|
Recent Additions
Budget Components Audacious Audio
Loudspeakers
Amplification
Digital Sources
Analog Sources
Accessories Listening / Art Dudley The Fifth Element / John Marks Music in the Round / Kal Rubinson Fine Tunes / Jonathan Scull Special Features Reference Interviews Think Pieces Historical Recording of the Month Records 2 Die 4 Music/Recordings Stephen Mejias Robert Baird Fred Kaplan Wes Phillips Audio News Past eNewsletters RMAF 2008 FSI 2008 CES 2008 RMAF 2007 CEDIA 2007 HE 2007 FSI 2007 CES 2007 China 2006 RMAF 2006 HFN 2006 CEDIA 2006 HE 2006 FSI 2006 CES 2006 Forums Galleries Vote Previous Votes Dealer Locator AV Links Audiophile Societies Contact Us Customer Service New Subscription Digital Subscription Renew Give a Gift Sub Services Recordings Backissues More . . . Phono Preamp Hi-Fi Phono Cartridge Amplifiers Stereo Speakers |
Sony ES SS-M9ED loudspeaker
The occasion was the 1999 Consumer Electronics Show, and I had sought out the Sony suite at Bally's—the word in the Las Vegas bars where audio journalists hung out was that Sony was demonstrating the production version of their SCD-1 Super Audio CD player. I was glad I'd made the trek along the Strip: As I reported in the May 1999 Stereophile, the sound of a DMP recording—of unaccompanied choral music recorded and mixed in DSD by Tom Jung—was breathtaking, I felt, with an exquisite sense of space. It was definitely the best sound at the CES. I next heard the SS-M9ED at HI-FI '99 in Chicago, where Sony was again demoing the SCD-1. Again I was impressed, so I asked for a review pair. These actually arrived at Stereophile's Santa Fe offices at the end of 1999, but the relocation of the magazine's editorial department to New York and the inevitable delays in fashioning a dedicated listening room in my new Brooklyn home meant I couldn't start on the review until October 2000. Various things and other reviewing responsibilities then conspired to keep the review from being finished until Memorial Day. My apologies. The ED As I said above, the new M9ED speaker looks superficially similar to the M9. However, in Dan Anagnos' words, "it is really a completely new, ground-up design with entirely different goals and objectives. We began this design with an enclosure of the same approximate size and shape as the SS-M9 and a very similar drive-unit configuration (albeit with significantly different drive-units) because the SS-M9 was a successful and proven design platform." Having access to high-resolution DSD-encoded recordings during the design process was apparently a major benefit. According to Sony's white paper, "By utilizing source material with much higher fidelity than CD, we were able to refine the M9ED's design to a point not possible in the past. Four basic tenets formed the foundation of our design philosophy for the M9ED: "1. Exercising engineering as an equal combination of science and art—being creative and innovative by applying science in a constructive, imaginative, and artistic manner. "2. Emphasizing 'Simplicity of Design' or a 'Less is More' philosophy throughout. "3. Applying a fanatical attention to detail and never compromising; implementation of the design being equal to the direction or objective of the design. "4. Utilizing a Balance of Design approach, with equal emphasis on all areas of design and their synergistic combination." [All italics Sony's.] Powerful words. And despite the SS-M9ED's unassuming appearance, it appears that no stone has been left unturned in its design. Hi-Tech The ferrofluid-cooled 1" tweeter uses a polymer-doped fabric dome shaped to give, in Sony's italics, "no resonance or ringing effects at all." A sealed rear chamber is used to absorb the tweeter dome's backwave, and the pole-piece behind the dome has been machined to minimize reflections. The supertweeter, mounted in a rotatable aluminum pod atop the enclosure and operating above the audioband, is interesting in that it uses a stationary voice-coil. Had the coil and its former been attached to the diaphragm in the conventional manner, the ultrasonic output would have been curtailed both by the extra mass and by the usual voice-coil inductance. Instead, a single aluminum ring is attached midway along the length of a cylindrical extension of the ceramic/carbon dome, to give balanced drive. The diaphragm moves in response to the electrical current induced in this ring, and, because the main coil doesn't move and has a nearly saturated ferrous core, its inductance is said to be very low. A powerful but small neodymium magnet provides enough sensitivity for the unit to match the M9ED's other drive-units. Biwiring terminals are provided, and the crossover uses audiophile-quality components, such as multiple polypropylene capacitors rather than single, large-value electrolytics, and, with one exception, air-cored inductors. The tweeter and supertweeter filters use what Sony terms the "Perfect Lay, Hexagonal Winding, Litz Wire Inductor." Seven separately insulated pure copper wires are twisted and wound in a computer-optimized manner, to eliminate proximity and skin effects. All the crossover components are damped, as is the printed circuit board that carries them, the board mounted with shear-loading thermoplastic grommets and aluminum ferrules to further reduce vibrational effects.
Article Continues: Page 2 »
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||


The playback system consisted of two new Sony speakers driven by Pass Labs monoblocks and preamplifier. The speaker was the SS-M9ED, part of Sony's ES series of high-performance components. Other than the addition of a ball-shaped supertweeter module and a high-gloss lacquer finish, it looked very similar to the SS-M9, which I had favorably reviewed in the September 1996 Stereophile.