Recommended Components Fall 2024 Edition Loudspeakers

Loudspeaker Systems:

A (FULL RANGE):

Audiovector R8 Arreté: $76,500/pair

Optional grounding cable adds $3850. (Vol.44 No.9 WWW)

Bang & Olufsen Beolab 90: $150,000/pair ★

(Vol.40 No.1 WWW)

Bowers & Wilkins 801 D4 Signature: $55,000/pair

(Vol.47 No.3 WWW)

Dutch & Dutch 8c: $14,950/pair (stands necessary) ★

(Vol.42 No.8, Vol.43 No.4 WWW)

Dynaudio Confidence 30: $24,000/pair

(Vol.44 No.8 WWW)

EgglestonWorks Viginti: $46,998/pair ★

(Vol.41 No.6 WWW)

Estelon Forza: $169,000–$185,000/ pair depending upon finish

(Vol.44 No.11 WWW)

Estelon XB Diamond Mk II: $63,000/pair–$70,750/pair depending on finish

(Vol.45 No.11 WWW)

Focal Maestro Utopia EVO: $76,000/pair

(Vol.46 No.11 WWW)

GoldenEar Triton Reference: $12,500/pair ★ $$$

(Vol.40 No.12 WWW)

Göbel Divin Marquis: $99,000/pair ★

Price is for standard finish. (Vol.43 No.10 WWW)

KEF Blade Two Meta: $27,999.98/pair

(Vol.45 No.9 WWW)

Magico A5: $26,800/pair

(Vol.44 No.7 WWW)

Magico M2: $76,500/pair ★

Price now includes nonoptional MPOD Bases. (Vol.43 No.2, Vol.44 No.3 WWW)

Marten Parker Trio Diamond: $40,995/pair and up, depending on the finish

(Vol.44 No.6 WWW)

MartinLogan Renaissance ESL 15A: $28,999.98/pair ★

(Vol.40 No.1 WWW)

MBL Radialstrahler 101 E Mk.II: $91,000/pair ★

(Vol.35 No.4 WWW)

Piega Coax Gen2 811: $30,000/pair

(Vol.47 No.9 WWW)

Raidho TD3.8: $117,000/pair as reviewed

(Vol.46 No.8 WWW)

Rockport Technologies Avior II: $47,000/pair ★

(Vol.40 No.8 WWW)

Sonus Faber Aida: $140,000/pair

(Vol.41 No.10 WWW)

T+A Solitaire S 530: $47,900/pair

(Vol.47 No.5 WWW)

TAD Grand Evolution 1: $65,000/pair

(Vol.47 No.5 WWW)

Tidal Audio Akira: $255,000/pair

(Vol.41 No.11 WWW)

Vandersteen Audio Quatro Wood CT: $19,200/pair

Rating assumes it is used with its companion M5-HPA high-pass amplifier. (Vol.42 No.11 WWW)

Vimberg Mino: $40,000–$41,000 (depending on finish) ★

Accuton diamond tweeter upgrade (not reviewed) costs $8500/pair. (Vol.43 No.4 WWW)

Vivid Audio Giya G1 Spirit: $105,550/pair Optional external crossover version: $110,550 ★

(Vol.41 No.1 WWW)

Von Schweikert Ultra 55: $110,000/pair, with Foundation Amplifiers, $120,000/pair ★

Price is for version reviewed, with powered woofers. (Vol.43 No.7 WWW)

Wilson Audio Specialties Alexia V: $71,000/pair in standard finish

(Vol.46 No.1 WWW)

Wilson Audio Specialties Alexx V: $154,000/pair

(Vol.44 No.12 WWW)

Wilson Audio Specialties Chronosonic XVX: $369,000/pair in standard finish

(Vol.44 No.5 WWW)

Wilson Audio Specialties Sasha V: $51,000/pair

(Vol.47 No.2 WWW)

A (RESTRICTED EXTREME LF):

Acelec Model One: $6495/pair (stands necessary)

The internally damped aluminum enclosure boasted the lowest-level panel resonances JA has encountered in >30 years of measuring speakers. HR was equaly impressed by the sound of this Dutch two-way standmount, which allies a Mundorf AMT tweeter with a reflex-loaded, 5.9" sliced–paper-cone, ScanSpeak bass/mid driver. He described the Model One as "extraordinarily clear, microresolved, and uncolored," adding that "their clear, expansive soundstage was mesmerizing; it kept my focus on whatever music it was presenting." And the low frequencies? "Overall, the Acelec's bass was tighter, cleaner, went lower, and was more music musically satisfying than any of the other speakers I have piled in the hall." JA's measurements confirmed the Model One's specified sensitivity of 84dB/W/m and while he found a slight excess of energy in the low treble, he noted that the Model One's cumulative spectral-decay plot was impressively clean. (Vol.46 No.8 WWW)

Alta Audio Adam: $18,000/pair–$19,000/pair in all finishes

A three-way floorstander that uses a 5.75" aluminum-ribbon tweeter, a 6" midrange driver, and an 8.75" anodized aluminum-cone woofer, the Adam features Alta’s Extended Transmission Line (XTL) loading for the midrange unit and woofer. This incorporates a short transmission line with no stuffing terminating in a port, which Alta says significantly extends the speaker's low-frequency extension. However, as with Alta’s two-way Alyssa, the XTL loading also results in high-Q resonances in the line and port. Nevertheless, RvB liked what he heard from the Adam, writing, “Pure and smooth. Nothing is boxy. ... Remarkable image cohesion; ... transients seemed to travel at the speed of light. ... With every track, there was admirable force and a corporeal quality to the instruments.” He did find that the Adam offered a little too much bass energy, though he never found the speaker to sound bloated or flabby.“Right now,” RvB concluded, “these are the speakers I’d consider most if 20 grand were burning a hole in my pocket.” In the test lab, the Adam was relatively easy to drive, but it failed to meet its specified high sensitivity of 91.5dB/2.83V/m by a significant 7.5dB. Its enclosure was respectably inert, though JA noted that the XTL-related resonances mentioned above affect not just the outputs of the twin ports but also those of the woofer and midrange unit. (Vol.46 No.3 WWW)

Audiovector R 3 Arreté: $12,900/pair

This 2.5-way, reflex-loaded floorstander combines the Danish company’s “Arreté” AMT tweeter with a 6.5" midwoofer and a 6.5" woofer. JCA found that for a conventional speaker so small and light, the R 3 Arreté’s bass went surprisingly low in frequency. Listening from the sweet spot, JCA noted that stereo imaging precision was solid, if not quite up to the standard set by its bigger sibling, the R 8. He was surprised, however, that he still heard a substantial stereo effect when sitting considerably off-axis, which makes the R3 more sociable—more visitor-friendly—than any other speaker he could think of. “The strongest impression the R 3’s left was a sense of ease,” he concluded. JA noted that this speaker was a demanding load for the partnering amplifier and found that the R 3 Arreté’s voltage sensitivity was 3dB lower than the specified 90.5dB/W/m. This difference may have been due to a broad lack of energy in the low treble. This, it turned out, was probably due to the tweeter’s “S-stop” gold mesh filter, which is intended to control sibilance. Otherwise, JA concluded that the Audiovector R 3 Arreté offers even, balanced, extended low frequencies in-room, and a clean spectral decay. (Vol.47 No.6 WWW)

B&W 805 D4 Signature: $13,500/pair (stands necessary). Custom stands $1600/pair.

See John Atkinson's review on p.149 of this issue. (Vol.47 No.10)

Bowers & Wilkins 804 D4: $15,000/pair

The floorstanding 804 D4 features what the manufacturer calls a “reverse-wrap cabinet”: The elliptical-plan, Matrix-reinforced enclosure has its flat side at the rear, with the Continuum-cone midrange unit and two Aerofoil-cone woofers mounted on the curved front. (The latter are reflex-loaded with a downward-firing port, this raised above the floor by a substantial metal baseplate.) The 1" diamond-dome tweeter is mounted at the front of a 12"-long, tapered tube machined from a solid aluminum billet that sits on the top of the enclosure with two compliant mounts. B&W specifies the sensitivity as a slightly higher-than-average 89dB/2.83V/m, which was confirmed by JA’s measurements. However, JA warned that while the 804 D4 is a demanding load at low frequencies, its higher impedance in the mid-treble will make tube amplifiers sound overly bright. The measured performance suggested a somewhat “tailored” response, with a little too much high-frequency energy. Care in setup reduced the effect of this, revealing an uncolored midrange and reasonably extended lows, though the speaker’s high-frequency balance will make system matching more difficult than usual. JA wrote that “clarity, transparency, low-frequency articulation, and the absence of midrange coloration” seemed to have had a higher priority than absolute neutrality for B&W’s design team. He concluded that the measured issues he found “seemed to step out of the way of the music much of the time.” Overall, he found the 804 D4’s sound seductive. (Vol.45 No.1 WWW)

Canton Reference 7K: $6995/pair

A handsome three-way tower, 1m tall and finished in high-gloss lacquer, the Reference 7K from German manufacturer Canton uses an enclosure formed from several layers of wood glued together with heat and pressure to achieve a stiff, well-damped structure. A downward-firing port reflex-loads the two 7" woofers, which feature ceramic-tungsten cones, as does the 7" midrange unit. The tweeter uses an aluminum-ceramic-oxide dome. The crossover includes a subsonic high-pass filter that is said to extend the linear low-frequency response of the woofers while minimizing out-of-bandwidth cone excursions. JA found that the Reference 7K’s needed to be used closer to the wall behind them than he could arrange in his room. Even so, the lows extended to 32Hz in-room, though the upper bass was somewhat exaggerated. JA found that the Canton’s sensitivity was the specified 88.5dB/2.83V/m, but the relatively demanding impedance means that the Reference 7K must be used with amplifiers that don’t have problems driving 4 ohms. Overall, JA concluded that the 7Ks offered “powerful-sounding low frequencies, clean and grain-free highs, a coloration-free midrange, high sensitivity and dynamic range, and stable, precise stereo imaging,” all at a relatively affordable price. KM agreed with JA’s recommendation, writing that “the Reference 7K produced perhaps the widest soundstage I’ve heard in my small Greenwich Village penthouse pad. Tonally, the Canton bordered on lush, with a clear, refined treble and midrange and focused bass with ample weight. … The 7K’s gorgeous midrange and munificent lower bass made every record sound fat, liquid, and pleasurable.” (Vol.44 No.9, Vol.45 No.3 WWW)

Dynaudio Contour 30i: $12,000/pair

The Contour 30i is a 2.5-way tower with an improved version of Dynaudio’s Esotar 2i 1" soft-dome tweeter and two identical 7.1" Magnesium Silicate Polymer (MSP) lower-frequency drivers. Compared with the earlier Contour 30, the new model’s crossover has been stripped of its impedance-correction circuitry, whose function is now performed by the driver itself via the physical properties of its materials. Dynaudio says that “fewer components” means “cleaner signal path, better performance.” Compared with RS’s reference Focal Aria K2 936s, the soundstage was more spacious, “almost Hoberman sphere-like,” with more depth and air between instruments. Listening to a track from Beck’s Morning Phase, RS commented that through the Contours, “notes seemed to blossom almost literally—an initial transient burst followed by a spreading out of resplendent tones. The song’s chorus, especially, sounded grand, like a rattling peacock train in full bloom, brimming with color.” He loved the Contour’s “symmetrical, one-voice cohesion; its colorful transparency; its authentic-seeming tonality; its dynamic ambience; its orderly and clean disposition.” JA’s measurements confirmed the Contour 30i’s voltage sensitivity of 87dB/2.83V/m, noting that it presents a relatively demanding load. He also noted good low-frequency extension, though the alignment favored articulation over ultimate weight, and was impressed by the impressively even frequency response, the well-controlled dispersion, and the clean waterfall plot. (Vol.47 No.9 WWW)

Estelon AURA: $19,900/pair

This elegant-looking Estonian floorstander combines a midrange-tweeter-midrange array with a downward-firing 10" woofer. (As the woofer operates below 77Hz, Estelon refers to the midrange units as “mid-woofers.”) KR commented that the AURAs sounded “open and detailed and, once properly placed, well-balanced.” He found that with classical piano recordings the experience was informative, enjoyable, and totally nonfatiguing. He would have liked a bit more from the lowest notes, but the rest of the spectrum was clean, open, and dynamic. KR found that the choice of amplifier was critical for the AURAs’ potential to be fully realized. He summed up his time with the AURAs by writing “They are among the most transparent speakers I’ve reviewed, and they present voices, instruments, and ensembles with refreshing immediacy and impact. Never did anything, including its bass performance, disturb that enjoyment or distract from it.” Although the AURA’s sensitivity is specified as 90dB/2.83V, JA’s B-weighted estimate was slightly lower, at 86.8dB(B)/2.83V/m. JA also noted that the Estelon is a very demanding load for the partnering amplifier. (Vol.46 No.12 WWW)

Falcon Acoustics “Gold Badge” LS3/5a: $3990/pair in basic finishes (stands necessary)

This special edition of Falcon’s version of the classic, BBC-designed, two-way minimonitor uses enhanced-size BBC Specification Transformer–style inductors, graded polypropylene-film capacitors, ultralow-inductance resistors, and a new, Falcon-designed multilayer FL6/23 printed circuit board. “Falcon’s Gold Badge LS3/5a can deliver enjoyable, well-sorted renditions of all types of music,” HR wrote, “but intimate vocal, solo piano, and chamber-instrument fare is the reason people like me are lifelong 5a devotees.” He added that “music flowed extra-easily and extra-quietly out of the Gold Badge boxes. The sound seemed more relaxed and less restrained than the classic version.” He wrote that the “Gold Badge” is “the best LS3/5a ever produced for general consumption.” JA found that the “Gold Badge” measured similarly to his 1978 Rogers LS3/5a and was overall smoother-balanced than the basic Falcon LS3/5a. He concluded that “The Falcon LS3/5a Gold Badge’s measured performance … confirms that 46 years after the introduction of the original, this is still a competitive loudspeaker.” (Vol.44 Nos.4 & 5 WWW)

Franco Serblin Accordo Goldberg: $13,475/pair (stands necessary)

This elegant-looking, curvaceously styled, reflex-loaded, two-way standmount from Italy is best used with the matching stands, which cost $2500/pair. A Scan-Speak 7" (180mm) woofer, loaded with a port on the asymmetrical rear panel, crosses over around 2kHz to a 29mm silk-dome tweeter, also by Scan-Speak. The antiparallel and strongly curved enclosure is fabricated from 24 laminated, solid walnut planks to control structural resonances. “It was with simple recordings of natural sounds that these speakers’ true excellence was revealed,” MC wrote. “Even with a large orchestra, the perception of individual-instrument focus and perspective was compelling.” He noted that with Tony Faulkner’s recording of Arvo Pärt’s Fratres, “a huge soundstage filled in with an extraordinary quantity of microdetail. Near-pinpoint imaging was heard over the whole soundscape.” The Accordo Goldberg “manages to transcend the build technology and the machinery within to build a closer relationship with your ear. It plays with a superbly natural timbre, especially violin, piano, and voice, while defining wide, deep, and well-focused sound images that almost breathe with life. … But that is as nothing compared with their supremely tactile microdynamic and seductive quality, which draws the listener into the musical performance,” he concluded. The Accordo Goldberg is a relatively demanding load, wrote JA, who also observed that its low frequencies will sound somewhat lightweight without boundary reinforcement. JA was impressed by the clean waterfall plot but noted that the frequency response lacked energy in the lower midrange and presence regions. The latter will be ameliorated if the speakers are toed in so that their axes cross in front of the listener. (Vol.47 No.8 WWW)

Genelec G Three: $1590/pair in white, $1390/pair in black (stands necessary)

A small, active, two-way speaker with a cast-aluminum enclosure, evolved from the Finnish company’s studio monitors, the G Three is supplied with an Iso-Pod isolating base, or can be used on stands or with wall-mounting hardware. An array of DIP switches allow the sound to be tailored for the speaker’s positions—in free space, nearfield, in a corner, or on a table or desktop. There are both RCA and XLR inputs and the drivers are a 5.125" polypropylene-cone woofer and a 0.75" aluminum-dome tweeter, the latter mounted at the rear of a recessed waveguide. HR noted the “pure and precise” sound, “unspoiled clarity,” and “uncompressed transparency,” coupled with a surprising amount of well-articulated bass for such a small speaker. He gave it his highest recommendation, writing that “the G Three performs like an authentic studio monitor, providing copious detail without losing any of music’s beauty or poetic content.” JA was similarly impressed by this loudspeaker’s measured performance, noting the G Three’s flat frequency response, well-controlled dispersion, and a clean cumulative spectral-decay plot. (Vol.45 No.8 WWW)

Joseph Audio Perspective2: $16,999/pair

Introduced in 2013, the floorstanding Perspective started life with a SEAS 1" impregnated-fabric dome tweeter and two SEAS 5.5" magnesium-cone woofers. After its 2019 upgrade to Perspective2 status, the tweeter remains, but the woofers have been replaced with 5.5" SEAS Excel Graphene drivers, in which magnesium-alloy cones are coated with a graphene-based "nanomaterial." JA, who in 2014 reviewed the Perspectives, wrote that the Perspective2s "produced the same wide sweep of full-range sound and tangible stereo imaging" that impressed him with the originals: "The low frequencies were still rich, but perhaps the articulation was even better." He also found the Perspective2s to be more tolerant than their predecessors of overly bright recordings. Reporting from his test bench, JA confirmed that, like the original, the Perspective2 was easy to drive if somewhat less sensitive than average, and concluded by recommending the new speaker "even more highly than I did the original." (Vol.37 No.7, Vol.42 No.7 WWW)

KEF LS50 Meta: $1599.99/pair (stands necessary) $$$

This new version of KEF’s classic LS50 standmount is a little heavier than the original. It still uses a coaxial Uni-Q drive-unit, but this new one has a cone-neck decoupler, a symmetrical motor system, and an absorptive, dual-layer disc, 3" in diameter and 0.43" thick, behind the drive-unit. This disc is made from a synthetic substance incorporating Metamaterial Absorption Technology (MAT) with 30 tubular channels, each acting as a narrow-band Helmholtz resonator. The structure is said to absorb 99% of the unwanted sound radiating from the rear of the driver at 620Hz and above. The Meta’s midrange and low frequencies sounded identical to those of the original LS50, JA decided, but the new speaker’s measured response was flatter in the presence region, and there was a little more output in the high treble. Perhaps most importantly, the Metas “painted a transparent window into the recorded soundstage,” he wrote. He was continually surprised by how recordings he thought he knew well were presented with detail that he had not fully appreciated with the earlier LS50s. JA estimated the LS50 Meta’s voltage sensitivity as 84.5dB(B)/2.83V/m, which is the same as that of the original and within experimental error of the specified 85dB. He concluded that, compared with the 2012 LS50, the Meta “presents a more transparent window into the recorded soundstage without compromising the ability to communicate the music’s message.” (Vol.44 No.1 WWW)

KEF LS60 Wireless: $4999.99/pair

This DSP-controlled, three-way, powered floorstander offers an analog input, Ethernet, optical and coaxial S/PDIF digital inputs, a UPnP-compatible wireless operation with Roon, AirPlay 2, Google Chromecast, and Bluetooth 4.2, and a subwoofer output. A coaxial Uni-Q drive unit that incorporates the metamaterial technology introduced with other recent KEF speakers covers the treble and midrange, while two sealed-box–loaded woofers on each sidewall handle frequencies below 340Hz. The KEF Connect app is used for setup, adjustment of sensitivity, bass extension, high-frequency balance, the subwoofer settings, and optimization of the low-frequency balance for specific room placements and behavior in the time domain. KR noted that the LS60’s tonal balance was reassuringly neutral/natural with palpable bass that belied the speakers’ small size. “The LS60s did not sound small,” he wrote, adding that they sounded much like the Class A (Full-Range) KEF Blade Two Meta. In direct comparisons with the Blade Two Metas, he found that the latter demonstrated an even more spacious soundstage and sounded firmer and fuller through the mid and upper bass, “but the speakers were surprisingly close.” KR was puzzled by his experience of the time-domain–correcting Phase Control, as with some kinds of music he preferred the presentation with this turned off. (Latency with the control off was 10ms; with the control on it was 14.5ms, which may be an issue with video synchronization.) JA the measurer noted that the LS60 offered a superbly flat, even frequency response, well-controlled dispersion, and an inert enclosure. KR’s conclusion? “The LS60 Wireless is a near–state-of-the-art sound system that will fit in almost any room and play any source with the addition of only a smartphone loaded with music or a streaming app.” Quite an excellent value at the lower price, says JA2. (Vol.46 No.3 WWW)

Klipsch La Scala AL5: $13,198/pair

This two-enclosure floorstander may be large and heavy—it weighs 201lb—but this is the smallest of Klipsch's fully horn-loaded models. The upper enclosure combines a 1" compression-driver tweeter loaded with a Tractrix horn with a 2" compression-driver midrange unit loaded with an exponential horn. The lower cabinet contains a 15" fiber-composite-cone woofer that fires into a folded horn. AH found that the speakers sounded more open without the attractive magnetic grilles. "Their ability to (re)produce lifelike dynamic contrasts and scale is unmatched by any speaker I've had in my home, he wrote, adding that he could set the volume "anywhere from Mozart-trio moderate to Mastodon-concert loud with no audible penalty." This will be due in part to the La Scala's extraordinarily high sensitivity— specified as 105dB/2.83V/m, JA's B-weighted estimate was lower, at 101.3dB(B)/2.83V/m, but this was still the second-highest sensitivity of all the speakers he has measured. The high sensitivity correlates with relatively limited low-frequency extension; the woofer rolls off below 50Hz. Nevertheless, AH commented that "despite being limited, the Klipsches' bass is in no way wimpy: When called upon, the big horns emitted bass notes as stentorian and downright scary as any speakers I've lived with." He concluded that "the Klipsches' frequency response sounded just a shade richer than neutral, with an extended but mellow top end and some added presence in the lower midrange and upper bass. This euphonic voicing made poor recordings easier to listen to and good recordings propulsive and fun," though he warned that "frequency-response-graph enthusiasts for whom absolute neutrality is paramount should probably look elsewhere." (Vol.46 No.4 WWW)

MBL Radialstrahler 120: $26,500/pair (stands necessary)

This three-way standmount uses the German company’s unique, omnidirectional Radialstrahler technology for its midrange and treble drivers, coupled with two reflex-loaded woofers. JMu felt that the 120’s bass seemed to extend deeper than the specifications or JA’s measurements indicated. But what impressed her the most was how “strikingly coherent” the MBLs sounded. “They delivered seamless sound from top to bottom, which made the presentation seem more realistic. Music sounded ‘of a piece,’ seamlessly woven within the soundstage,” she wrote. Though JA’s estimate of the 120’s sensitivity was slightly higher than the specified 79dB, this was still significantly lower than average. However, as this is an omnidirectional loudspeaker, the in-room subjective sensitivity will be somewhat higher. “The MBL 120s don’t favor one genre of music over another,” JMu concluded, adding that they sounded “big and full—voluptuous at times, especially when you turn up the volume.” Matching stands cost $1850/pair. (Vol.44 No.11 WWW)

Monitor Audio Platinum 300 3G: $17,900/pair

This three-way floorstander features a folded ribbon tweeter, a 4" midrange unit, and two reflex-loaded 8" woofers. The midrange and woofer cones are made from a three-layer diaphragm, with a skin of ceramic-coated aluminum in front of a Nomex honeycomb and two layers of carbon fiber. The Micro Pleated Diaphragm (MPD) III tweeter is said to extend to above 60kHz. There are two ports on the rear panel, one of which can be blocked if the low bass sounds excessive. JA did indeed block one of each speaker’s ports, as the port tuning frequency of 33Hz coincided with that of the lowest mode in his room. JA noted the excellent low-frequency extension and was impressed by the Monitor Audios’ imaging accuracy, which, he noted “was more like what you get from a pair of high-performance minimonitors.” In the test lab, JA’s measurements confirmed the Platinum 300 3G’s specified free-field sensitivity of 88dB/2.83V/m, though it was also revealed that this is a relatively demanding load. The speaker’s farfield response was flat in the low- and mid-treble regions but rose by a few dB in the top octave. JA didn’t find this to be an issue and summed his time with the Monitor Audios by writing “With its clean, uncolored midrange, its well-controlled, extended low frequencies, its well-defined stereo imaging, and its ability to play much louder than my usual minimonitors, Monitor Audio’s elegant-looking Platinum 300 3G is a high-performance loudspeaker. Strongly recommended.” (Vol.46 No.11 WWW)

Monitor Audio Silver 500 7G: $3400/pair

This well-finished, three-way, four-driver, bass-reflex tower impressed RS: “What these speakers said was spoken with a clarity and expressive ease. … Dynamic and transient-fast, it sounded almost hornlike.” The Silver 500 7G’s twin ports can be blocked with supplied plugs, but RS felt the sound with them closed was warmer but a little “woolier” than with them open. “Without bungs, the picture was in focus, linear from top to bottom,” he wrote, concluding that “The whole wide frequency range of music sounds well-behaved, smooth, and of a piece. Notes seem to emanate from air, not from wooden boxes. The notes slide and shoot like stars.” The Silver 500 7G’s high specified sensitivity of 90.5dB/2.83V/m was confirmed by JA’s estimate. JA was also impressed by the Monitor Audio’s superb measured performance. “That it achieves this level of performance at an affordable price is even more commendable,” he concluded, a sentiment that was echoed by RS: “The Monitor Audio Silver 500 is one of the great audio deals of the pandemic era.” (Vol.45 No.2 WWW)

Paradigm Founder 120H: $8998/pair

The floorstanding 120H, the flagship of the Canadian company’s six-model Founder series, uses three powered woofers with CarbonX cones, the behavior of which can be optimized with the ARC Genesis app. (A USB microphone for use with the app is included.) The 6" alloy-diaphragm midrange unit is mounted behind a Perforated Phase-Aligning Lens, which Paradigm claims results in a smoother frequency response, both on-axis and off-axis. The midrange and bass drivers are decoupled from the cabinet by an “Advanced Shock-Mount Isolation Mounting System.” The 1" alloy-dome tweeter is mounted at the center of a conical waveguide. The optimal listening axis is said to be between the tweeter and midrange, which is 39" from the floor. RvB found the 120H's trickier to place than most speakers, but once their positions had been optimized, he was impressed by what he heard: “It was the balance that was thrilling, and the continuity up and down the frequency range. Everything sounded ‘together,’ coherent, right.” The Paradigms offered superb low-frequency extension, though RvB found that without ARC room optimization there was a little too much bottom-octave energy. Even so, he wrote that “Bass-wise, the Founders, on spikes, acted like a velvet sledgehammer or an iron fist in a silk glove, if you like that sort of thing. I do.” JA’s estimate of the 120H’s sensitivity was 2dB lower than the specified 92dB(B)/2.83V/m, but this is still higher than average. He also noted that the large, trapezoidal cabinet was well-damped, though he found that the speaker’s quasi-anechoic response featured a slightly rising high end, which might correlate with need for careful setup. (Vol.45 No.12 WWW)

Perlisten S7t: $19,990/pair in high gloss black or white (special edition finishes are available at $21,990/pair)

A four-way tower that can have its four woofers reflex- or sealed-box–loaded, the S7t features a unique high-frequency driver array with a beryllium-dome tweeter mounted in the center of a “Directivity Pattern Control” waveguide and two units with “thin-ply carbon” diaphragms above and below it. All three units operate in the low treble, while just the central tweeter operates above 5.5kHz. After some experimenting with placement, KR found that listening to Ry Cooder’s Jazz, “placement of the instruments was perfectly clear. More than that, the relationships between them and their tonal characteristics were more consistent and seemed less artificial.” He was also impressed by the S7t’s dynamic capabilities, and while the Perlisten’s low-frequency extension, even when reflex-loaded, didn’t extend to 20Hz, the bass was “full, dynamic, taut, and balanced at all listening levels,” obviating the use of a subwoofer. JA’s measurements confirmed the high specified sensitivity of 92dB/2.83V/m, but JA warned that the S7t should be used with amplifiers that don’t have problems driving 2 ohms. JA commented that “To say that I was impressed by the Perlisten S7t’s measured performance would be an understatement. It typifies excellent loudspeaker engineering.” KR concluded that the S7t was overall the best speaker he’d heard in his room. (Vol.44 No.12 WWW)

Stenheim Alumine Three: $36,500/pair

This three-and-a-half-way tower from Switzerland mounts its four drive-units in a slender, internally braced, aluminum enclosure. HR found that, driven by RAAL’s low-power HAS-1b amplifier, the Stenheims, playing music at his normal listening levels “exhibited a beautiful spectral balance and a controlled, well-focused presentation.” While the midrange was flat-out gorgeous with the RAAL amplifier, with the Pass Labs XA25 “all nine of the Stenheim’s octaves were cloudless, blue-sky bright. … The XA25 seemed to add a full octave of clear sky at the top.” JA found the Alumine Three’s sensitivity was a couple of dB lower than the specified 93dB, but his estimate was still significantly higher than average, and he added that the speaker is a relatively easy load. He also described the Stenheim’s behavior in the frequency domain as “mostly smooth, even.” HR summed up the easy-to-drive Alumine Three as offering excellent bass power and extension, an absence of hashy, low-level breakup sounds near the limits of the drive-units’ passbands, and “extraordinary midband lucidity.” (Vol.44 No.10 WWW)

TAD CE1TX: $35,000/pair in olive finish w/stands, $40,000/pair in piano black finish, stands included

A heavy (63.9lb) three-way standmount that features TAD's coaxial "Coherent Source Transducer" (CST) driver, which combines a 5.5" magnesium midrange cone with a concentrically mounted beryllium-dome tweeter. Frequencies below 250Hz are handled by a woofer with an aramid-composite cone; this unit is reflex-loaded with bidirectional, slit-shaped ducts with flared openings behind the speaker's sculpted-aluminum side panels. "The CE1TX loudspeakers sorted and presented the densest, most complicated and overproduced music in ways that made it more intelligible and agreeable," wrote HR. Using a variety of amplifiers, from low-powered tubed designs to high-power solid state models, HR summed up the TAD speaker as "extremely well-sorted," "exposes everything," and "flawless tone," with "an innate ability to present instruments and voices in a most agreeable, seductive manner." His overall conclusion: "This TAD is the finest example of speaker engineering I've ever encountered. Absolutely Class A." (Vol.46 No.6 WWW)

Thrax Siren: $13,600/pair (stands necessary)

This reflex-loaded, two-way standmount from Bulgaria mounts a horn-loaded 1" ring-diaphragm tweeter and an unusual 6.5" Purifi mid/woofer in a substantial enclosure with aluminum front and rear panels. When MC started his auditioning, he found that nothing about the sound drew his attention. But gradually he became aware of something special about the Sirens, first in the high-frequency range. “What I heard here did not sound like a tweeter of the usual kind,” he wrote. “Indeed, it was not aurally identifiable as a working mechanism but rather an open window into recordings. … it became clear that the treble range was delicately resolved, very detailed, and natural. While almost self-effacing, it possessed exceptional expressiveness combined with subtle dynamic nuance. When I concentrated further, I also heard beguiling immediacy with enchanting microdetail and exceptional transparency.” And the midrange? “What at first seemed a mildly recessed quality was progressively dispelled; the midrange blossomed, revealing a broadly balanced and natural richness imbued with much microdetail and growing transparency.” He summed up his experience of the Thrax speaker by writing, “With no midrange overprojection and a very low fatigue factor, the Siren enjoys very low distortion coupled with a smooth frequency response that’s largely free of delayed resonances. … The Siren joins those select few loudspeakers that are able to truly disappear into the soundstage illusion.” Thrax specifies the Siren’s sensitivity as 87dB/2.83V/m. JA’s B-weighted estimate was 85.6dB(B)/2.83V/m. While he found the Siren a demanding load for the partnering amplifier, he concluded that with its very quiet enclosure, relatively even frequency response, extended, articulate lows, well-controlled horizontal dispersion, and extraordinarily clean waterfall plot, the Thrax Siren’s measured behavior is “exemplary.” (Vol.47 No.4 WWW)

Vivid Kaya S12: $7700/pair (stands necessary)

The open-backed, aluminum-dome tweeter in the little Kaya S12 is the same one found in Vivid’s top-range Giya speakers and is coupled with a reflex-loaded, 4" aluminum-cone mid/bass driver. The cabinet is made from two layers of polyurethane, with the space between them broken up by tubular absorbers that also act as stiffening. HR noted that the S12s were above average in apparent speed, transparency, and resolution, but also a little lean in the bass and noisy through their upper octaves. However, when he bolted the speakers to their dedicated 24" stands, he found that the bass became fuller, solider, and deeper and focus and clarity increased. “The spindly stands added a measure of sheen and a richer, more polished tone that made the speakers sound less like a racecar and more like a luxury car,” he wrote. His conclusion? “Overall, the S12s are shy on bass but easy to drive; lightning fast, uber-transparent, micro-detailed, and extremely three-dimensional. Their defining trait is the beauty and intricacy of their projected soundspace.” JA was equally impressed. As well as a measured 86.3dB(B)/2.83V/m sensitivity and a relatively easy-to-drive impedance, the Kaya S12 offers an extraordinarily flat frequency response, well-controlled dispersion, and a clean waterfall plot. “The Vivid Kaya S12’s measured performance is indicative of the superb loudspeaker engineering I have come to expect from this brand,” he concluded. (Vol.45 No.4 WWW)

Voxativ Ampeggio 2024: $13,900/pair with the AC-1.9 driver

A further development of the original horn-loaded, single-driver, floorstanding Ampeggio, which was enthusiastically reviewed by AD in 2011, the Ampeggio 2024 features an optimized cabinet, a redesigned support system, and a choice of 8" full-range drivers. The base-model Ampeggio 2024 with the paper-cone AC-1.9 driver, which KM auditioned, costs $13,900/pair. (The alternative AC-4B driver uses a wooden or paper cone and raises the price to $26,900/pair.) The phase plug is made from brass, aluminum, birch, maple, or oak. KM loved what he heard, writing that the Ampeggio 2024s “were unique in their ability to remove themselves from my listening space while filling it with physical, natural-sounding music, from delicate vibraphones and glistening guitars to punchy vibrating drum skins and vocals that were spookily real.” He marveled at how the Ampeggios transmitted sound in the upper mids through the treble with such fine layering, lucidity, tonal keenness, and textural precision that the sum bordered on holographic. JA’s measurements indicated an amplifier-friendly impedance and very high sensitivity but limited low-frequency extension. While the on-axis frequency response had boosted high frequencies, JA noted that as with the original Ampeggio, “firing the speakers in the forward direction—not toeing them all the way in to the listening seat—should give a more neutral tonal balance in the top audio octaves.” (Vol.47 No.6 WWW)

B (FULL RANGE):

Audiovector QR 7: $6500/pair

A large, three-way tower, the Danish QR 7 combines an AMT tweeter with a “Pure Piston Technology” midrange unit and twin “Pure Piston Technology” woofers. All three of the lower-frequency drivers use aluminum-sandwich diaphragms, and the woofers are reflex-loaded with a bottom-firing port. JA found that the speaker’s weighty, extended low frequencies made setup tricky, but other than a slight excess of energy in the upper midrange, he ended up with a smooth, even tonal balance from the low bass upward. Stereo imaging was precisely defined. JA felt that the QR 7 will work best in medium- to large-sized rooms. His estimated sensitivity was slightly lower than the specified 90.5dB/W/m, at 88.7dB(B)/2.83V/m, though this is still higher than average. (Vol.45 No.9 WWW)

GoldenEar T66: $7200/pair in Santa Barbara Red, $6900/pair in Gloss Black $$$

Resembling GoldenEar’s earlier Triton One.R in that it is a slim three-way tower with a powered subwoofer section, the T66 is the first GoldenEar speaker that has had its design optimized by Garth Powell, AudioQuest’s senior director of engineering. The High-Velocity Folded Ribbon (HVFR) AMT tweeter is positioned between two 4.5" midrange/bass drivers with Multi-Vaned Phase Plugs. Frequencies below 150Hz are handled by two 5" × 9" “Quadratic” drivers, reflex-loaded with two 8" × 12" passive radiators. Internal wiring is AudioQuest’s direction-controlled, Perfect-Surface Copper+ (PSC+) cable, which employs a carbon layer said to maximize RF noise dissipation. The subwoofer amplifier’s input is taken from the midrange/woofer posts, but there is also an LFE RCA input jack, and the crossover is implemented with DSP. JA’s initial impression was that the T66 sounded like a more dynamic, clearer, cleaner-sounding cousin of GoldenEar’s BRX standmount, with considerably more powerful and extended low frequencies and more top-octave air. Recordings of solo piano were commendably free from coloration, and the T66 consistently excelled when it came to reproducing voices. JA commented that this full-range speaker neatly stepped out of the way of the music. The measurements confirmed the usefully high 91dB/2.83V/m voltage sensitivity, and while JA noted that the T66 is a demanding load, this will be ameliorated by the high sensitivity. Other than its elevated top octave, which will require care with system matching and setup, the GoldenEar T66 “offers excellent measured performance,” JA concluded. (Vol.47 No.8 WWW)

JBL 4367 Studio Monitor: $16,500/pair

This massive (119lb), retro-styled, sensitive, two-way floorstander marries a 15" woofer, reflex-loaded with twin ports, to a horn-loaded compression tweeter with two polymer diaphragms, each with its own voice-coil, neodymium magnet, and motor. AH found that the big JBLs proved remarkable in their ability to play (very) loudly without compression or distortion. He noted that the JBLs’ portrayal of detail and atmosphere was superb and concluded that this loudspeaker “reproduced music in an utterly neutral, evenhanded way, sounded robust while resolving lots of detail” and produced deeper and tighter bass than his vintage Altecs. JA was impressed by the JBL’s measured performance. His estimated B-weighted sensitivity was close to the high specified 94dB/2.83V/m at 92.7dB(B)/2.83V/m, its low frequencies appeared to be tuned to be maximally flat, in textbook manner, and the farfield response was impressively even. In an email to JCA, AH noted that despite the JBL's high sensitivity, it is not a good match for low-power amplifiers (below, say, 50Wpc). (Vol.45 No.5 WWW)

Klipsch Forte IV: $4998/pair

On its surface, the Forte IV appears almost unchanged from its predecessor, the Forte III that KM reviewed in Vol.42 No.8. The floorstanding, horn-loaded IV’s specifications are identical to those of the III, but there are differences in the details. While the 12" woofer and 15" passive radiator are unaltered, the titanium-diaphragm high-frequency compression driver now has an ABS phase plug and the midrange unit is now a Celestion polyimide-diaphragm compression driver. Perhaps most significantly, the crossover has been completely redesigned. The result, according to KM, was a refinement and poise that the III, for all its virtues, lacked: “The IV sounded smoother and richer than the III from the midrange through the upper treble, and the soundstage was deeper.” The IVs “rocked” dynamics and visceral textures, found KM, who concluded that for the extra $500 over the price of a pair of Forte IIIs, the Forte IV was “more coherent, sweeter, smoother, and more refined, with a better-defined top end, a warmer midrange, and the same trademark dynamics and low-end weight as the previous Forte version.” (Vol.44 No.9 WWW)

PSB Synchrony T600: $8999/pair

The floorstanding T600 houses each of its three 6.5" woofers in its own vented subenclosure and marries them to a 5.25" midrange unit and a 1" titanium-dome tweeter, with, unusually, the midrange unit mounted above the tweeter. “PSB’s Synchrony T600 stepped out of the way of the music being played, imposing almost no character on the sound other than a slightly mellow high treble and a slightly forward midrange,” JA wrote. He found that the stereo imaging was “stable and precise” and that the bass was “extended and clean-sounding.” Rubber plugs are supplied to block one or two of the speaker’s three reflex ports, to allow its low-frequency in-room balance to be optimized. JA noted that the PSB’s farfield response on the midrange axis was commendably even, though his estimate of the T600’s sensitivity was slightly lower than the specified 89dB. The T600’s impedance measurement implies that this speaker is a relatively demanding load. Price includes IsoAcoustic GAIA II isolating feet. (Vol.44 No.11 WWW)

SVS Ultra Evolution Pinnacle: $4999.98/pair $$$

See Sasha Matson's review on p.123 of this issue. (Vol.47 No.10)

Tekton Moab Be: $30,000/pair

The Moab Be is unusual in that, instead of normal midrange units, it uses a patented coaxial array of seven beryllium-dome tweeters above and below the centrally mounted beryllium-dome tweeter. These arrays are said to act as a midrange driver with unusually low mass thus exceptionally quick response. Two reflex-loaded 12" woofers at the top and bottom of the front baffle complete the drive-unit line up. RvB wrote, “On metrics like timbre, pace, transient quickness, and soundstaging, the beryllium-adorned Tektons play with the big boys. Their signature tends toward big, brash, and meaty—all good traits in my book.” He loved the “expansive midrange and upper-bass purity,” and though he found the Moab Be’s bottom end quick, ample, and punchy, “with or without sealed ports, the lowest octave sounded just a tad less controlled, with a bit more overhang, than I’ve heard from upper-crust competitors.” (RvB listened with each speaker’s twin ports plugged about two-thirds of the time.) JA noted that with the Moab’s powerful but somewhat underdamped bass, the speaker’s low-frequency alignment is best-suited to medium-to-large rooms and concluded that “the Moab Be’s measured performance suggests that with care in setup, it will offer a neutral sonic balance.” (Vol.47 No.4 WWW)

Volti Audio Razz: $7500/pair ★

This beautifully constructed, high-sensitivity tower combines a horn-loaded 1" tweeter with a horn-loaded 2" midrange compression driver and a reflex-loaded 12" woofer. “The ability of Volti Audio’s Razz to portray music of any genre with scale, realism, and thrilling dynamics is unmatched by any loudspeaker I’ve had in my system,” wrote TG, adding that while the Razz demonstrates a lovely midrange liquidity, “there’s no sacrifice of detail.” While Volti specifies the Razz’s sensitivity as 97dB, JA’s estimate was somewhat lower at a still-high 93dB(B)/2.83V/m, though JA did note that the Volti’s highish impedance makes the speaker an easy load for amplifiers. Low and high frequencies are boosted compared to the midrange level, though the treble can be fine-tuned by experimenting with toe-in. Price is for walnut, mahogany, black cherry, or maple veneer. Premium finishes add $1000/pair. Volti allows the user to tweak the output of the tweeter and midrange driver by replacing crossover resistors, which may be accessed in a recess on the back panel. For his Follow-Up, KM tried juicing the midrange but returned the Razz to its factory setup for his auditioning. He wondered: Is the $7500/pair Razz as good as the $16,000/pair Volti Rival that he reviewed in June 2017? “Maybe,” he wrote, adding that the Razz’s demeanor seemed very much the same as that of the Rival, just on a smaller scale, with the same balanced sound, even temperament, and genre-agnostic capabilities. “I can say this much with confidence,” he concluded. The Razz “will get you close to the Rival experience for considerably less money.” (Vol.43 No.8, Vol.46 No.12 WWW)

Wharfedale Dovedale: $6995/pair (including stands)

This three-way, reflex-loaded standmount from the venerable British brand is manufactured in owner IAG’s new factory in England. JA was impressed by the Wharfedale’s stereo imaging. “I was intrigued by how such large speakers could completely disappear, leaving a wide, deep soundstage,” he wrote, “but disappear they did.” He was also impressed by the weight and articulation of the Dovedale’s low frequencies. While the Dovedale’s mid-treble could sound a little too forward with some recordings, he felt that this was outweighed by the “powerful, extended low frequencies, natural-sounding midrange, and generally clean high frequencies.” In the test lab, JA noted the flat on-axis response and confirmed the high specified sensitivity of 89dB/2.83V/m, though he noted that the Dovedale was a demanding load for the partnering amplifier. “Amplifier choice [will be] critical in getting the best from this speaker,” he concluded. (Vol.47 No.4 WWW)

B (RESTRICTED EXTREME LF):

JBL 4329P: $4500/pair (stands necessary)

This hefty, powered, two-way, reflex-loaded standmount features class-D amplification, and Wi-Fi, Ethernet, USB, Bluetooth, and S/PDIF digital inputs as well as balanced and single-ended line-level analog inputs. A switch allows a 3dB low-frequency rolloff for when the speakers are placed against a wall. There is also a subwoofer output. The 4329P can be controlled with a local web-page—an app is promised—and it works with both Apple AirPlay 2 and Google Chromecast. TF described the sound as “subjectively full-range”—and commented that the speaker’s voicing reminded him of “some other modern speakers, seemingly tipped up a bit though not, in this case, to an annoying extent.” TF concluded that during the month it was a part of his life, the 4329P system provided many hours of enjoyable listening. “The 4329P has a retro look but sounds modern—classic big, bold, American JBL sound with better clarity than JBL speakers of yore,” he wrote. JA’s measurements indicated that the JBL speaker's farfield output was impressively even, as was the superbly well-controlled radiation pattern. “The frequency response, horizontal dispersion, and low-frequency alignment are textbook,” he concluded. Optional JS-80 stands cost $400/pair. (Vol.46 No.10 WWW)

B (RESTRICTED LF):

Bowers & Wilkins 705 S3: $3399/pair (stands necessary)

The elegant-looking, two-way standmount combines a carbon-diaphragm tweeter in B&W's familiar bullet-shaped enclosure with a reflex-loaded, Continuum-cone woofer. KR found that the matching FS-700 S3 24" stands ($799 pair) were essential for situating the tweeters at ear level and that minimal toe-in expanded the soundstage while avoiding on-axis brightness. He commented that three qualities of the 705s were evident: satisfying bass output (belied by their size); great detail and presence; and a wall-to-wall soundstage. "Their midrange and treble resolution is outstanding, and their bass is musically satisfying," KR concluded. JA's measurements indicated that the sensitivity was slightly higher than the specified 88dB/2.83V/m, but this will be due in part to the fact that the on-axis response slopes upward in the treble, peaking by almost 10dB at 10kHz. He commented that this behavior will not be heard as "brightness" as such. Instead, it will add "air," "transparency," and "openness" to the perceived balance. But it will make system matching tricky and may emphasize surface noise with vinyl playback. (Vol.46 No.7 WWW)

Chario Aviator Amelia: $8400/pair; optional stablizers (bases) are recommended, $820

This three-way, Italian tower mounts one of its 5.1" woofers on the rear of the natural wooden enclosure, the other firing downward, next to the reflex port on the base. The 38mm silk-dome tweeter sits below the 5.1" midrange unit. The Chario Aviator Amelia’s delivery “seems unforced and easy,” wrote JMu, “but not ‘easy’ as in laid-back. Easy as in effortless.” She noted the Amelia’s “smooth, vivid naturalism, ... big on immediacy—not shy about delivering a punch.” JMu did comment that with some albums the Chario’s high end seemed slightly exaggerated and in the test lab, JA found that the on-axis response did indeed peak in the top octave, notably so with tube amplifiers. However, as the speaker is very directional in this region the Amelia’s treble balance can be adjusted by experimenting with toe-in: “No toe-in and the top octaves will be too mellow,” he wrote, but warned that “complete toe-in to the listener position and the high treble will sound fizzy.” His estimate of the Chario’s sensitivity was inconsequentially lower than the specified 90dB, at 88.6dB(B)/2.83V/m. (Vol.45 No.6 WWW)

DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/93: $8820/pair $$$ ★

Made in Brooklyn, New York, the Orangutan O/93 is a two-way floorstanding loudspeaker with a SEAS 1" soft-dome tweeter—the same one used in DeVore’s upmarket O/96—and a 10" paper-cone bass/midrange driver. It has a claimed sensitivity of 93dB and a nominal impedance of 10 ohms. The beautifully finished cabinet is made from a combination of Baltic birch plywood and MDF; the front baffle has a distinctive fiddleback mahogany veneer, while the sides, back, and rear are veneered in maple and finished in a semitranslucent gloss-black lacquer. Driving the O/93s with a Unison Research Simply Italy amplifier, ST noted the DeVores’ lively, immediate sound: a sweet, extended treble; punchy bass; and a deep, wide soundstage with excellent center fill. In his Follow-Up, AD praised the O/93 for the physicality of its sound—the sense of touch in robustly played piano trills, the feel of mallet against marimba, the tactile pluck of a double bass—and for its fine overall balance that allowed excellent timbral color from acoustic instruments yet also “gave nearly full weight” to kettledrums. He regards the O/93 as among the best choices for people who appreciate the impact, drama, and thrills of vintage loudspeakers yet whose rooms and budgets require a contemporary speaker of more modest price and size—considered as which, the DeVore is “far better stuff than most everyone else is making.” With the O/93s driven by the Linear Tube Audio Z10e amplifier, HR concluded, “I've experienced countless audio components that measured well, but only a rare few that produced authentic tone, nine octaves of natural detail, and copious atmospherics. The LTA Z10e driving the DeVore Orangutan O/93s did all that.” In a measurements Follow-Up, JA estimated the O/93’s sensitivity as 90.1dB—slightly lower than the nominal 93dB, yet still, when combined with the speaker’s 10 ohm impedance, indicative of a very flea-watt–friendly loudspeaker. (Vol.37 No.1, Vol.38 No.12, Vol.39 No.6, Vol.41 No.5, Vol.42 No.1, Vol.43 No.5 WWW)

DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/baby: $5700/pair (stands necessary)

This relatively large, heavy standmount combines a 0.75" horn-loaded textile-dome tweeter from Denmark’s Vifa and a 7" paper-cone woofer from Norway’s SEAS, both drive units made to DeVore’s specifications. KM found that with the O/baby speakers, “the music flowing into my room was terrific: physical, live, enveloping, natural, with good scale. Dynamics ranged from house-mouse still to boisterous and brazen. The sweet spot was truly sweet.” He described the treble as “exacting, revealing, supersilky,” the midrange as “rich and see-through,” and the bass as “tight and well defined,” if less weighty than that of the larger Orangutan O/96. Overall, “these babies pack a mighty, two-fisted wallop.” The DeVore O/baby’s specified sensitivity is a high 90dB/W/m, which, with the speaker’s relatively high average impedance, was confirmed by JA. However, he noted that the O/baby will probably work best with a tube amplifier’s 4 ohm output transformer tap. Matching stands cost $995/pair. (Vol.46 No.12 WWW)

Dragonfire Mini Dragon DFA 2.1: $9992 for the system

The DFA 2.1 system from Dragonfire Acoustics comprises the company's Mini Dragon Satellite planar-magnetic desktop speakers; MD-4 250 Wpc class-D amp, which contains a DSP module for correcting and controlling the speakers; and DFA SB-8P subwoofer, along with a version of the miniDSP SHD headphone amp/streamer (equipped with Dirac Live room-correction software), plus a suite of cables and a calibrated USB microphone. Although Dragonfire published individual prices for all of the above, they really must be used together—especially the speakers and the amp, which cannot perform optimally in isolation from each other. Although JVS found that "setup was not without its challenges" and noted, duly, that the Dragonfire system was designed for "intimate listening where its monitors are precisely aligned to ear height," he remarked that the system's "remarkably transparent, colorful, and detailed full-range sound is musical to the core." JA noted that the system "offers excellent measured performance," but confirmed the for desktops only dictum. (Vol.42 No.9 WWW)

Dynaudio Focus 10: $5500/pair (stands necessary)

The Primary two-way, sealed-box, active standmount offers single-ended analog, Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Toslink inputs, with connection to the second Client speaker either via wired S/PDIF or WISA-standard Wi-Fi. A Bluetooth remote control is supplied, but the Roon Ready speakers can also be controlled with Dynaudio’s Connect and Control app. DSP is used not just for the crossover, placement optimization, and tone controls, but also to reduce the 5" woofer’s low-frequency extension at high spls. JVS used Roon and Tidal Connect for his auditioning and commented that the Focus 10s sounded natural, balanced from top to bottom, and invitingly warm. “Colors, while not as saturated as on my many, many times more expensive reference rig,” he wrote, “were nicely differentiated and sufficiently compelling to pull me in.” He preferred the presentation with the wired connection between the two speakers, which operates up to a sample rate of 192kHz, noting that with the Wi-Fi connection, which downsamples hi-rez data to 96kHz, transparency was lessened, colors were less saturated, and instruments were surrounded by less air. The Focus 10 did well in JA’s lab, though he noted that the speaker has a higher latency, almost 12ms, than other digital active designs he has tested. The Focus 10 includes Dirac room correction, but even without Dirac, “the Focus 10s are easy to set up and optimize, and they deliver all they promise,” JVS concluded. JA investigated the Dynaudio speaker’s incorporation of Dirac Live in a follow-up review. He found that it was necessary to perform the Dirac measurements at the same spl that will be used for the auditioning. Once that was done, he created four filters offering different degrees of correction and auditioned each with a variety of music. “Even without Dirac Live, the Dynaudio Focus 10 combines ease of setup and use, stereo imaging precision, and a natural-sounding midrange with surprising low-frequency extension, provided the spl is kept below 85dB or so,” he concluded, “but Dirac Live takes its sound quality to another level.” (Vol.46 Nos.2 & 11 WWW)

EJ Jordan Marlow: £1960/pair (stands necessary)

This LS3/5a-sized minimonitor uses a single full-range drive unit based on the late Ted Jordan’s work. “I had forgotten how much havoc an energy-absorbing, phase-twisting, signal-molesting loudspeaker crossover could wreak,” wrote HR, adding “I was stunned by how direct, quiet, and transparent the Jordans sounded.” He conjectured that “when we get rid of the tweeter, especially one that operates below 3kHz, we eliminate a layer of fuzzy, splashy, phasey blurring that we didn’t know was there. Sans tweeter, the sound is more direct and accurate to the source.” While the Marlow cannot deliver commodious deep bass or play loud, HR wrote that it satisfied his hunger to peer into recordings as directly and excitedly as possible, concluding that he “fell in love with its petite, truth-telling charms.” JA was less impressed. Though the Marlow offered a good 87dB(B)/2.83V/m sensitivity and its overdamped reflex alignment would benefit from the low-frequency reinforcement from close wall placement, its frequency response was decidedly unflat, with a peaky upper midrange owing to the lack of baffle-step compensation that would have been provided by a crossover. “With music, the boosted upper mids may well have contributed to the added sense of recorded detail that HR reported hearing,” JA wrote, adding “but whether the Marlow is perceived as having too much upper midrange or suppressed lower midrange and treble will depend on the recordings being played.” JA concluded that the measured performance of the Marlow suggests that this will be a loudspeaker for “special tastes or special systems.” (Vol.45 Nos.4 & 5 WWW)

Fleetwood Sound Company DeVille SQ: $18,600/pair (stands optional)

The Deville’s “steam-punk-meets-modern” styling disguises a high-performance two-way design with a compression-driven, conical-horn–loaded polymer-diaphragm tweeter and an 8" paper-cone woofer with a phenolic grille. KM wrote that the Fleetwood DeVille SQ’s “upper midrange and treble poured out music with microscopic detail, tactility, and complexity. ... [I]ts top end was meticulous yet never analytical. Micro- and macrodynamics were first rate and fast as hell.” He added that the low end was tight and focused with no boom or muck and concluded that “Beef and brawn are not its calling cards, but rather lucidity, spatial beauty, clarity, dynamics, and precision.” In the test lab, JA found that the Fleetwood speaker’s sensitivity was a little lower than the specified 94dB/W/m, but still usefully high at 91.7dB. The flattest response in the midrange and mid-treble regions was 5° above the axis of the horn-loaded tweeter, which will be 46" from the floor with the speaker sitting on its dedicated stand. He also noted that the tonal balance will be too mellow unless the speakers are toed in to the listening position. Natural-finish “torrefied” stands add $1550/pair; black-painted, reclaimed hickory stands add $750/pair. Optional grilles cost $350 or $450/pair depending on type. (Vol.45 No.5 WWW)

Fyne Audio F500SP: $1999/pair (stands necessary)

A standmount featuring Fyne Audio’s IsoFlare coaxial driver in which the titanium-dome tweeter is mounted behind the woofer’s voice-coil, providing the former with a degree of horn loading. Woofer is reflex-loaded with a downward-firing port. JA’s estimate of the Fyne’s sensitivity was 3dB lower than the specified 90dB, but this speaker is relatively easy to drive. “Music sounded meaty, visceral, and full bodied and proved capable of spinning a deep, wide soundstage,” KM wrote, adding that low frequencies were extended and free from bloat. The tweeter is balanced a couple of dB higher than the woofer, which KM found required careful system matching, but when everything was optimal “the Fyne F500SPs played music with a big, wide, deep stage, satisfying punch and precision, and much humanity.” Base price is for gloss black or white finish; walnut veneer adds $300/pair. The matching F6 stands cost $1895/pair. (Vol.45 No.2 WWW)

GoldenEar BRX: $1900/pair (stands necessary)

The final loudspeaker to be introduced by GoldenEar while Sandy Gross was still with the company he cofounded, the immaculate-looking BRX (for Bookshelf Reference X) marries the flagship Triton Reference’s HVFR (High-Velocity Folded Ribbon) tweeter and 6" polypropylene-cone upper-bass/midrange driver to a pair of 6.5" planar passive radiators. The optimal listening axis is just below the tweeter, so JA used 30" Sanus SF30 twin-pillar stands to get the best sound. The result is superb stereo imaging accuracy and uncolored, natural-sounding midrange and treble with the grilles, but a touch too much mid-treble energy without them. Excellent low-frequency extension, to 50Hz, for such a small speaker, JA found, with fleshed-out upper bass even with the BRXes used well away from the wall behind them. Measured sensitivity was 87.5dB(B)/2.83V/m compared with the specified 90dB. “While it benefits from being powered by high-quality amplification, its sound quality features an uncolored midrange, clean high frequencies, and enough mid- and upper-bass energy to satisfy, coupled with stable, accurate stereo imaging,” he concluded. However, he warned that despite its impedance being specified as “compatible with 8 ohms,” the BRX will perform best with substantial amplifier power. HR enthusiastically echoed JA’s praise for the GoldenEar’s sound, writing “My auditions suggest that the new GoldenEar BRXs might be the best thing to happen to affordable speakers since the debut of the KEF LS50. With the right amplifier, they achieved a level of overt lucidity that is extremely rare at this price.” (Vol.43 Nos.9 & 12 WWW)

Harbeth P3esr XD: $2990–$3190/pair depending on finish (stands necessary) ★

In its standard version, the two-way, sealed-cabinet P3ESR ($2195/pair) stands just 12" tall and pairs a 0.75" tweeter with a 5" woofer, the latter using Harbeth’s proprietary, patented Radial2 polymer for clarity and low-level resolution. Restricted in loudness and bass extension, the P3ESR had a slightly warm overall balance characterized by smooth highs, an uncolored midrange, and stable and accurate stereo imaging. “The Harbeth P3ESR is the best iteration yet from any manufacturer of the BBC LS3/5A minimonitor concept,” JA concluded. The littlest Harbeth also gets the strongest recommendation from JM. While its lack of bass (both low and mid) disqualified it for most rock and large-scale orchestral performances, BD felt, the Harbeth’s incredible midrange clarity and detail made it an outstanding choice for small, intimate works. The 40th Anniversary Edition added upgraded connectors, internal cable, and crossover capacitors; aesthetically, it added an exclusive olivewood veneer and two commemorative badges. This edition found favor with HR: Used on TonTräger P3 stands ($1485/pair) and compared to the standard P3ESRs, the 40th Anniversary Edition Harbeths showed “greater separation of instruments, and a fleshier texture to [Birgit] Nilsson’s voice.” Herb regarded the 40th Anniversary Edition P3ESR as “the best-built, most natural-sounding small speaker I have ever heard” and considered the prices of both versions “chickenfeed.” Later still, HR enjoyed his time with the latest XD version of Harbeth’s classic minimonitor, both on its own and with Harbeth’s Nelson subwoofer/stand. (See Subwoofers.) Using a variety of amplifiers, he noted that the ability to peer deep into recordings was the P3ESR XD’s defining trait. Overall, “Harbeth’s P3ESR XD sounded exactly as I expected it would: more finely detailed and transparent than my memories of the 40th Anniversary edition I used for several years.” (Vol.33 Nos.8 & 10, Vol.34 No.7, Vol.41 No.12, Vol.47 No.7 WWW)

Harbeth Super HL5plus XD: $7990/pair (stands necessary)

The same size as the BBC-inspired Spendor BC1, the three-way, reflex-loaded Harbeth features the same combination of drive units as that 1970s-era speaker: a woofer, a tweeter, and a supertweeter. These are all thoroughly modern units, however. The in-house–made woofer features Harbeth's RADIAL2 polymeric composite-cone; the tweeter and supertweeter use aluminum domes and are sourced from SEAS. KM liked what he heard: "The Super HL5plus XD succeeded at being exceptionally refined, robust, and fun, in roughly equal parts. It was ultradetailed but never surgical. Its immaculate resolution never sounded less than natural, smooth, never processed." Imaging and soundstage were similarly profound, KM wrote, producing "an enveloping 3D soundfield, at least with recordings with that potential." He concluded that the Harbeth is tailor-made for well-recorded classical with its grandeur, spaciousness, and separation. He also enjoyed jazz and female vocals with this speaker. However, when he played anything that required "major boogie factor"—ZZ Top, Led Zeppelin, Mastodon—he found he wasn't satisfied. "They seemed to lack the drive needed to fill my small room with convincing rebel sounds." Writing from his test lab, JA confirmed the 86dB/2.83V/m, sensitivity and noted that while the Super HL5plus was a relatively easy load, tube amplifiers will work best with their 4 ohm output transformer taps. He found that the frequency response was impressively even, with small peaks balanced by small reductions in energy, though he commented that there was a very slight downward slope in the treble. (Vol.46 No.9 WWW)

JansZen Audio Valentina P8: $9250/pair

This complex floorstander uses a multi-element electrostatic diaphragm in a sealed subenclosure mounted between two 8" dynamic woofers, these also loaded with a sealed box. An auxiliary 1" ring-dome tweeter is mounted outboard on each speaker, firing sideways toward the nearest sidewall. Rear-panel controls allow the levels of the electrostatic driver and woofers to be individually adjusted—with these level controls, the tiltback of the speaker’s baffle, and the side-mounted tweeter, JA found that optimizing the Valentina P8s’ setup in his room was complicated. Fortunately, he noted, the extensive manual offered useful advice, and after experimenting with the speakers’ positions, toe-in, and level controls, JA found that the high frequencies were naturally balanced, the midrange was uncolored and clear, the reasonably extended low frequencies were articulate, and the JansZen speakers presented a clear window into the recorded soundstage. The measured sensitivity varied somewhat with the exact measurement axis. JA found that the P8’s voltage sensitivity was low, at 83–84dB/2.83V/m depending on the measurement axis, but noted that this speaker is a relatively easy load for the partnering amplifier. “The JansZen Valentina P8’s measured performance indicates that, when optimally set up, it will give an even tonal balance,” he concluded. (Vol.45 No.6 WWW)

KLH Model Five: $2499.98/pair including stands $$$

One of the first loudspeakers from the reborn KLH brand, the three-way Model Five echoes its vintage ancestor by having an acoustic-suspension woofer. A three-way switch allows the speaker’s Mid-HF balance to be adjusted. With this switch set to its maximum, KM liked what he heard: “The M5’s midrange was consistently meaty and lucid, but some recordings could excite a thin, slightly papery quality from the tweeters; it was recording dependent. Mostly, the speaker played with a detailed, sparkling upper/mid/treble chutzpah that favored and seemed to amplify texture and viscosity.” KM was also impressed by the KLH’s low frequencies: “Bass notes have never sounded tighter or more carved in black space here than they did through the Model Five,” he wrote. KLH specifies the Model Five’s free-field sensitivity as 87.5dB/2.83V/m, which was confirmed by JA’s measurements. He found that the KLH’s impedance lay between 4 and 8 ohms over most of the audioband but recommended this speaker be used with amplifiers that don’t have problems driving 4 ohms. Measured farfield response was even, though JA noted that experimenting with toe-in will be useful in obtaining the optimal low-treble balance. KM concluded that for not a lot of money, the Model 5 “was a forensic instrument when needed and an audiophile speaker capable of reproducing rich, true-to-the-source sounds when desired. … The KLH M5s are intoxication kings, urging me to hear my most beloved vinyl via [their] big personality and well-scaled dimensionality.” Matching stands included in price; Stonewash Linen grilles add $199/pair. (Vol.44 No.10 WWW)

KLH Model Three: $1799.98/pair including stands

While it resembles the classic KLH Model Five speaker from 1968, like the current-day Model Five, the Model Three is a thoroughly modern design. It combines the Five’s 1" aluminum-dome tweeter with a sealed-box–loaded 8" pulp-paper–cone woofer. A three-position “Acoustic Balance Control” attenuates the output above 400Hz by 0, 1.5dB, or 3dB to deal with difficult room acoustics. A pair of black, powder-coated, 14-gauge slant riser stands are included in the price; these tilt the speakers back to place the listener’s ears on the tweeter axis. RS found that the silvery grille rattled with high-level bass notes. He removed the grilles for his auditioning, noting that bass was then one of the M3’s strong suits. The soundstage was wider than he expected, and he also admired the KLH’s transparency. “Understated transparency; it didn't call attention to itself. Detail wasn't hyped,” he wrote, adding that the M3 “preserved the richness and warmth inherent in the music.” He summed up his time with the KLH speakers by writing “The M3 delivered both fun and refined audiophile sound, at a price I consider almost laughably low. It delivers music in a way that made this long-time audiophile shake his head and smile.” Measurer JA confirmed the M3’s specified sensitivity of 85dB/2.83V/m and noted both that the speaker will work well with amplifiers that don't have problems driving low impedances and that tube amplifiers will best be used from their 4 ohm output transformer taps. (Vol.46 No.1 WWW)

Klipsch RP-600M II: $649/pair (stands necessary) $$$

The original version of Klipsch’s two-way standmounted RP-600M used a 6.5" spun-copper-plus-ceramic-cone woofer to handle frequencies below 1.8kHz and a 1" titanium-diaphragm tweeter loaded with a Tractrix horn to reproduce everything else. The new version is an inch deeper than the old and has a larger conical-tractrix high-frequency horn and a redesigned woofer, which sports Faraday rings and a larger voice-coil. While HR preferred the old Klipsches with their speaker grilles attached, he found the new Klipsches sounded best with them removed. “The combined effect of the revised horn and bass driver is to add weight, presence, and low-signal delicacy to the presentation,” he wrote. While the original speakers did an extraordinary job of emphasizing the beat and “diagramming the melody” of classical music, the new Klipsch “is simply more refined-sounding.” HR commented on the Klipsch’s “ability to play really loud” with even an 8W amplifier, though reporting from his lab, JA estimated the original RP-600M’s sensitivity to be 89.6dB—”much lower” than Klipsch’s spec. Even so, he praised the earlier speaker’s “impressive measured performance, especially when its affordable price is taken into account.” (Vol.42 No.4, original version; Vol.46 No.8 WWW)

Klipsch The Nines: $1499/pair (stands necessary) $$$

This relatively small, two-way active standmount loudspeaker system includes class-D amplification, digital and analog inputs—the latter appear to be digitized at 96kHz—and on-board DSP. A horn-loaded, titanium-dome 1" tweeter is accompanied by a reflex-loaded 8" fiber-composite–cone woofer. ln addition to HDMI-ARC with CEC, Bluetooth 5.0, TosLink S/PDIF, and USB2 Type B digital inputs, there are two single-ended analog inputs: one on RCA jacks for phono and the other on a 3.5mm stereo minijack for line-level signal. There is also a line-level subwoofer output. Playing digital files, TF found that the Nines excelled at the transmission of low-level details and as long as he kept the level moderate, the bass sounded clean and went deep. TF played LPs with an Ortofon 2M Blue cartridge and described the Nines’ phono preamp as “easygoing.” Like the 2M Blue, “it doesn’t pull every last detail out of the groove, but it pulls out enough to enjoy the music.” TF concluded that the Nines “grab enough of the music, and push it out in the room, to get the party started and keep it going all night.” In JA’s test lab, The Nines’ woofer alignment appeared to be somewhat overdamped, the frequency balance was impressively even overall, though with a very slight rise in output above 7kHz, and the lateral dispersion was superbly well-controlled. Optional KS-24 stands cost $349/pair. (Vol.47 No.2 WWW)

MayFly Audio Systems MF-201A: $3499/pair (stands necessary)

This unique, almost circular-profile standmount uses internal skyline diffusers to damp the woofer’s backwave in the midrange, but not at lower frequencies, to get more bass output from the reflex-loaded alignment. The single driver is a coaxial unit from SEAS. RvB found that the MayFlys have tight bass that pumps out 40Hz with authority; he felt that the MF-201A sounded “honeylike, and it’s hard to dislike a skosh of honey.” Overall, he felt that there was a “dignified, reserved quality” to the speakers’ presentation and commented on their precision and delicacy. His conclusion? “Though slow to quicken the pulse, these speakers are not shy or retiring, but you may have to take the time to find the right placement.” JA found that the voltage sensitivity was 5dB lower than the specified 88dB and warned that despite its overall high impedance, the MF-201A will work best with amplifiers that have no problem driving 4 ohms. Matching 14" stands cost $899/pair, though RvB felt that the MF-201As sounded better-balanced on taller, conventional stands. (Vol.45 No.3 WWW)

McIntosh ML1 MkII: $12,000/pair (stands included)

The four-way, sealed-enclosure ML1 MkII is a redesign of a classic McIntosh speaker from the 1970s. Unabashedly old-fashioned in its appearance, with a bulky wood-framed grille, the MkII’s titanium-dome tweeter is placed above a 2" cloth-dome upper-midrange unit that has a 4" polypropylene-cone lower midrange driver on each side. Low frequencies are handled by a high-excursion, polypropylene-cone 12" woofer that SM found “got deep into the backbeat” on Little Feat’s live Waiting for Columbus album. SM preferred the presentation with the grilles removed, which gave more detail and soundstage information, more precise attacks, and more distinct instrumental timbres. He concluded that the McIntosh ML1 Mk II “offers a unique, three prong combination of effs: finesse, firepower, and fun. A pair of these speakers will recreate music in all its variety without blinking, with personality and style to spare.” JA’s measurements confirmed the 85dB/2.8V/m specified sensitivity; he noted that the ML1 is a demanding amplifier load, exacerbated by the lower-than-average sensitivity. JA also found that the level of the lower-midrange unit was a little lower than appropriate and that the overall response was more even without the grille. He recommended not toeing in the speakers to the listening position for the most neutral tonal balance. (Vol.47 No.7 WWW)

Mission 770: $5000/pair including stands

Looking almost identical to the classic 770 from 1979, the 2022 770 is a completely new standmounted, two-way, reflex-loaded design from IAG’s Peter Comeau. Drive units are a 28mm soft-dome tweeter and a mineral-loaded–polypropylene-cone woofer. JA found the 770s’ low frequencies extended and articulate, with low distortion. He was also impressed by the speaker’s midrange, which he described as “warm, detailed, and musically involving,” especially with vocal recordings. He summed up his time with the 770 by saying that its “sonic character was in some ways more than the sum of its parts.” The Mission’s respectable measured behavior correlated well with its sound quality, though while the specified sensitivity is 88dB/2.83V/m, JA’s estimate was 2.5dB lower. Ameliorating that discrepancy, the Mission is a relatively easy load. (Vol.45 No.11 WWW)

Mobile Fidelity Electronics SourcePoint 10: $2999/pair (stands necessary)

This hefty, reflex-loaded, two-way standmount is from the CAD app of veteran speaker engineer Andrew Jones, who, over the years, has designed well-regarded speakers from KEF, Infinity, Pioneer, TAD, and ELAC. Unusually, it uses a coaxial driver that mounts a 1.25" soft-dome tweeter at the center of a 10" woofer’s paper-pulp cone. The woofer cone acts as a waveguide, and with its corrugated surround not disturbing the tweeter’s wavefront, this results in what JA confirmed as well-controlled dispersion. Low frequencies extend to 42Hz, –6dB, and the farfield response was respectably flat in the midrange and low treble, with a slight rise in the top two audio octaves that JA heard, though he noted that the high frequencies were clean and that the speaker otherwise sounded smoothly balanced and uncolored. He found the SourcePoint 10s’ stereo imaging precise and stable, and commented favorably on the speaker’s high dynamic range capability. JA’s measurements confirmed the high specified sensitivity of 91dB/2.83V/m and indicated that the MoFi speaker won’t be a difficult load for the partnering amplifier. Overall, he concluded that with its clean, superbly well-defined low frequencies, the natural-sounding midrange, the high sensitivity, the easy-to-drive impedance, the ability to play loudly without strain, and the affordable price, the SourcePoint 10 gets a thumbs-up. In his follow-up review, KM wrote that he heard sweet, extended treble, natural, clear, and stomach-churning sub bass. “The SourcePoint 10’s versatility—its ability to delight playing all styles of music with a wide variety of amplifiers—make it, in my opinion, a contender for Loudspeaker of the Year,” he concluded. (Vol.46 Nos.2 & 6 WWW)

Mobile Fidelity Electronics SourcePoint 8: $1999/pair (stands necessary)

With similar looks to the larger SourcePoint 10, the SourcePoint 8 substitutes an 8" coaxial driver for the '10's 10" unit but this driver's active area is almost as large. KR found that the clearest and most stable center imaging was achieved with the SourcePoint 8s toed in about halfway between straight ahead and directly aimed at the listening position. He also found that the SourcePoint 8 demonstrated remarkable bass for a small box with a bass driver of modest size. "They did not reproduce much output below 50Hz," he wrote, "but above that frequency they proved capable of tight, powerful bass." KR concluded that this is a balanced, wide-range speaker, enjoyable at all practical volume levels. The SourcePoint 8 demonstrates how satisfying a small, relatively affordable loudspeaker can be, he wrote, adding that "they generate a fairly wide and deep soundstage that is notably transparent and detailed." JA noted that the MoFi SourcePoint 8 offers excellent measured performance, is an easy amplifier, and he confirmed the specified 87dB/2,83V/m sensitivity. (Vol.46 No.9 WWW)

Moon by Simaudio Voice 22: $3200/pair (stands necessary)

The smallish, designed in Canada, made-in-Indonesia Voice 22 marries a waveguide-loaded, 29mm textile-dome tweeter with a reflex-loaded, long-throw, 6.1" woofer that has a cone made from mineral-filled polypropylene. Unusually, RS found that the speakers sounded best without any toe-in to the listening position: "the sound was clearer and more incisive that way, yet also bloomier and more open-air breathy." While the 22's treble couldn't reach the same airy heights of his twice-the-price reference speakers, he noted that the Voices "reproduced an introspective, well-lit environment bathed in texture and space" and were "adept at exposing reverb." RS concluded that the Moon Voice 22's most conspicuous sonic attribute "was its well-sorted, seamless midrange." The speaker incorporates a removable "hover" base, a tapered isolation platform with a rubberlike material base, which is magnetically affixed to the speaker. JA found that this did reduce the level of the enclosure's vibrational modes. JA also estimated the Voice 22's sensitivity as an inconsequential 1dB lower than the specified 89dB/2.83V/m. Frequency balance was a little forward in the upper-midrange, but the cumulative spectral-decay plot "is superbly clean," he remarked. (Vol.46 No.5 WWW)

Q Acoustics 5040: $1499/pair $$$

This slim, elegant-looking tower features a vertical D’Appolito drive-unit array comprising a 0.9" fabric-dome tweeter positioned between the two 5" plastic-cone woofers, the latter reflex-loaded with a port on the rear panel. The low-frequency alignment is optimized for placement close to the wall behind the speaker, which wasn’t possible in JA’s listening room. Nevertheless, he found that the low frequencies had sufficient bass weight, though he noted that at the other end of the spectrum, cymbals had a little too much HF “swish.” This could be alleviated by reduced the toe-in angle, though this slightly blurred the superbly stable, well-defined stereo imaging. The 5040’s midrange was impressively transparent. “Even without taking its affordable price into consideration,” JA concluded that the Q Acoustics 5040 “combines sufficient low-frequency extension and articulation with excellent clarity and imaging and low coloration. As the 5040 won’t play deafeningly loudly, it will work best in smallish to medium-sized rooms.” JA confirmed the high specified voltage sensitivity of 91.5dB/2.83V/m but warned that as this loudspeaker is a difficult load, “amplifier choice will be critical in getting the best from this speaker.” (Vol.47 No.1 WWW)

Q Acoustics Concept 50: $2999/pair

This affordable, elegant-looking two-way tower combines a 0.9" fabric-dome tweeter positioned between two 5" plastic-cone woofers and incorporates a custom suspension system in its base. The reflex woofer alignment requires placement close to the wall behind the speaker, but even with the Concept 50s farther out in the room, JA noted relatively extended low frequencies, with low distortion and excellent upper-bass articulation. Stereo imaging was precise, with good soundstage depth, and while the mid-treble region sounded a little softened compared with the upper midrange, the Concept 50’s overall presentation was uncolored and clean. JA’s estimate of the speaker’s sensitivity was somewhat lower than the specified 90.5dB/W/m, at 88.1dB(B)/2.83V/m, but the Q Acoustics is relatively easy to drive. It also offered excellent measured performance. (Vol.45 No.8 WWW)

Sonus Faber Lumina III: $2399/pair

This elegant but affordable three-way tower stands 38" tall on its spikes. (The spikes provide clearance for the reflex port, which fires downward from the speaker’s base.) Two 5" pulp-cone woofers are accompanied by a 5" pulp-cone midrange unit and Sonus Faber’s Damped Apex Dome tweeter. Specified sensitivity is 89dB/2.83V/m—JA’s estimate was commendably higher, at 91dB(B)/2.83V/m. Bass alignment is a little overdamped, meaning that the Lumina IIIs will sound at their best when placed relatively close to the wall behind them without compromising low-frequency definition. JA didn’t recommend this speaker for use with source components that are themselves too forward in the treble, even with the toe-in adjusted to give the most-neutral treble, but concluded that in the right system and room, “this elegant-looking tower will excel at communicating the music’s message.” (Vol.44 No.4 WWW)

Tannoy Stirling Prestige Gold Reference: $6990/pair

This classic-looking floorstander uses Tannoy’s traditional Dual Concentric driver with its Tulip Waveguide loading the aluminum-magnesium–alloy tweeter diaphragm. The paper-cone woofer features an impregnated-fabric surround and is reflex-loaded with vertical slots at the sides of the recessed front baffle. A three-position “Energy Control” allows the treble balance to be optimized. KM noted that this speaker requires careful setup and, unusually, he found that the Stirling sounded better with the bulky grille attached—“its tone fuller, its treble more open and revealing, its low end weightier and better defined.” He noted that the high frequencies were clean and extended, the dynamics were marvelous, and the speakers presented “a full, believable, densely populated soundstage. “At its core a horn speaker,” he wrote, “the Stirling is fast, communicative, coherent, and demonstrative. It was transparent to equipment and music sources while retaining its trademark sound.” JA found that the Tannoy’s sensitivity was almost 3dB higher than the already high specification of 91dB/2.83V/m and commented that while the Stirling will work best with amplifiers that don't have problems driving low impedances, the speaker's high sensitivity will reduce its need for current. He concluded that the Stirling’s measured performance was dominated by the effects of the tweeter being coaxially mounted behind the woofer cone: “Experimentation with vertical listening axis and/or toe-in, in combination with the high-frequency controls, will be necessary to optimize its in-room tonal balance.” (Vol.45 No.10 WWW)

Triangle Antal 40th Anniversary Edition: $4700/pair

As its name suggests, this slim, three-way tower celebrates the French manufacturer’s 40th anniversary. A horn-loaded tweeter with a rigid anodized-magnesium dome is allied with a midrange unit that uses a paper cone that Triangle says is the most optimized they’ve ever developed, and two reflex-loaded, wood-pulp, flax, and carbon fiber-membrane woofers. RS found that the Antals offered a big sweet spot and that the speaker’s midrange had “a projector-like clarity against which images and musical lines appeared in physical, protuberant relief.” Bass drum hits were clean yet bold, he noted, with good impact and sustain, but without overhang. “Assuming the rest of your system is up to snuff,” RS concluded, “the Antal 40s will let you hear an inordinate amount of what’s on the record. I found it hard to imagine, as I listened, that I was missing anything.” JA found that the Antal’s sensitivity was 3dB lower than the specified 92dB/W/m and noted that the speaker was a relatively demanding load for the partnering amplifier. He did note that the Triangle speaker’s frequency balance was flat and even, its dispersion in the vertical and horizontal planes well-managed, and the low frequencies extended if overdamped, favoring articulation over ultimate bass weight. For her follow-up review, JMu drove the Antals with the HiFi Rose RA180 integrated amplifier. She found that they were capable of endowing images “with sufficient presence and enough highly resolved detail to be immersive in their own way … Voices sound as though they came from the bodies of real, flesh-and-blood singers.” She concluded that the Antal’s best features were “presence and purity of tone.” (Vol.45 No.10, Vol.46 No.6 WWW)

C (RESTRICTED LF):

Magnepan .7: $1995/pair $$$ ★

Magnepan's .7 planar-magnetic or "quasi-ribbon" loudspeaker is a two-way panel design that measures just over 54" high and 15" wide. The manufacturer's specs include a 4-ohm nominal impedance, sensitivity of 86dB, and bass extension down to 45Hz. Used on their own, especially when driven by Rogue Audio's 100Wpc Sphinx integrated amplifier ($1295), the .7s delighted HR with their "microdetail, transient attack, transparency, and soundstaging," but could also sound "a little bass shy." But when augmented with a pair of Magnepan's DWM bass panels ($795 each), the combination of .7 speakers and Sphinx amp delivered "disarmingly big, robust, vivid, and extremely tactile" sound with plentiful, "authentically toned" bass. "These Maggies did slam," HR declared, adding that he'd never enjoyed Led Zeppelin II more than through this system. Class B, felt HR; Class C decided JA, following his auditioning. (Vol.38 No.8 WWW)

SVS Prime Wireless Pro: $899/pair (stands necessary)

This two-way, active standmount offers an 1/8" stereo analog input, RCA and TosLink S/PDIF, HDMI ARC and eARC, and Ethernet digital inputs, as well as AirPlay 2 and Chromecast Wi-Fi connectivity using the DTS Play-Fi app. There is also a single subwoofer output. RvB felt that Play-Fi still needed improvement, so he streamed audio with Tidal Connect or Roon. Although the Prime Pro’s low-frequency extension is specified as –3dB at 42Hz, RvB found that the small speakers offered sufficient bass weight. “Even without a sub or two,” he wrote, “they played loudly without breaking up or sounding ragged.” Imaging lacked pinpoint precision, however, and RvB was bothered by the lively enclosure. (Measurer JA noted a strong cabinet resonance in the midrange with a frequency close to that of the musical note Middle C and another strong resonant peak just below 600Hz in the port’s output.) Nevertheless, RvB was impressed by the Prime Pro. Compared with the all-in-one Vanatoo Transparent One Encores, he found that the SVS speakers played louder, partied harder, slammed deeper, and looked nicer, as well as offering a “small smorgasbord” of convenient features. “If your budget is somewhere south of $1000, and you're looking for versatile powered speakers capable of unabashed performance, I don't think you can go wrong with the SVS Prime Pros,” he concluded. (Vol.46 No.1 WWW)

D:

Audioengine A2+: $269/pair $$$ (stands optional) ★

At the end of 2013, Audioengine replaced the A2 ($199/pair) with the A2+, the only apparent differences being that the latter costs $50/pair more and, per JA, "adds to the left, master speaker a USB 1.1 input for digital audio and a pair of output jacks, used to feed an unfiltered, unequalized signal to the subwoofer(s)." JA compared the new speaker with its predecessor, confirmed that they sounded "identical," and added, "I was impressed by how well these tiny speakers managed to fill my listening room with sound." His new measurements noted that "the A2+'s farfield response … is identical to the A2's." He concluded, "A heck of a speaker at a heck of a price!" (Vol.37 No.9, Vol.38 No.4 WWW)

Deletions
Magico S5 Mk II M-CAST, replaced by newer product not yet reviewed. Heretic AD614, no longer available. Marten Oscar Duo, Paradigm Persona 5F, Wilson SabrinaX, Polk Audio Legend L100, Alta Audio Alyssa, not auditioned in a long time.

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