Sounding Good—Thiel's Versatile SCS4

Sounding Good—Thiel's Versatile SCS4

While we have been salivating for months in anticipation of the impending release of the floorstander, the CS3.7 that Wes Phillips blogged about on Thursday, Thiel teamed a pair of them with 3 of the new SCS4 small LCR speakers (and a pair of SS-1 subs) in one of the most musical setups at the show. The SCS4 utilizes a single coaxial driver in a remarkably rigid and resonance-free enclosure. The front panel is an aluminum casting and the other panels are doubly-laminated 1" MDF. As a single source, this can be oriented vertically (as shown) or horizontally as a center channel without phase interactions. At only $1000 each, this matched sweetly with the CS3.7s.

Showing a Lot of Classé

Showing a Lot of Classé

Less flashy than the amplifier internals I blogged about earlier, but still enormously impressive, was this rack of Class&#233;. Class&#233;'s Dave Nauber told me it was the first time the company had displayed their curved-profile components in these high-quality racks and that the installers were going nuts over them. They <I>do</I> do a restrained elegance.

Classy!

Classy!

They say that guys are visually stimulated, so I must be normal. Walking by Class&#233;'s booth, I saw this naked CA-5200 (5 x 200W; $8000). <I>Hubba hubba!</I>

A Turntable? At CEDIA?

A Turntable? At CEDIA?

So what does an audio guy discover at CEDIA? A turntable, of course. At the head of Sumiko's array of Pro-Ject turntables was their most elegant and impressive one yet. The RM-10 looks like a serious and grown-up RM-9 with a platform base and double-thick platter. At $2500, Pro-Ject's most expensive model yet, evoked buy-me-now urges in this lapsed vinyist. I understand that Michael Fremer has a review already in the hopper for our November issue.

Chord's Huge Array

Chord's Huge Array

Chord's CEO John Franks (right) and Bluebird Music's Jay Rein (left) regaled me with tales of Chord's Media Engine (price tbd). It includes an Intel Pentium 4 processor and up to 6TB of drive capacity, allowing you to centrally archive pretty much all varieties of CD and DVD formats. Chord promises "studio-quality audio" and "the best image processing technology available."

Robert Glasper - Canvas CD

Forums

Hi all,
Just bought a CD by the young pianist Robert Glasper titled "Canvas". I've listened to it about a dozen times now. Great piano jazz. Glasper's playing contains the sensitivity of Bill Evans and the funkiness Keith Jarrett but he has his own unique "voice".
Some of this also reminds me of some ECM stuff from the 70s. And there is a [very] slight hip hop influence to a couple of tracks.
Just a solid, modern jazz CD with lots of energy.

The Ultima Salon2—Revel's New Flagship

The Ultima Salon2—Revel's New Flagship

Revel main man Kevin Voecks demmed the new four-way Ultima Salon2, previewed yesterday by Wes Phillips, for the <I>Stereophile</I> scribes. It was worth the wait. With all-Mark Levinson electronics, the dem program ranged over many music types, culminating in Little Feat’s “Long Distance Love,” whose awesomely deep low frequencies didn’t faze the speaker’s triple 8” titanium-cone woofers with their edge-wound rubbon voice-coils. Price will be $22k/pair, with availability in early spring ’07.

Wilson's Watch Dog—New and Improved

Wilson's Watch Dog—New and Improved

With David and Sheryl Lee Wilson in Europe for the Milan and London Shows, son Daryl demonstrated for me how the Utah company’s newly redesigned Watch Dog subwoofer doubles as designer seating. The sub is now a more manageable passive design, one third smaller than the original, and is stackable. The Passive Dog can be controlled either by a home theater system’s bass management or, in a music system, by the outboard Watch Controller. This has both balanced and single-ended inputs and outputs, and features versatile high- and low-pass filters.

Now That's Cute!

Now That's Cute!

For $129.95, the JBL Spyro 2.1 system&mdash;available in black, fuschia, or retro blue with chrome highlights, as well as white&mdash; hooks up to your MP3 player and provides 6Wpc of neodymium-magnet Odyssey satellite power and 24W of Atlas woofer action. But don’t you just <I>love</I> the stylin’ styling! <I>Not</I> just for Spyro the Dragon gamers.

Will Marantz SR-5600 work on 50 Hz ? (instead of 60 Hz)

Hi,
I bought a Marantz SR-5600 for my sister in India. Problem is that power supply in India is 220V/50Hz. Now I did send a step down tranformer to bring the volatge down to 120V, but how about the frequency? Will it work okay on 50 Hz? The spec says it needs 60 Hz.
Is there a cheap solution for frequency conversion? All I was able to find were expensive ones.
Thanks for the response,
Nary

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement