PBN's Sammy Speaker

PBN's Sammy Speaker

San-Diego-based PBN is best-known for its heroically proportioned loudspeakers, but PBN's Peter Noerbaek introduced his new Sammy loudspeaker at THE Show, which, as you can see from the photo, is a little more manageable in size. The 55"-tall Sammy uses premium Scanspeak drive-units in an unusually constructed cabinet (see next photo): a new, long-travel 10” Revelator woofer, a wide-range, 4” Illuminator midrange unit, and the Danish company's new pressure-formed beryllium-dome tweeter. Price will be $29,500/pair.

Paradigm's Affordable SE Speakers

Paradigm's Affordable SE Speakers

Though my photo shows the Canadian company's Director of Marketing Mark Aling with the top-of-the-line Paradigm Reference Signature S8 tower, my interest was piqued by Paradigm's new SE speakers. The Special Edition series combines elements of the more expensive Paradigm models, such as the tweeter from the Monitor series with the mineral-filled polypropylene-cone bass/midrange drivers from the Reference Studio series. The two-way SE1 bookshelf will sell for a very affordable $598/pair and the three-way floorstanding SE3 for $1398/pair.

YG's Carmel Loudspeaker

YG's Carmel Loudspeaker

Colorado manufacturer YG Acoustics, led by the energetic Yoav Geva, achieved notoriety by proclaiming its Anat Reference II Professional the "Best Loudspeaker on Earth. Period. " Stereophile reviewer Wes Phillips didn't disagree with that characterization, though it is fair to note that at $107,000/pair, the Anat Reference II Professional is also one of the more expensive speakers on Earth. Making its debut at CES, YG's two-way Carmel is relatively more affordable, at $18,000/pair, but shares with its sibling an enclosure constructed from slabs of aluminum CNC-machined in-house.

Teresonic Speakers Play Loud

Teresonic Speakers Play Loud

One of my last stops at THE Show at the Flamingo was the Teresonic room, where Mike Zivkovic demmed his 6'-tall single-driver Ingenium Silver Edition speaker using his own single-ended 2A3 tube amplifier. According to Mike, the amp uses interstage and output transformers from Lundahl and "there is not a capacitor in the circuit."

Epos Aims High With the Encore 50

Epos Aims High With the Encore 50

Since the ES14 from the mid-1980s, speakers from the English Epos company have been renowned for their midrange magic, not for ultimate dynamics. But Mike Creek, Epos's owner, is aiming for both with the Encore 50, which made its debut at CES. This three-way floorstander, priced at $9995/pair, uses two port-loaded 9" woofers with Kevlar/carbon-fiber/pulp-composite cones, in a large cabinet to achieve a high 90dB sensitivity, while the metal-dome tweeter uses an injected-molded roll surround to give high excursion. The midrange is fed by a tapped autotransformer to allow adjustment to a tight tolerance in production.

Playing with Teo Liquid Cable

Aloha,

One of the things we did this year at T.H.E. was to do some more playing with cables.

Last year, we compared some Straightwire Maestros to the Purist Audio Aqueous Anniversary cables and had a 100% identification rate. Ethan said the cables must have been broken for this to happen.

This year, in another trial, we stayed 'aquatic' and checked out the Teo Audio Liquid Interconnect.

I need a replacement Stylus for a Shure V15Vb cartridge.

I've had a Shure V15Vb Cartridge on a Dual CS5000 since 1986. I've logged thousands of hours on this combination. I hadn't used it for the last year while I was in the midst of buying/renovating an apt. Now it's time to get it tuned up.

After so many hours I figure it will perform better if I replace the stylus. Shure stopped making them correct?

Can anyone recommend a replcement option?

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