In my 1993 WCES report last April, I reported that the most impressive product I'd heard at the Show was the introduction of NHT's new flagship loudspeaker, the $4000/pair Model 3.3. Even under the iffy conditions of a show demo, the big 3.3s just floored me—I had honestly never heard speakers do what I was hearing these new NHTs do. Although the 3.3s had already been snatched up by Tom Norton for review, I made arrangements to get a pair into my He-Man listening room as soon as my plane touched back down in TX.
…search
John Atkinson performed the measurements on the NHT 3.3, handing me the file only after I had finished my auditioning. Its B-weighted sensitivity measured approximately 87dB/W/m (B-weighted). Its impedance (fig.1) is quite uniform, both in magnitude and phase angle, verifying NHT's specifications and indicating that the 3.3 will be a relatively easy load to drive. The maximum value of just over 10 ohms at 27Hz indicates the low-frequency tuning point of the system—an unusually low value. This is the -6dB point of the woofer's near-field response (see fig.2). The…
Description: Four-way, sealed-enclosure, loudspeaker system. Drive-units: 12" polymer-cone woofer, 6.5" polymer-cone midbass, 4" polymer-cone upper midrange, 1" fluid-damped aluminum-dome tweeter. Crossover frequencies: 100Hz (12dB/octave), 320Hz (12dB/octave), 3.5kHz (18dB/octave). Frequency response: 23Hz-26kHz ±2dB (in-room, 1m). Usable bass response: -6dB at 19Hz, in-room (-3dB at 22Hz, in-room). Sensitivity: 87dB/2.83V/1m. Nominal impedance: 6 ohms (4.3 ohms minimum, 10.5 ohms maximum, no phase angle greater than ±30 degrees). Amplifier requirements: 30-…
"In the right room acoustically, the Eroica is felt through the feet, against the belly, and, if one sits on the floor, it ripples through his bottom. It is very difficult to put on tape, and especially on records, with any fidelity. Adequate playback equipment is…
The EMB's speed and agility rendered dynamics with…
Description: Powered bandpass subwoofer in sealed enclosure with signal-sensing auto on/off. Drive-units: 12" long-excursion, cone driver with 3" push-pull voice-coil and 15-lb magnet, 12" brushed-aluminum-cone passive radiator. Frequency response: 20-150Hz, ±3dB. Low-pass filter: 40-150Hz (variable, defeatable), 24dB/octave slope. No high-pass filter. Total harmonic distortion: <0.5%. Amplifier: 1200W RMS, 3600W peak (class-D). Inputs per channel: 2 line-level (RCA), 2 high-level. Speaker terminals: 4 (bare wire, banana plugs, or spade lugs). Outputs: 2 line…
Analog source: Linn Sondek-Lingo turntable, Linn Ittok tonearm, Spectral moving-coil cartridge.
Digital sources: Krell KRC-28 CD player, Sony SCD-C555ES multichannel SACD/CD player.
FM tuners: Day-Sequerra Classic, McIntosh MR-78, Sony ST-5000.
Preamplification: Mark Levinson ML-7 preamplifier with L3A moving-coil phono cards, Duntech MX-10 head amplifier, Margulis phono section, Krell KCT preamplifier.
Power amplifiers: Mark Levinson ML-2 monoblocks, Mark Levinson No.334, Krell FPB 600c.
Loudspeakers: Quad ESL-989, Velodyne DD-18 subwoofer…
The 10" EMB-1000 ($1595) shares the larger EMB-1200's design and internal amplifier, but it costs $600 less. It's also 1" shorter and thinner, 4" shallower, and weighs 30 lbs less. The EMB-1000 (serial number 1577) performed surprisingly well in my large listening room with most program material. To my surprise, I was able to blend it with the Quad ESL-989s at 45Hz, which made it much less directional than the EMB-1200. Working behind the Quads, it widened and deepened the soundstage even more.
However, demanding program material showed its…
My mother's words echoed in my ears as I unboxed Classé Audio's CAM 350 monoblock amplifiers, and I couldn't help but smile. I've been using Magnepan loudspeakers on and off for the past 20 years, most often matching them with tube amps—VTL, for example, or perhaps VAC, Sonic Frontiers, or Audio Research. As good as these systems have been, what I always inevitably found myself wishing for was "a really good, big solid-state amp."
Aladdin's Lamp?
At 350W—or 700W into the Magnepan 3.6/R's 4 ohm load—I figured the…
The CAM 350s arrived midway through my August 2000 review of the Magnepan MG3.6/R loudspeaker and immediately took up residence in my main system.
Over the years, in daydreams in which I'd mentally paired Magnepans with my dream amp, the most dramatic effects were significant improvements in transparency, dynamics, and the resolution of low-level detail. In my musings, that last little bit of gauze that my Maggies could never seem to shake would simply vaporize. The tiniest details would be revealed, imbuing images with a vibrant life and body. Subtle…