface finish.  I am pleased to say that the magnets are strong enough to hold the heavy grilles in place, yet not so strong as to make removing the grilles a grappling match either.

Cabinet dimensions are  40cm high, by 26cm wide, by 27cm deep, making it slightly squat and boxy in appearance.  The buyer has a choice of finishes to choose from, ranging from a red baffle with a plastic type of grey vinyl material to the rest of the cabinet as the base model, to a satin black baffle with either real veneered Oak, Walnut, or Mahogany finishes, or the full monty piano gloss black or piano gloss white  finish on all sides including the baffle.

The pair submitted for review were finished in a piano gloss black finish.

Prices at time of testing are:

Red baffle, grey cabinet:£1,250.00 inc VAT

Satin black baffle, wood finish:£1,475.00 inc VAT

Piano gloss white or black:£1,700.00 inc VAT

Front grilles (Pair):£84.00  inc VAT

The price differential between the basic grey and red variant compared to the full piano gloss version raised some concerns with me, given that the cost of the piano gloss finish represented a good percentage of the speaker’s base cost to begin with.  Russell said it was a high price due to the fact that the piano gloss finish is hand prepared with rubbing and sanding down between the base paint coats and the final lacquer coats which is of course is highly labour intensive work and the additional cost is reflected in that.

I am informed that a dedicated stand is being designed for the 100s and will be completed in due course. In the absence of same, I tried them on 50cm stands which were too low and a 60cm pair brought the speakers up the correct height for me.  Russell said they were a bit finicky with what stands they are paired with and I am not aware if my Partington Ansa stands were on his approved stands list but they sounded fine to me.

SOUND QUALITY

With a build specification like that, you might expect a sound that was well off the beaten path and you would be right to think that.  While the overwhelming majority of the speakers out there are designed with a whole series of compromises (Including aesthetics and cost), the Russell K 100’s are not that way inclined, as the designer has reportedly spent an inordinate amount of time, effort and no doubt money too, in refining the design to have as few if any of those compromises that others are plagued with.  Russell Kauffman has put his very being into the design and every single aspect of them has been paid meticulous attention to and the sonic rewards to you the listener are immense.

The greatest triumph of the design for me has been the bass performance and while I am not an advocate of bass reflex designs as a whole with their chuffing ports and woolly bass output, much preferring the solid weight and control of an infinite baffle design, the Russell K 100s sports the very same reflex port I am wary of and have quickly come to the conclusion after hearing these speakers, is that the reflex port per se isn’t to blame, it is the poor implementation of the reflex port principle that is the real bogeyman.  A large hole drilled into the baffle or back plate and some cheap plastic tube shoved in there, do not a reflex port make and these speakers demonstrate that rather concisely.

Russell Kauffman claims the port is tuned to 35Hz and I would be the last to dispute that figure, but what I can tell you is this speaker goes LOW folks for a mere stand mounted speaker and in complete control too I might add.  No boom, no overhang, no wooliness at all, that leading edge is good enough to shave stubble off your chin, it is that keen and in truth puts many a large floor standing model to shame for good measure.  There is a slight raising of upper bass energy which the designer is aware of and I think the sound benefits from that by adding a touch or warmth to the midrange which otherwise would be on the cool side.

The word “articulate” is much bandied about by reviewers to describe bass that they hear and I often think to myself is that word used as a true description of what is being heard, or just another euphemism or plucked from the ether kind of word slotted in when the description memory bank starts running aground?   The bass output of the RK 100’s is articulate in every sense of the word, inasmuch as it’s as real a standing next to the bass guitarist, drummer, cellist, flautist, whatever and hearing every single timbre and harmonic from those instruments deep into the bass registers.  Let’s not completely ignore the tweeter’s role in this scenario either as it’s no shrinking violet by any means, as it’s not merely a supporting act for the bass driver, oh no, this driver is crisp and clean, insightful without being explicit.  The pair are very well matched to the crossover, giving a refreshing cleanliness to the midrange and I couldn’t hear any bloom or fogging in that area of the audible spectrum.

Onto some music then and hoping that you own or have listened to my often played favourite album for putting a system through its paces.   If you don’t own or have not heard it, then I suggest obtaining a copy of Fink’s “Wheels Turn Beneath My Feet” live album so you can relate to what I am referring to in my reviews.  Fink’s artistic talents may not ring your bells (it didn’t mine at first) but it has certain elements in the recording that makes faults shine like a beacon, a joy when reproduced accurately.  Tidal has a higher resolution than Spotify, which while acceptable doesn’t have the same resolving power as the original CD or high resolution downloads for a listen to this album.  Dan Worth also uses this album for the same reason.

Track one begins with “Biscuits For Breakfast” with some crisp cymbal strikes to the centre of the Ride Cymbal from the drummer that has resonances and ringing within the cymbal strikes and it takes a great tweeter to capture that essence, which the Russell K’s do admirably and run a very close second to some ribbon tweeters I have heard.  Bass guitar has a taut deep growl to it and goes very low while at the same time it captures the fret finger movements from the guitarist with uncanny realism.

This album as I have probably mentioned a good few times in my reviews, has each track recorded at different venues and it takes a very competent speaker to let you the listener know that they have been, with reverberation and ambience cues ranging from intimate to large scale.  On one track the microphone is slightly misbehaving too and the Russell K’s let you know that is occurring as well, whereas it slips under the radar with most other speakers.

When we come to the track called “Sort Of Revolution” the drummer drives down hard on to the Floor Tom and by golly it generally makes my listening room almost expand and contract with the power and energy released.  The Russell K’s though do it rather differently, by exposing every part of that strike into separate compartments, as in you can hear and almost feel the drum stick hitting the drum’s ‘skin’, the body of the drum reacting to that and begins vibrating with an almost aural picture in the air of the drum itself and yes the energy is still there, but taut and very controlled, down to the decay.   At first it was rather disconcerting, having become accustomed to a single powerful burst of energy emanating from the speakers, but since hearing what I have done from the Russell K’s it has set a brand new benchmark for me that other speakers which follow for review will have to strive towards.   This track has a visceral pounding rhythm to it and is a good test of both timing cues and separation between instruments, so while the drummer is maintaining a steady beat on the Kick Drum, the bass guitarist is mirroring that pace and the audience is clapping along.  If this doesn’t lift you up and enervate you into enjoying the music you are in need of help.Terminals

Of course being an album recorded live, I will pay particular attention to how the audience sounds.  Any speaker that makes the audience clapping sound like bacon sizzling in a frying pan or a thousand crisp (potato chips) bags being rustled is a complete no-no as far as I am concerned.   I need to be made to feel as if I am surrounded by cheering enthusiastic people, catcalling and whistling as individuals I can place in locations around me (well, as far as a stereo image will let me perceive anyway).

As a contrast to that, some electronic music in the shape of Tripswitch’s excellent album “Geometry”.  There is some superb layering in this album and it takes a sure footed pair of speakers to unfold and pull back all the layers so each strand is separated and clear.  The bass lines are really deep, subtle in places too and can easily be muddled by the music around it.  The Russell K’s certainly did untangle and strand out all of the music and the bass was separated out almost into a compartment on it’s own, untroubled by whatever else was going on around it.

Naturally, I played a large range of music genres and the Russell K Red 100’s acquitted themselves very well.  My final test though was Porcupine Tree’s “Deadwing” album and that will either sound dreadful with it’s raw uncouth recording, or acceptable, with little middle ground in between.   The opening title track has the sounds of a train pulling into a station with plenty of brake squealing sounds and it’s electric motor humming away in the background while the passengers alight.  The Russell K’s certainly picked up these sounds with great clarity and as is the norm with good sounding systems it fair set my teeth on edge.  Now if the sound was smooth and rounded then I would have been concerned.  Further into that same track there is a bass guitar riff with a long low note that shouldn’t just ‘emerge’ as a grumble from the speakers, it has to flow and roll out seemingly low down near the floor to be credible.  I got that full effect from the Russell K’s and to my surprise I could almost count the bass guitar’s string vibrations.  Spooky.

If you are the kind of listener who revels in the sound of female vocals then these speakers will delight.  Haven’t heard Loreena McKennit sounding better and Dido’s “Life For Rent” album took on some new dimensions that convinced me I should listen to it more often from now on as I had mostly dismissed it as being a typical commercial pop recording.  Not so.

CONCLUSION

When I first laid eyes on the Russell K Red 100’s there was a gut instinct feeling that they were “right”somehow.  Don’t ask me to explain why because I can’t, I just sensed it.  I hadn’t even heard of them before, nor of Russell Kauffman the designer for that matter, even less heard them fired up in action to make some sort of value judgment call and they weren’t even red, but in a piano black finish.  Certainly wasn’t their looks as they are to me a short wide box rather than a slim elegant  design that fits neatly into contemporary homes, nor was it a heady mix of exposed exotic drivers in the cabinet to get my juices flowing either.  Maybe it was the screen printed name in white on the tweeter of the man himself and I could easily go nuts here trying to figure it out where this gut feeling sprang from.  It was that gut feeling that drove me on to get in touch with Russell Kauffman to arrange a review pair and am so glad that I persisted because it has been very worthwhile.

These speakers may just change your perceptions about stand mounted speakers as it has changed mine.  Reaching  down to the bass regions where many a floor stander cannot get to is a revelation in itself, making that bass so controlled and so articulate is breathtaking and a tribute to the designer.  Great bass is one thing, matching that to an equally impressive well performing treble and midrange says these speakers are no one trick pony and a lot of thought and expertise has gone into their creation.

I had visions of clinging on to my resident speakers until my final breath and while there has been a procession of speakers through my hands for review, none have tempted me to change until the Russell K’s came along.  I have ordered a pair for myself and if that isn’t putting your money where your mouth is, then I don’t know what is and how much better a recommendation would you possibly want from me?

As ever don’t just take my word for it, arrange an audition to gauge suitability for your tastes, preferences and system synergy which will always be the ultimate arbiter.  But I do implore you to at least have a serious listen to them, as they may just raise the bar for you too.

Build quality: 8.6/10RECOMMENDED LOGO NEW

Sound quality: 9.3/10

Value for money: 9/10

Overall: 8.96/10 

Pros:                            

Exceptional sound quality and fine build in an affordable package.  Few rivals within this particular price band or indeed even higher for the base model red and grey cabinet variant. 

Cons:        

£84.00 for a pair of grilles. Ouch!

Dominic Marsh

I’d spoken to Stu about these loudspeakers and he mentioned that Dominic had really enjoyed them and so, intrigued, I wanted to hear them for myself.  That was all I knew, and in the light of honest reviewing I didn’t want to know anything about earlier reviews on the speakers before I listened, and won’t until this review goes live. I met up with Russell Kaufmann at his Dunstable factory to listen to the speakers there and then later in my own listening environment with my cat Toby. The speakers are tradition box-shaped 2way with front port, with 4 distinctive indented horizontal lines on the baffle, which I liked.  The cheapest version has a red front, which you can cover up with a grille, available as an accessory, though why you would want to I don’t know. All versions looked great. The review sample was shiny piano-black, beautifully built and the more expensive.rk3s

Russell was very open about his designing which helped me to understand the sound I heard and what he was trying to do. This model lies between the 50 bookshelf and 150 two-and-a-half-way floorstander.  The sound was certainly very unique and interesting. I did notice a ‘micro’-spike at around 800Hz, something he later told me only one other reviewer had ever noticed, and in fact it was 830Hz. It wouldn’t be noticeable to almost everybody, only that my hearing is exceptionally good and I have perfect pitch, so I could hear something between a G and G#. This didn’t cause any problem to music or speech, if anything helped give it its distinctive and pleasurable sound. The set-up in the “factory” wasn’t ideal, so I was glad to take it back to my house, which I have set up so there are no reflecting walls. Indeed like B11 in the Basement of Old Broadcasting House back in my days at the Beeb, where sounds were not absorbed in the walls but reflected out of the way of the listening area, my living room is set up so that some sounds are absorbed and others reflected away from the listening area. Similarly Russell uses a horizontal wooden floor above and below the woofer with holes to control and direct sounds both up to tweeter and down to the port chamber so sounds don’t need to be damped in the traditional manner of box loudspeakers. Indeed there is no internal damping, though the wood used is thick unlike old box-builds of the 60s. They were supplied to me on his own designed stand of thick metal base and solid wood sides, which worked very well.

The sound was certainly good with classical music, giving a very good controlled and polite musical rendition of The 4 Seasons, Vivaldi (Allegro (Spring; Takako Nishizaki), had the strings and harpsichord well placed and everything where I would expect it in the orchestra. Kate Bush Aerial ‘An Endless Sky of Honey’ was powerful and well composed in the bass end; indeed, the bass was the really special thing about these speakers. The bass was not woolly or uncontrolled as in a number of speakers 2 to 3 times the price. Tops were clear with an extended decay time in the end of phrases. ‘Fields of Gold’, Eva Cassidy wasn’t quite so accurate. The OTT reverb on her voice with its HF lift wasn’t so obvious or clear. Similarly the acoustic guitar wasn’t so easy to place in the soundstage and in fact sounded almost as if there was a phase issue. The guitar in John Lee Hooker Deep Blue Sea, similarly didn’t position the guitar pin sharp in front of me, as my speakers-of-choice do. The speed of the heavy microphone breath at 2’ was certainly clear, though, as was the punchy close mic’ing in ‘Besame Mucho’ (Puschnig and Sarrock). Of course this is where things get delicate; a 12dB/second order/ crossover design suggests usually the tweeters should be phase reversed, but often designers don’t bother as they adjust the crossover components to get the sound just right. This is what Russell has done, using his ears to get the measurements ‘just right’ for him. The 4+4 element bass/tweeter crossover design is typical 2 octave design apart from not doing the reversed -/+ tweeter polarity. Whilst this gave an exciting and attractive sound, understandably attractive, as a boring studio manager used to balancing music in front of a massive desk with speakers reasonably apart, this just sounded not right for me. However, its ability to make Jeff Lynne’s ELO’s latest offering ‘Alone in the Universe’ sound worth the outlay is a powerful selling point.   The bass, right down to the lowest lows, put my £5000 stand-mount monitors to shame, but that tweeter just didn’t do it for me. What was very good, however, was the way the two drivers worked so well together as a single point-source, rather than sounding like two separate drivers in a box.

CONCLUSION

I might sound overtly critical but I really did want to understand these speakers, as I felt they were my friend. They might not have been the red ones but the sound was very human and personal and I was the one who was blushing. For the price, designed in the UK by a gentleman of many years’ experience in audio design and sales and sourced in Poland, this is an excellent speaker and I really want to listen to more from the company. At under £2000 this is a very attractive proposition.

Sound Quality: 8.5/10RECOMMENDED LOGO NEW

Value for Money: 8.7/10

Build Quality: 8.8/10

Overall: 8.67/10

Janine Elliot

Designer’s Notes 

The design goal on the Red 100 was to make a loudspeaker that sounds as close as we could get to the real thing at an affordable price.  As a new company with Red 100 being the first product, it was essential to bring some original thinking to the party in order that the speaker would not be instantly dismissed. As a starting point we decided to cut everything from the design that was not critical to the sound. Some examples of this thinking being; the grille is an extra cost option; many customers will take the grille off and never use it, but have paid for it in the complete speaker. A Russell K customer is given the choice. The packaging for transport is simple but safe and there are no brochures. The more controversial cuts include the decision not to use famous brands for drive units, but well made, good sounding drivers adapted for Russell K, and the now familiar ribbed plastic coated grey cabinet with a Ferrari red front baffle. This finish option saves the customer a lot money with no loss of sound quality.

Starting with drive units, the first test is to connect a woofer, or for that matter a tweeter, directly to the amp with no crossover or cabinet and just listen. If the sound is bad then no crossover will really help, and it is amazing how different, and sometimes bad, even the best tweeters can sound. In the case of the Red 100 tweeter it sounds smooth and can even play a bass tune – in fact it sounds like a small speaker.

The woofer size came next and we went for a nominal 6 inch unit. We feel this  has the best compromise between efficiency, power handling, bass extension, clarity and dispersion. Next we did a bit of maths to find the optimum volume (size) for the cabinet and found it really was most comfortable being a stand mount rather than a compromised floorstanding enclosure.

There are many different ways to design a speaker and I don’t claim to have the only correct way. In many respects I try to work to my strengths and avoid going into areas that I am not so secure about. This is a roundabout way of me saying that measurements and theory are always going to be the slave of what I hear. I do believe a speaker should have a relatively flat measured response, but I will not allow the sound to suffer to get it. This sets me free to bend some of the rules such as no internal damping in the cabinet, no resistors in the signal path, and not using textbook values for the crossover components.

The design studio allows me to measure and listen without having to move the speakers or disconnect them from the Hi Fi system. This means I can listen, make an adjustment, measure and then listen again allowing me to control the process of voicing the speaker. I use a lot of different music with no particular test tracks, along with spoken word. I also check and recheck many times to be sure I didn’t fool myself into thinking I have made the best speaker in the world.

The final product is designed to work with both transistor and valve amps, and whilst it does not have a Hi-End price, it should be set up with the same care and attention. For sure I treated this speaker with the same respect during development that I lavished on a £25,000.00 loudspeaker designed for a company I was a consultant for.

Russell Kauffman 

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James Loudspeaker Announce W Series

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James Loudspeaker, designers and manufacturers of décor-friendly entertainment products for both residential and commercial applications, has announced the introduction of the W-Series loudspeakers designed for specialised boundary applications, such as integration into a 90-degree corner where walls and ceilings converge. James Loudspeaker say “The visually unobtrusive wedge-shaped form factor is ideal for the latest immersive 3D audio technologies (Atmos, Auro3D and DTS:X) as well as other applications and can be used in both indoor and outdoor environments”.53QW

The initial launch of the W-Series includes two models; the 52QW (single 5.25-inch woofer/quad tweeter) and the 53QW (dual 5.25-inch woofers/quad tweeter). Each speaker features proprietary high-excursion woofers matched to the quad-array aluminium dome tweeter that has become a signature of the James Loudspeaker brand.

The 52QW and 53QW are constructed entirely of aircraft-grade aluminium for strength, sonic performance and durability and feature an aluminium perforated grille. A unique mounting system makes W-Series speakers easy to install using an innovative corner bracket that suspends the speaker securely via setscrews. Standard colours are Gloss White and Satin Black, however custom colours are available to suit any décor. Specially equipped versions of each model are available for outdoor/marine applications. James Loudspeaker W-Series loudspeakers are available now only through authorised integrators. The 52QW MSRP is $1000 (each) and 53QW MSRP is $1300 (each).

James Loudspeaker architectural loudspeakers are engineered and manufactured in Napa, CA USA.

 

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AVID To Launch £35K to £120K Reference Loudspeakers

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Following last year’s launch of their Reference Amplifiers, AVID have announced their complimenting range of Reference loudspeakers, which will officially launch at this year’s Munich High End Show 2016.Avid Reference Range

Made up of one stand-mounted design and two floor-standing models, they have massive black aluminium enclosures and trademark AVID design touches.

The three models start with the stand-mount Reference Three through the Reference Two and finishing with the range-topping Reference One. Prices are expected to be £35K to £120K.

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Scansonic Loudspeakers With Raidho Heritage

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Scansonic is owned by Dantax, the same parent company as Raidho, and the brand’s loudspeakers are designed by Michael Børresen, creator of the Raidho range.  As a result, they have much of the Raidho family DNA and pedigree but at a fraction of the cost.

Says Børresen, “Having worked with Raidho speakers for more than 12 years, I found myself faced with a completely new challenge when I was asked to design a new range of high-performance speakers for the Scansonic brand.Scansonic M-5

“From the start, I was very focused on building on all the experiences and strengths obtained from designing the Raidho speakers. At the same time, I also had to be aware of the long heritage and the Nordic design tradition of the Scansonic brand. This time, the task also came with a budget and a desire to create the very best possible within financial limits.”

Børresen was keen to ensure that certain core techniques from his Raidho designs would remain central in the Scansonic range. In particular, they would be designed around a ribbon tweeter that works with a super lightweight diaphragm, sealed around the edges to enable a seamless transition to the midrange region.

Børresen’s first designs for Scansonic’s HD range were the five models in the MB-series (named with his own initials): a compact standmount, three floorstanders and a home theatre centre channel, launched in early 2015.

The new M-series, comprising a compact standmount, two floorstanders and an active subwoofer, is designed around an ultra-light ribbon planar tweeter as used in the MB-series. Its membrane is formed by a Kapton-aluminum sandwich just 20 um thick and with an extremely low mass – approximately 50 times less than any conventional textile, ceramic, beryllium or diamond dome.

The tweeter is partnered with a paper-polypropylene coned 4.5-inch mid/bass driver (one in the M-5 compact standmount and two in the M-6 and M-9 floorstanders) with underhung magnet system. The M-9 floorstander adds an 8-inch side-mount bass driver.

Cabinets feature a heavily braced, ventilated box design with front-loaded port.

Also in the range, the M-8 subwoofer has a powerful 100 W RMS built-in amplifier. Its adjustable crossover frequency and phase angle enable you to seamlessly combine the M-8 with any existing stereo or surround sound setup.

Technical specifications 

  M-5 M-6 M-9 M-8
Type Compact 2-way stand-mount Compact 2.5-way floorstander 3-way floorstander Active subwoofer
Tweeter 1 x sealed ribbon tweeter with Kapton/aluminum sandwich membrane
Mid/bass driver 1 x paper-polypropylene coned 4.5” bass/mid driver with underhung magnet system 2 x paper-polypropylene coned 4.5” bass/mid driver with underhung magnet system

 

Woofer         1 x 8” woofer 1 x 8” woofer
Frequency response 55 Hz – 30 kHz 50 Hz – 30 kHz 40 Hz – 30 kHz 30 Hz – 16 kHz (adjustable)
Impedance > 6 ohm > 4 ohm > 6 ohm > 8 ohm
Dimensions mm (w x h x d) 151 x 265 x 151 151 x 900 x 198 151 x 900 x 298 303 x 270 x 270
Weight 3.4 kg 15.8 kg 21.5 kg 12.9 kg

The Scansonic HD M-series is available now, priced as follows (incl VAT). All models are available in a choice of two finishes: black-piano or white-piano.

M-5 compact 2-way stand-mount (pictured)    £399

M-6 compact 2.5-way floorstander   £899

M-9 3-way floorstander   £1,199

M-8 active subwoofer     £599

The range will be at the Bristol show lager this month.

 

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ATC Announce Special Edition Range Loudspeakers

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ATC Loudspeaker Technology has announced the arrival of a new series of Special Edition speaker designs. Available in active and passive versions and based on ATC’s reference SCM50, SCM100 and SCM150 monitors, the limited edition SCM50SE, SCM100SE and SCM150SE models feature the Company’s proprietary acoustic systems set within beautifully curved cabinets, precision-finished in a choice of exclusive real-wood veneer combinations.24421838143_392f34b4df_z

“Designed and hand-built at ATC’s UK development and production facility at Stroud, Gloucestershire, the new three-way SE towers will enhance the Company’s global reputation for impeccable engineering and performance” says the company’s recent press release. Stepping up in size and capability but sharing ATC’s family sound, each system is housed in a finely curved, multi-layer laminated cabinet, distinguished by an exclusive colour blend of high quality veneer in Rosewood, Burr Magnolia or High Gloss Cherry with crowning ‘top brow’ detail.24996609335_9727b4f070_z

Customers are able to select any veneer for the cabinet, with a choice of three ‘top brow’ combinations: black with red inlaid stripes (horns), matching veneer with nickel stripes, or black with black stripes.

Completing the distinctive Special Edition design, rear venting and input panels are PVD coated for a  scratch-resistant nickel ‘tone’, and acid-etched with Special Edition details. Each tower sits on adjustable spiked feet bolted to the cabinet through a frosted acrylic plinth.

Available as active or passive systems, the new SE models employ a three-way configuration of proprietary ATC drivers, designed and hand-assembled at Stroud. Each system includes the company’s premium pairing of the new SH25-76S 25mm soft dome, dual-suspension ‘S-Spec’ tweeter and the renowned SM75-150S 75mm Super Dome mid-range driver. Below the SM75-150S, bass drivers share ATC’s familiar ‘underhung’ voice-coil design and incorporate the Company’s Super-Linear (SL) magnet technology.24701161740_38b7cd2c4e_z

The SCM50SE employs the 234mm (9”) SL driver; the SCM100SE uses the 314mm (12”) SL driver, and the SCM150SE, the (15”) SL design.

The Active SEs are equipped with ATC’s three-way amplifiers featuring the Company’s discrete 21 transistor op-amps in the input, buffer and filter stages. No integrated circuits are used. Dedicated class A/B MOSFET output stages for each drive unit form a tri-amplifier of 350 watts, while the active crossovers employ all-pass filters. Parallel overload protection circuits ensure power amp hard clipping does not occur.

The Passive SEs deploy ATC’s latest optimised crossover designs developed to provide an easy load for a separate power amplifier such as ATC’s new 300 watt P2 Dual-Mono design.

All ATC products carry a six year warranty.

SCM50SE Features

  • Special Edition 3-way active/passive system
  • New ATC designed and built 25mm Soft Dome tweeter model SH25-76S
  • The unique ATC 75mm Soft Dome midrange model SM75-150S
  • The latest ATC 234mm short coil Super Linear magnet bass driver model SB75-234SL
  • Fully discrete amplifier for each drive unit combined to create a three-channel amplifier of 350 watts with active crossover filters, phase correction and overload protection
  • Accurate timbre, wide dispersion and pin-point imaging
  • Any veneer to order
  • Choice of top brow finish and colour detail
  • Six year warranty

SCM100SE Features

  • As above
  • The latest 314mm short coil Super Linear magnet bass driver model SB75-314SL

SCM150SE Features

  • As above
  • The latest ATC 375mm short coil Super Linear magnet bass driver model SB75-375SL

UK PRICING (inc VAT):

SCM50SE passive / active £23671 / £26964

SCM100SE passive / active £25638 / £28921

SCM150SE passive / active £31879 / £35406

 

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Audiofilia AF-S6 Loudspeakers

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Audiofilia make a range of loudspeakers, electronics and accessories, here Dominic Marsh tries out the Italian company’s AF-S6 floorstanding loudspeaker that costs € 6160.

Audiofilia are an Italian company specialising in loudspeaker and electronics manufacture, founded in 2011 by Alessio Paolizzi and Francesco Stocchi.  The unique feature of this company’s loudspeaker lineup is their “S System” which the company claims tackles head on the problems associated with cabinet resonances, which I have no intention of explaining, but it will be mentioned in the review body.AF_S6reviezpics

CONSTRUCTION

The pair of loudspeakers submitted for review were the AF-S6 model, large three and a half way floor standers.  Natural wood finishes are also available, as are piano gloss black and white.  I must also mention that the supplied speakers were fitted with the optional (at extra cost) Fountek ribbon tweeter rather than the standard issue dome tweeter.  The remainder of the drive units are sourced from Morel which already intimates this isn’t going to be a “budget” speaker by any means, rather one that certainly has aspirations towards high end sound quality.  Unusual too in this day and age is having a domed midrange driver fitted.  I still don’t understand why this driver isn’t as popular as it once was, as it helps to avoid critical crossover points in the upper midrange.  Cabinet loading is by a front mounted reflex port.

These are substantial cabinets weighing some 20-odd kilograms each and fitted with Audiofilia’s own design of feet, which they say should not be replaced by spikes, or placed on plinths.  No doubt, but my listening room has thick carpets and a thick underlay beneath that and these speakers almost swayed around like a palm tree in a hurricane, so despite Audiofilia’s best advice, some thick solid Oak slabs went underneath which increased stability hugely, yet still allowed a small amount of movement.  At least I could relax during the listening sessions knowing that the speakers weren’t going to topple over at any minute.  The speakers arrived without any jumper links fitted, so I pressed into service a set of pure silver jumpers that I keep in a spares drawer for just such eventualities.

The cabinet is built with Audiofilia’s “S System” which is designed to harnesses the drive unit’s natural vibrations to generate a “hybrid waveguide” of a pneumatic nature, which interacts with the air flow and pressure inside the cabinet by accelerating or slowing it until a precise point, previously set in the design phase, is reached.  It is akin I gather to a piano’s or violin’s body, whereby the strings excite the whole instrument so it is the wood itself not the strings themselves which creates the sound that we hear, hence why Stradivarius violins and Steinway pianos are not made of concrete.

One last thing to mention before I move onto how these speakers sound and that is I was told they needed around 400 (Yes, that FOUR HUNDRED) hours of running in before old Dominic’s ears could even begin to assess their sound qualities. And that was on top of three other components with similar break in periods at the same time.  Gulp!

SOUND QUALITY

It is not easy “ignoring” speakers for 400 hours or so and then turning your attention to them.   They do however run in exponentially as most other speakers do and after around 80 hours or so the rate of change decreased so I could at least hear what they were capable of at that point without analyzing them too deeply.    Even at that milestone I could formulate a good take on what they were capable of and I wouldn’t say they were a “Hifi” sounding speaker full of verve and fireworks to grab your attention and I’d say they were rather grown up and sophisticated in fact, consistent from the lowest octaves right up to the highest treble, with no peaks or troughs along the way.  It is that very sophistication in sound that draws you into the music, so deep that you become totally immersed in it and the listening time just seems to fly by without you even realising it.  One could be forgiven then for assuming they are a rather mild or polite kind of speaker, but trust me they can produce fireworks when you ask them nicely and my listening tests will demonstrate that, so bear with me.AF_S6-02

They are not a power hungry speaker by any means and I drove them easily with a variety of amplifiers ranging from an EL34 valve amplifier from Fezz Audio, a compact streamer/amplifier from Cabasse, the Aaron “The Chrome One”, a diminutive little TAGA valve/hybrid amplifier, plus of course my resident amplifier and all produced a sound I could easily live with, so matching them to amplification of whatever persuasion shouldn’t prove to be difficult.

As my regular readers will know, I don’t generally listen to orchestral or jazz music, but the Audiofilia speakers simply begged me to play some through them.  In to the CD drawer then went my trusty old compilation CD that has around 15 or so excerpts from well known, popular orchestral recordings.  I particularly enjoyed Eric Satie’s “Gymnopedie”  played on a Concert Grand and the luscious tonal palette produced by that instrument had the hairs on the back of my neck bristling.  PHEW!  I can though now understand how orchestral aficionados get so energized by listening to this kind of music, as performed well it has a lot going for it – but still not for me and my classical excerpts CD is plenty enough for me.

Jazz isn’t my thing either, but I will admit to liking Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” occasionally and some while ago I transferred the direct cut recording “A Cut Above” vinyl to CD when I sold a turntable, so I could at least enjoy the dynamics of this recording for the times when a turntable didn’t grace my system (I used to change them frequently).  Anyway, the drum solo in Take Five is something else and if there ever was a recording with no compression and big fast dynamics, then this was it.  The Audiofilia AF-S6 speakers certainly could kick up a dust cloud when required to and however much I turned the volume up I couldn’t detect any signs of distress from them.  There are some drum rolls and snare drum strikes in this recording that can certainly make speaker drivers jump around  and if you, like me, revel in fast transients, this recording will no doubt please.

Down to the nitty gritty when I finally hit the four hundred hour mark in the running in process and the gloves were then off and the real evaluation process began.  In to the CD player went Porcupine Tree’s “Deadwing” album which is a raw, uncouth recording that either sounds rough and ragged, or smooth as silk and it is the kind of sound that shows up a speaker’s true characteristics.  The Audiofilia’s, much to my surprise, managed to walk along the hair’s breadth sized tightrope between revealing all the harshness this album contains that makes it a real wince listen, filing off the rawer edges to make it at least tolerable to listen to.  Had they rounded everything off and made it sound smooth, pleasurable and musical, I would have been concerned.drivers

Of course, the stock reference recording had to be played and Fink’s “Wheels Beneath My Feet” live album was inserted into the CD player so I could really get to grips with the AF-S6’s sonic palette.  The opening cymbal strikes in “Biscuits For Breakfast” didn’t quite muster the sheen and polish from my resident speakers (Russell K Red 100), the shimmer of the cymbal was there, but without the level of refinement I have been accustomed to.  We are talking a very subtle effect, but noted nonetheless.  Ambience cues from the venue were well conveyed though and the audience was heard without any “shooshing” sounds and I could pick out individuals easily.  Kick drum had a firm pounding crisp beat to it and I could tell a hard beater was being used.  Snare drum rims shots came across very realistically, so good marks there.  Fink’s voice can sound rather nasal on this track with some speakers, but thankfully the  AF-S6’s managed to avoid that, so again good marks there.  Moving on to the “Sort of Revolution” track, this has some very powerful strikes to the Floor Tom on the drums and this is my test for bass control.  Yes, the force and power must be relayed, but I also want to hear a good clean leading edge and no overhang, yet still be able for it to make me feel the energy being released in the pit of my stomach, like a mule kick.  No problem with any of those criteria from the AF-S6’s.  Throughout this album I should be able to hear the different reverb and ambience cues from each of the venues the album was recorded in and this wasn’t as easy to determine with these speakers as clearly as I can from my resident speakers.  I could hear them, but I had to work at it rather than let the speakers do it for me.  Contrary to that though, the sound staging was impressive, being well out beyond the speaker boundaries and with good depth too.

CONCLUSION

All in all then, a good performance from these speakers with only one exception.  It seemed to me that the tweeters were reaching high up the frequency range, but at the very top end they lacked the absolute power, clarity and resolution I was expecting from the ribbon tweeter, which I felt was ever so slightly rolled off.  That can be a blessing of course, depending on partnering equipment where that silkiness at the very top end could be beneficial.  It didn’t offend me as such and if you asked me if I could live with these speakers full time the answer would be in the affirmative, as overall they gave a fine performance with many genres of music, especially so with acoustic, classical and jazz where the speakers gave of their best.   With that small proviso, I will give them a recommendation and an audition is well advised before purchase.

Build quality: 8.3/10RECOMMENDED LOGO NEW

Sound quality: 8.9/10

Value for money: 8.6/10

Overall: 8.6/10

Price at time of writing 6160 Euros

 

Pros:

A good solid all round performer with no major vices.

Cons:

A slightly rolled off upper treble – could be beneficial in some systems

 

Dominic Marsh

SPECIFICATIONS

Drive units: 2x woofer 6”, 1x dome midrange 2”, 1x dome tweeter 1” (or ribbon 1,5”)

Tecnology: “S” system transverse channeled

Type: 3½ way Reflex

Frequency response: 16Hz – 25kHz (or 40kHz) +/- 3db

Sensitivity: 90 db SPL (1W 2.83V / 1m)

Harmonic distortion: < 0,9% 63Hz – 25kHz (or 40kHz)

Impedance: 8 Ω

Recommended amplifier power: 3W / 200W

Dimensions: H 1100 x W 200 x D 380

Finishes: Wood or Lacquered

The Bristol Show – Cabasse To Introduce The Murano Compact Speaker

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Connected Distribution will use Sound & Vision, the Bristol Show, to unveil the Cabasse Murano, the smallest full range speaker in its Artis high-end series. It benefits from innovations initially developed for the reference La Sphère: the co-axial midrange tweeter and specific technologies incorporated in the design of the woofer, combined together to generate the best possible sound quality and performance for a speaker of its size.Anzge-cabasse-murano-magformat.indd

The honeycomb dome membrane, borrowed from La Sphère’s woofer, and the powerful long throw motor system enable the 17 cm woofer of Murano to provide clean and deep low frequencies. Guided by a long voice coil in the 45mm deep air gap of a 4-kilogram oversized motor, the driver is said to give the bass incredible purity and strength, unexpected from such a small device.

The BC13 co-axial midrange-tweeter is developed from the three-way TC23 which is fitted to the flagships La Sphère and L’Océan. The new speaker comes fitted with a new aluminium wave-guide specifically designed for optimal sound output.

The Cabasse measuring protocol through the HDSE (Homogeneous Distribution of the Sonic Energy) filters in the anechoic chamber takes into account measurements of the listening axis and at 360° around the speaker for perfect control of the directivity of sound. Whilst the global power output, in keeping with the Cabasse HDSE principle, provides a sound level that is even and constant, whether it direct or reflected.

Available in three different colours, the Murano, in glossy black will shine in any environment, whilst those looking to shake up the scenery will choose the glossy wild cherry. A glossy mahogany finish will suit the more traditionally furnished room.MURANO 3-4 no grill copy

Christophe Cabasse, marketing and sales director commented, “The Murano was developed to bring the technology and sound performance of the flagship models to consumers wanting a more compact and smaller cabinet.” He concludes, “The Murano’s reproduction totally belies the size of the cabinet and with its range of stunning finishes is sure to fit comfortably into any environment where size if key but performance mustn’t be compromised”.

The Murano has a UK retail price of £3,499

Connected Distribution will be demonstrating the Murano in room 322 at Sound & Vision, The Bristol Show from 26-28 February.

 

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ATC SCM7 Loudspeakers

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The ATC SCM7 is a diminutive loudspeaker of just 7 litres and costing from £810. Dan Worth takes a listen.

On different occasions over this past year Dominic and I have had the pleasure of listening to the SCM11s and the SCM19s from British loudspeaker company ATC. Each time we’d greeted their arrival with a mixture of apprehension and excitement. This is because our experience of ATC had taught us to expect great dynamics, attack, insight and truthfulness, but also the occasional jagged edge from the older style tweeter, particularly on poorer quality recordings.

However we needn’t have worried. For their new ‘passive’ range ATC has replaced a modified third party tweeter with its own in-house design – and it’s stunning. The unit on these new SCM7s, and the 11s, 19s and 40s is at once more refined, better controlled and truthful. Its secret is a dual suspension design, which is hand-built at ATC’s Stroud HQ and has taken the Company years to perfect. Coupled to a more efficient and linear underhung driver motor, the dual suspension controls the driver’s movement more precisely for lower distortion, better power transfer and a smoother response. ATC has got this design just right, because both the 11s and 19s have received our highest accolades.ATC-SCM7-speaker-front_no-grill-large RGBs

AT FIRST GLANCE

The dinky SCM7s have a tiny 7-litre cabinet (hence the name), measuring 300x174x215mm and housing the tweeter and a 5″ linear mid/bass driver. The review sample’s curved design immediately felt solid and sturdy, with a high standard finish in real cherry wood veneer. They cost £810 a pair in the standard cherry or black ash options. However a special order piano black model comes in at a hefty £1243.

I was pleasantly surprised when I lifted the SCM7 from its box. It’s much heavier than I had imagined weighing-in at around the 7.4kg mark. Nearly half of this weight is due to the bass/mid driver’s massive 3.5kg underhung magnet system, which includes a 45mm flat wire voice coil, milled by ATC at Stroud on a machine designed by ATC’s founder and Chief Engineer Billy Woodman. Most of remaining weight is down to the heavily-braced veneered enclosure, which also sports chunky bi-wire terminals.ATC-SCM7-speaker-3-4-view_no-grill RGBs

 

THE SOUND

Dom and I have had many conversations about the character and virtues of the SCM11s and 19s. We’ve decided that the 11s are about pure excitement and have a punchier sound whereas the 19s come across as richer, fuller and more refined.

I’m writing this before Dom has had a chance to listen to the SCM7s, so I’ll give you my immediate impression: these 7s are really exciting and their imaging is fantastic. Due to their size, they struggle to reproduce image height if you are sitting too close to them, but when you’re sat back and even at lower volumes, they get going so easily for an 84db-sensitive speaker, instantly disappearing into the background and placing instruments way beyond the expected width boundary.

I would suggest that they have some of the SCM11’s zip and enthusiasm, which Dom and I loved so much. They punch rather than pound, but the bass is so representative of truthful playback (given their 60Hz limit at -6dB), that I only hankered for more on occasions.

Obviously the 7s are ideal for those who have limited listening space, but I would suggest they’re also great for music lovers who enjoy vocals and acoustic guitar, as well as pop and electronic music – I would prefer a bass reflex design in this sized cabinet for the latter. The SCM7s can’t muster the wash of deep bass you’ll get from larger cabinets and drivers, for example on bass guitars and oboes, but they will keep a beat. Sparkling percussion sounds terrifically accurate from these small boxes, complete with all their natural dynamics. When replacing my active desktop Focals, I was extremely impressed with the 7’s overall response, especially from the bass when enhanced by the alcove they were sitting in. ATC SH25-76 tweeterss

What I really enjoy about the 7s and even the 11s is that they seem to allow upper frequencies to breathe so well, allowing for more perceived accuracy in the higher frequencies and mid level notes, making for a crystal clear vocal reproduction. I suspect this is due to their tonal balance from smaller cabinet sizes and sharper bass roll off, but it got me thinking that a set of 11s or 7s with ATC’s own C1 subwoofer could make for a stunning listen.

Fast forward a few days and, courtesy of ATC’s PR man, I now have a C1 subwoofer and I’ve put together a little system comprising SCM7s, C1 sub, and a Primare I32 with MM30 multimedia board/DAC fed by my Mac. ATC SH25-76 tweetersss

Wow, this set-up proved to be a real treat. I suspect that ATC would frown upon the idea of passive speakers and active sub in a music application, because it wouldn’t be the last word in accuracy, but what the hell, this system rocked with everything I sent it. I love the increased definition of the midrange especially, under-pinned with tremendous weight, poise and control. Even the treble sounds beefier. Dialing the sub in to around 60Hz to integrate with the 7s was magic. Not purist, but magic – and fun!

Dance music had a more intense rhythm and a crystal clear top end. Rock had a grip and a leading-edge sharpness that may well have sounded overbearing from the 7s alone, but with the C1 it had more flesh on the bone and greater weight. Acoustic music and vocals seemed to be better defined in the soundstage with an in-filling of subtle undertones that demanded the attention of the listener. It just sounded richer.

In each scenario the 7s worked so well. Ultimately available space and music tastes will determine your speaker choice, but if you have room for a subwoofer I would wholeheartedly recommend one from ATC, as it adds another dimension to the sound.

CONCLUSION

I’ve not written a long review for a change. This one is short and sweet – just like the 7s. Combine the imaging of the old ProacTablettes, the surprising bass of a Totem One and the enthusiasm of an old AE1. Each of these speakers is renowned for having a special and memorable characteristic. The diminutive ATC SCM7 seems to possess a good measure of each. It’s one of those speakers that is so addictive and so unassuming that I think I’m going to have to buy a pair. They are like the cutest animal in the litter – the one you simply have to take home. Over time their musical consistency, honesty and downright practicality are simply undeniable. The thought of being without them has me reaching for a tissue.

Build Quality – 8.5/10RECOMMENDED LOGO NEW

Sound Quality – 8.7/10

Value For Money – 8.75/10

Overall – 8.65/10 

Price at time of review:

Cherry/black ash – £810

Piano black lacquer – £1243

Pros:

Emphatic, transparent, detailed presentation

Solid imaging and strong dynamics

Great build

Cons:

At this price, nothing

Dan Worth

TECHNICAL SPEC’

Drivers: HF ATC 25mm Neodymium Soft Dome, Mid/LF ATC 125mm SC
Matched Response: ±0.5dB
Frequency Response (-6dB): 60Hz-22kHz
Dispersion: ±80° Coherent Horizontal, ±10° Coherent Vertical
Sensitivity: 84dB @ 1W @ 1metre
Max SPL: 103dB
Recommended Power Amplifier: 75 to 300 Watts
Nominal Impedance: 8 Ohm
Crossover Frequency: 2.5kHz
Connectors: Binding Posts/4mm Plugs, bi-wire
Cabinet Dimensions (HxWxD): 300x174x215mm (grill adds 28mm depth)
Weight: 7.5kg

DESIGNER’S COMMENTS

Tweeter

SH25-76

The SH25-76 is a 25mm soft dome tweeter designed and built by ATC Loudspeaker Technology and exclusively employed on ATC’s SCM7, 11, 19 and 40 ‘passive series’ speakers.  The drive unit has been designed with the same no compromise philosophy as all other ATC drive units.

Sharing technology with the SM75-150 mid-range, the SH25-76 employs a dual suspension design, ensuring pistonic motion and suppressing rocking modes even at high drive levels. This also enables the use of a narrow magnetic gap and negates the requirement for ferrofluid. The SH25-76 is therefore, free from the detrimental effects of ferrofluid drying out over time.

A short coil, long gap configuration ensures linearity and incredibly low distortion through its intended operating band. The soft dome diaphragm is based on a complex geometry which maximises power transfer from the former, extending the high frequency response and giving a smooth off-axis response.

The FEA optimised neodymium motor with heat treated top plate is designed to give 15,000 Gauss (1.5 Tesla) in the magnetic gap and the motor assembly also performs the secondary function of dissipating heat away from the voice coil, ensuring high power handling and low power compression. The underhung design, small coil-gap clearance and black plating ensures heat dissipation is as efficient as possible.

The geometry of the waveguide is designed for optimum dispersion and the flattest possible on-axis frequency response. It is made from a precision machined alloy so that the entire structure is extremely rigid and free from resonances.

Bass Driver

SB45-125SC

The bass driver used in the SCM7 is a proprietary design, manufactured in-house.  Like the vast majority of all our larger drive units, the so called ‘underhung’ design uses a short coil operating in long magnetic gap for the best possible linearity.  The advantages of this type of motor topology are:

  1. Less variation in the force acting on the coil vs excursion.
  2. Less variation in coil inductance vs excursion.

The result is that distortion is greatly reduced. The music benefits from greater clarity and tonal balance and the listener benefits from reduced listening fatigue.

The voice coil technology employed greatly benefits the performance of the loudspeaker.  Firstly, a large voice coil diameter is chosen for increased power handling and, as important, low power compression.  Loudspeakers are quite inefficient and much of the amplifier power ends up heating the voice coil.  This, in turn causes:

  1. A rise in resistance.
  2. A drop in efficiency.
  3. Increase of the system low frequency ‘Q’ (causing a tendency for pronounced ‘boomy’ bass).
  4. Modification of the crossover performance which, in turn, changes the perceived balance of the loudspeaker.

Using the largest possible voice coil diameter increases the coil surface area which reduces the rate of voice coil heating and minimises the problems associated with it.

Not only is great attention paid to the coil but also to the wire we wind the coil from.  Round wire does not ‘pack’ (tessellate) well, leaving gaps between the windings (think pool balls racked before a break).  These gaps are wasted space and fill with glue and air, slowing the escape of heat from the coil.  ATC chooses to use the more complex and costly process of winding flat ‘ribbon’ wire voice coils.  The ribbon wire, when wound on edge, results in a greater volume of copper in the magnetic gap (vs round wire) and the efficiency of the drive mechanism is improved.  The air and glue filled gaps are also greatly reduced, leading to a more rapid escape of heat from the voice coil.

The cone and dust cap of the bass driver used in the SCM7 are formed into curve-linear profiles from resin impregnated fabric.  The fabric chosen uses a very strong and dense weave, with high internal damping.  Two different polymer coatings are then applied to the fabric surface: a PVA based coating to the rear and a proprietary coating to the front.  Both of these coatings increase cone stiffness and also, very importantly, the mechanical damping of the cone structure.  Materials high in damping suppress resonances, minimising the audibility of cone break up modes and extending the useable bandwidth at the top of the bass driver’s range.  This in turn greatly simplifies crossover design (which I’ll get to shortly).  ATC believes that as a loudspeaker manufacturer, you are defined by your drive unit components and that is why every loudspeaker system we produce begins with in-house designed and built components, optimised for their application.

Crossover

By investing heavily in the drive unit engineering, ATC produces components with a well-controlled response that require only simple filters to integrate into multi-driver systems.  The SCM7 employs 2nd order filters for both the low-pass and high-pass sections.  The bass section also uses a R-C zobel network to correct for the rising bass driver impedance, ensuring correct operation of the bass low pass filter.  The high frequency section uses a resistive ‘T’ attenuation network to pad the tweeter output down to match the bass.  All of the inductors used are air-cored types for lowest distortion and the capacitors are 250Vdc rated metallised polypropylene parts.  An area of the crossover design we pay particular attention to is that of impedance vs frequency and ensuring the loudspeaker system (drivers + crossover + wiring) present an easy load for an amplifier to drive.  The loudspeaker load an amplifier ‘sees’ is just as important as the sensitivity of the loudspeaker, although loudspeaker load doesn’t seem to be debated quite so regularly.  Not only must the magnitude of the impedance be balanced with a reasonable system sensitivity, the phase angle must also be considered.  Low impedance values or large phase angles will lead to large current demands from an amplifier and could lead to increased distortion and, at worst, amplifier hard clipping.  The combination of both a low impedance magnitude and large phase angle is very difficult for an amplifier, especially when it occurs at a frequency where music has a great deal of energy.  Through careful drive unit design which, in turn, allows simple crossover design, free from ‘ringing’ filters that are used to reinforce a frequency band lacking in energy, we can deliver a loudspeaker that presents an easy load to an amplifier.

Ben Lilly, ATC Technical Sales Manager, February 2016

 

Bristol Show – Monitor Audio To Unveil Flagship Platinum II Range

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Monitor Audio’s flagship Platinum II range will receive its global public premiere at Sound &Vision, The Bristol Show. The show’s audience will be the first to appreciate the craftsmanship and sound quality of Monitor Audio’s “most audiophile speaker line to date”.MA PL500 drama

The new seven model range, which includes the luxury PL500II tower (pictured), is said to be the result of rigorous new analysis and breakthrough innovation by the engineering team. For the first time in a Monitor Audio speaker, Platinum II deploys a new MPD (Micro Pleated Diaphragm) high frequency transducer, supported by next-generation RDT ®II bass and mid drivers, improved crossover design and bespoke speaker terminal designs.

The star of the invitation only demonstrations to be held at room 1008 will be the PL500II. Conceived for ultra-wideband reproduction with vanishing distortion, this majestic 3-way, 7 driver system is the most advanced speaker design in the brand’s forty-five year history. Priced at £15,000 pair, the PL500 II uses four 8” RDTII long-throw bass drivers and twin 4” RDTII mid-range drivers in a M-T-M array with a MPD high frequency transducer.

Hifi Pig will of course be attending Bristol and will report on the new Monitor Audio Platinum II range but you can get your ticket to this invitation only event by visiting Monitor Audio in room 208.

 

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Budget Speakers From Mission

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LX-2 and LX-3 are the first speakers to arrive from Mission’s all-new entry-level LX Series which the company says will deliver exceptional sound at affordable prices. 4324_Mission_LX-3

For the LX Series, the speakers’ design has been stripped design back to its fundamentals to produce a range of speakers that Mission can be proud of in engineering terms, but even more so in terms of the enjoyment the speakers’ owners will experience.

For the LX Series, Mission has designed a tweeter with a neodymium magnet, selected for maximum magnetic force in a small space, and a 25mm microfibre dome, chosen for its repeatability and consistency in manufacture. 4316_Mission_LX-2

Both the LX-2 and LX-3 are two-way designs, combining the 25mm tweeter with one 130mm mid/bass drive unit in the LX-2, and two such units in the LX-3. These drivers sport cones fashioned from an advanced fibre formulation, selected for its reduced susceptibility to hygroscopy as well as being very stiff for its mass with excellent self damping. A high-strength ferrite magnet ensures that the magnetic field is directed precisely within the area of voice coil excursion, enabling an ultra-linear performance that minimises coloration.

In traditional Mission style, the LX-2’s tweeter is positioned below the mid/bass drive unit, in order to aid time alignment. By placing the treble unit lower than ear level, the path length to the listener is longer than that of the mid/bass unit. As the treble unit’s dome is physically forward of the mid/bass driver’s cone, the difference in path length helps to equalise the acoustic distance. Similarly, the LX-3 positions the tweeter between the twin mid/bass drivers in a D’Appolito configuration, rather than above both drivers in conventional fashion.

The LX Series uses a 4th order (24dB per octave acoustic) Linkwitz-Riley crossover network, developed through a combination of computer modeling and many hours of listening tests.

With the help of 3D Computer Aided Design, finite element analysis and laser interferometry, coupled with a great deal of experience, a budget cabinet can be designed that delivers better rigidity with lower radiated noise than most designers would believe achievable at such low material cost. As the Mission LX-2 and LX-3 emphatically prove, like many Mission designs before them, budget loudspeakers can truly sing, whilst also being smart, practical and unfussy in terms of positioning and room dependency.

The Mission LX-2 and LX-3 will be available from late spring, with RRPs of £199.95 and £399.95 per pair respectively. Both models will be available in black initially, with further finish options to follow. Hifi Pig heard the standmounters at the recent Bristol Show and were extremely impressed given their price-point.

A smaller standmount speaker, the LX-1, and two larger floorstanders, the LX-4 and LX-5, will join the LX Series later in the summer, along with a centre channel speaker for home cinema use.

Specifications Mission LX-2 Mission LX-3
Configuration Two-way ported standmount loudspeaker Two-way ported floorstanding loudspeaker
Tweeter 25mm microfibre dome 25mm microfibre dome
Mid/bass driver(s) 130mm fibre composite cone 2x 130mm fibre composite cones
Sensitivity (2.83V @ 1m) 86.5dB 89.5dB
Recommended amp power 25-100W 25-120W
Nominal impedance 6 Ohms 6 Ohms
Frequency response (+/-3dB) 60Hz-30kHz 42Hz-30kHz
Crossover frequency 3kHz 2.5kHz
Cabinet volume 8.4L 26.8L
Dimensions (HxWxD) 305x191x250mm 848x191x265mm

 

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