Description: Three-way, floorstanding loudspeaker. Drive-units: 1" (25mm) soft ring-radiator tweeter with dual magnets and machined waveguide; 5.9" (150mm) papyrus-blend midrange cone with 1.25" (32mm) voice-coil, dual magnets, and cast magnesium frame; two 7.1" (180mm) bilaminate-cone woofers with 1.5" (39mm) voice-coils and cast magnesium frames. Crossover: 400 and 3000Hz, both four-order Linkwitz-Riley. Frequency response: 28Hz–25kHz, ±2dB; –6dB at 23Hz. Dispersion: 30Hz–15kHz, +0/–3dB from axial response over 45° horizontal window. Impedance: 4 ohms nominal…
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Digital Sources: Sony XA-5400ES SACD/CD player, Oppo BDP-95 universal Blu-ray player, Logitech Squeezebox Touch networked music player.
Preamplification: Parasound Halo JC 2 BP preamplifier, Meridian HD621 HDMI audio processor & 861 Reference V6 preamp-processor.
Power Amplifiers: McIntosh MC303 (three-channel), Bel Canto Design REF1000 Mk.II (monoblocks).
Loudspeakers: B&W 800 Diamond, Sony SS-AR1, JL Audio Fathom f113 subwoofer.
Cables: Digital: Black Cat Veloce. Interconnect: van den Hul Flat 180, AudioQuest Vodka HDMI &…
My estimate of the Aerial Acoustics Model 7T's B-weighted sensitivity on its tweeter axis was 86.6dB/2.83V/m—significantly lower than the specified 89dB. The electrical impedance remains between 4 and 8 ohms over much of the audioband (fig.1), but drops to 3.5 ohms in the upper bass and low treble, and to 3 ohms in the low bass. Although the electrical phase angle remains low at almost all frequencies, this speaker will work best with a good amplifier rated at 4 ohms.
Fig.1 Aerial Acoustics Model 7T, electrical impedance (solid) and phase (…
The form factor has remained unchanged since 1999: a slim, tall, three-way tower speaker with immaculately finished and veneered side panels of wood, horizontal strips of black ebony inset under the lacquer, a leather-covered front baffle, and a lute-profiled enclosure constructed from horizontal layers of maple…
Description: Three-and-a-half-way, reflex-loaded, floorstanding loudspeaker. Drive-units: 1.1" (29mm) soft-dome tweeter, 7" (179mm) cellulose-fiber midrange cone, two 8.75" (220mm) aluminum-magnesium–alloy cone woofers. Crossover frequencies: 80Hz, 220Hz, 3.3kHz. Frequency range: 25Hz–30kHz. Sensitivity: 90dB/2.83V/m. Nominal impedance: 4 ohms. Rated input power: 30–300W without clipping.
Dimensions: 45.7" (1160mm) H by 16" (405mm) W by 25" (635mm) D. Weight: 122 lbs (55.5kg) net each; 319 lbs (145kg)/pair shipping.
Finish: High-gloss lacquered wood…
Digital Sources: Ayre Acoustics C-5xeMP & DX-5 universal players; Apple G4 Mac mini running OS10.5.8, iTunes 10, Pure Music 1.83; Shuttle PC with Lynx AES16 soundcard & dual-core AMD Athlon processor running Windows 7, Foobar 2000, Adobe Audition 3.0; dCS Debussy, Logitech Transporter, Bricasti M1, Weiss DAC202 D/A converters; Halide S/PDIF Bridge, Empirical Audio Off-Ramp4 USB-S/PDIF converters.
Preamplifier: Ayre Acoustics K-5xeMP.
Power Amplifiers: Classé CT-M600, MBL Reference 9007 (both monoblocks).
Loudspeakers: BBC LS3/5a, TAD…
I used DRA Labs' MLSSA system and a calibrated DPA 4006 microphone to measure the Sonus Faber Amati Futura's frequency response in the farfield, and an Earthworks QTC-40 for the nearfield and spatially averaged room responses. As Sumiko's John Hunter had taken great pains to optimize the speakers' backtilt when he set them up in my room, I measured a single Amati Futura on the exact axis at which his setup had placed my ears. This was 2" below the tweeter at my standard 50" microphone distance. My estimate of the Amati Futura's voltage sensitivity on this axis was…
My seat was near-center in Orchestra row T. It's a very interesting position. In Davies Symphony Hall, home of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the sound in row T is so…
To the left of the May Audio exhibit…