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NHT 2.9 loudspeaker:
I encountered only one problem in my auditioning of the NHT 2.9s—a buzzing sound, more prominent in the right speaker than in the left. It occurred only on specific, very strong bass notes, and seemed to originate at the junction of the metal bracket and the cabinet's bottom edge. I didn't attempt to cure it (it was an only occasional nuisance), but the problem disappeared when I took the weight off the feet by tipping the cabinets. NHT might look into eliminating a slight ridge around the bottom edge of the cabinet. (It's not visible, but you can feel it at the join of bottom and sides.) The buzzing came from the area where the metal bracket/foot contacts this ridge. Slipping some shims between the bottom of the cabinet and the brackets to keep the brackets from contacting the ridge might also eliminate the buzzing. The next step in the evolution of the NHT 2.9/3.3 could well be versions with onboard woofer power, a step NHT has already taken with a new home-theater system based on design ideas from the 2.9/3.3 duo. Powered "subwoofers" built into full-range loudspeakers is now a hot design trend, and offers a lot of advantages, not least the ability to tailor the woofer response and install bass limiting to prevent overloading. The latter is particularly important if the speaker is to see double duty by being used full-range in a home theater. I didn't use the 2.9 in this way, but my experience suggests that although its bass extension is more than adequate for the demands of music, the challenge of the low-frequency effects track on many Dolby Digital and DTS soundtracks demands either some sort of bass-overload protection (which a dedicated subwoofer amplifier can provide) or a subwoofer system designed to hold up under severe stress. But if your room is of moderate size, your taste in films subdued, and/or your preferred listening levels reasonable, the NHT 2.9 might do fine in such a dual-function system. (FYI: NHT has recently begun building a new center-channel loudspeaker designed to closely match the 2.9 and 3.3: the $850 AudioCenter-2.) Conclusions
Article Continues: Specifications »
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