The Best is Yet to Come

The Best is Yet to Come

Ayre and Vandersteen are two companies whose products have achieved an enviable reputation for excellence. I was, in fact, blown away by my listening experience in the Ayre room at RMAF 2006, and looked forward to an equally enveloping experience this year.

VMPS? Yes

VMPS? Yes

I was impressed by the extremely full-range presentation of the VMPS RMD-60 loudspeaker ($9950/pair) paired with the VMPS Very Solid Subwoofer ($1850)—especially with the system's admirable bass control. Part of the credit goes to Bybee special-effect Golden Goddess AC cables and speaker bullets, Bolder Cable interconnects and cables, the rest to the Eastern Electric M156 monoblocks (160W into 8 ohms, $7000/pair, based on the EL 156 pentode tube), and Bolder's Statement Level Modded Squeezebox 3 ($1300). If The Bolder Cable Company’s display sounded this good with brand-new amps that were not yet broken in, I look forward to hearing it again once everything is fully ready to strut its stuff.

The Return of the Beveridge Electrostat

The Return of the Beveridge Electrostat

Many years ago, in a conversation I was having with Peter Walker of Quad, I asked him if there was a speaker he'd wished he'd designed. "PJ" thought for a moment, then said he admired the Beveridge electrostatic, where a flat panel fires into a waveguide, thus allowing the panel to overcome its Achilles' Heel: the very limited horizontal dispersion resulting from its width.

The Rythmik Audio DS-15 Rubik's Cube Subwoofer

Thought you guys may be interested in this:

It's a Rythmik Audio DS-15, Sealed, with an AS370 12dB/Octave Amplifier - very nice!

I've spent the last 3 months, almost, building it but it's been worth it. Of course, rather than go for a boring black box, I dressed it up a bit - behold the Rubik's Cube Subwoofer...

[url=http://projectcube2007.blogspot.com]Project Cube 2007[/url]

The Real Thing, Courtesy of Zu Audio

The Real Thing, Courtesy of Zu Audio

After a hard day's morning presenting my hi-rez digital audio dems, I wandered into the Marriott's Atrium to sip on a Starbucks Grande Cafe Mocha. There I enjoyed some fine singing and guitar picking from Dan Weldon on the Zu Audio stand. The Utah cable'n'speaker company, whose modification of the classic Denon DL103D cartridge will be reviewed in the December issue of <I>Stereophile</I>, was presenting live music throughout the Show, with their high-sensitivity speakers used as the PA. Nice one, guys.

How do I clean my albums?

I am sure I will eventually want to buy a record cleaning machine, and I know they are available at a wide range of prices from a few hundred to several thousand dollars, but for now I will need to clean my albums manually. The problem is, it's been so long since I've done it that I don't recall how.

What is a good basic set of manual cleaning supplies that I can start out with, and how do I use them most effectively?

A Thing for Circles

A Thing for Circles

The delightful Gilbert Yeung of Blue Circle, minus the Mickey Mouse ears and Snake Oil display I encountered at the last Show, has a thing for circles. I'm not complaining. After seeing boxes upon boxes upon boxes, encountering a surfeit of circles is super. (I have a feeling someone is going to rake me over the coals in the comments section for that one.)

Proclaiming Potential

Proclaiming Potential

A definite eye-catcher, the $25,999/pair spherical Proclaim Audioworks DMT-100 speaker system features an external crossover that facilitates the ability to balance stereo output in difficult listening environments. (The crossover includes an L-pad bypass option to ensure "the cleanest possible signal path...for audio purists.") Each driver is independently mounted in a spherical enclosure cast from a proprietary high-density laminate. Fine-tunable for one's room, each driver can be adjusted up to 45&#176; off-axis; they also afford up to 12" vertical and horizontal positioning flexibility for the tweeter and midrange modules. Daniel Herrington's babies, designed by ear, are so new that their sensitivity has yet to be measured.

Rega audition

I went to an audio store today and looked at Rega turntables. They had Rega, Kuzma, and Linn tables. I spent some time speaking with a consultant about my listening preferences, my current equipment, the room where I'll be setting up my system, my component-at-a-time upgrade approach that is dictated by budget considerations, and my end-state objectives.

Come Listen, My Friend

Come Listen, My Friend

The sweet solidity of the violin beckoned me from down the hallway (which is far more than I can say about some of the rooms I visited). I was hardly surprised to discover that I had been lured by Edge Electronics. Paired with the Tyler Acoustics Woodmere II speakers ($8800 base price, 185 lbs each), the Edge System handled silences wonderfully. That may sound like a backhanded compliment, but I mean anything but. Playing the exquisite Elly Ameling singing Schubert to piano accompaniment, there was a stillness, poise, and grace amidst the living flow of her voice that I rarely experience from sound systems. (I experienced something similar one year in the Joule/Elrod room at CES). On display were the new Edge CD player, whose RAM circuitry is said to perform advance error correction, the G8 amp, and G2 preamp (available with optional battery supply). Actually, passive display was not what was intended. Shipping mishaps from the company's new base in Florida had actually destroyed some of the intended components, which were replaced by older versions of Edge's current models, which Steve Norber lifted from his home system a few miles away.

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