MartinLogan Masterpiece Renaissance ESL 15A loudspeaker Specifications

Sidebar 1: Specifications

Description: Hybrid electrostatic–dynamic loudspeaker. Drive-units: 46" H by 15" W (radiating area 690 in2) XStat CLS electrostatic panel, two 12" (305mm) aluminum-cone woofers in asymmetrical chamber. Crossover frequency: 300Hz. Frequency response: 22Hz–21kHz, ±3dB. Horizontal dispersion: 30°. Vertical dispersion: 46" line source. Room correction (bass section): ready for Anthem Room Correction (ARC-2 v1.3.4351 software is a free download; the mike kit costs $100). Woofer amplifier: 2x 500W into 4 ohms, 2x 1kW peak, with 24-bit, DSP-based preamplifier. Sensitivity: 92dB/2.83V/m. Impedance: 4 ohms nominal, 0.52 ohms minimum (at 20kHz). Compatible with 4, 6, or 8 ohm rated amplifiers. Recommended amplification: 20–700Wpc. Audio controls: bass, ±10dB below 75Hz; midbass, –2, 0, +2dB. ARC-2 Room EQ: On/Off. Signal inputs: WBT-0703Cu five-way binding posts. Inputs: AC power, RJ45 (for ARC), mini USB (for ARC). Power draw: idle, <0.5Wpc; max, 900Wpc.
Dimensions: 69.8" (1773mm) H by 15.75" (400mm) W by 24.9" (633mm) D. Weight: 140 lbs (63.5kg).
Finishes: Gloss Black, Gloss White, Dark Cherry, Walnut; premium finishes add $2500.
Serial numbers of units reviewed: AFL9149857105, AFL9149858105.
Price: $24,995/pair. Approximate number of dealers: 60.
Manufacturer: MartinLogan, 2101 Delaware Street, Lawrence, KS 66046. Tel: (785) 749-0133. Web: www.martinlogan.com.

COMPANY INFO
MartinLogan
2101 Delaware Street
Lawrence, KS 66046
(785) 749-0133
ARTICLE CONTENTS

COMMENTS
emcdade's picture

Absolutely gorgeous. I love that they sloped the woofer cabinet to the back, it reminds me of a Range Rover roof-line. It really is a nice touch to get away from a boxy look that dual opposed woofers demand.

I'm a bit jealous but thankful this line has arrived, as with current models on closeout I snatched up a pair of Montis at a very steep discount!

After seeing that in room frequency response I'm going to be very tempted put some EQ in my chain, and it looks like Dirac will have to be my weapon of choice since it can EQ from say 200hz on down and leave the mids and highs alone.

Are you keeping them John? After seeing that FR plot I don't think you're going to do better if you want ruler flat!!!

Jon Iverson's picture
Don't have the money for them at the moment. But if I did, yes I would buy the Renaissance and replace the Prodigy. And keep the extra subs just for fun.
brenro's picture

I've been dying to see a review of these speakers and this is a very good one. They acquitted themselves well but I'm having a hard time seeing twenty five thousand reasons to part with my Prodigies.

ctsooner's picture

JA interesting measurements on this beautiful speaker. Over the years of reading your measurements, I have noticed when the speaker under test was a panel type (Martin Logan, Magnipan , MBL) or horn loaded, the waterfall plot has a lot of hash in the foreground. I've always wondered if this sounds anything like singing in the shower or using the echo effect on a Karaoke box being a lot of delayed energy, quite even in frequency for quite some time. Thanks for putting in the effort to measure speakers because it is quite rare today and I enjoy seeing how they correlate to their sound.

ottablue's picture

Very nice review!!! Have a question on BASS. The Renaissance speaker has Frequency Response 22–21,000 Hz ±3dB with double 12" woofers and older model Summit X has Frequency Response 24–23,000 Hz ±3dB with double 10" that is only 2 HZ difference!!! So would I expect very similar bass? Will I still need subwoofers with Renaissance speakers since with Summit X I don't FEEL (lack of tactile presence) much bass thus using 2 subs!! Thank you.

tejastiger61's picture

Jon .. A million thanks for your effort.. and review. My only wish is that you had documented your effort with a I-phone(or device of your choice)and let the general public.. see with a video (what a few snapshots that will barely show) the muscle and doe ray me, required to enjoy these fine ELS15A's.
I am begging you to document the re-boxing of these whoppers. And the effort required just to send them back. It is after all is said and done "only fair" to would be purchasers to see what they are getting into coming and geauxing It will prove my theory that yawls job is not all ooh's and ahhhh's .. it is hard work at some point.. or the other.

Oh yea how much is the shipping cost..?

BruceW's picture

Jon,

I think you got that part wrong. During the "Prodigy era" I believe several models had signal sensing to power off the bias on the panels.

"Prodigy manual
page 22 FAQ
Will my electric bill go ‘sky high’ by leaving my speakers plugged in all the time?

No. A pair of MartinLogans will draw about 5 watts maximum.
There is some circuitry to turn off the static charge when not in use; however, the actual consumption will remain close to the same.

The primary purpose of the sensing circuitry is to prevent dust collection on the electrostatic element."

Speaking of transparency, I found when I by passed the woofer crossovers and used a much steeper (24 db/octave) slope to get the woofers out of the way, transparency up leveled dramatically.

By passing all the passive components to the stats made a further dramatic improvement.

Bruce

fnoyseth@gmail.com's picture

I have (had for years) a surround 5.1-setup consisting of Martin Logan (ML) Ascent front, ML Stage center, ML Abyss sub and ML EM-FX2 in the back. Now I an thinking of upgrading my (old) Ascents to either ML ESL 13A or ESL 15A (very interesting reading this review!). I am also thinking of using a stereo solid state amplifier from McIntosh together with ML, but my Hi-FI shop says this is not a good combination. Do anyone have a comment on this?

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