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S. Jensen
04-20-2004, 01:20 PM
Hello folks,

I have been searching for new speakers for quite a while now. I have narrowed down my search pretty much to a few speakers. First of all, let me give you some basic information:

My stereo is a Harman Kardon AVR 5500 (the international version of AVR 520) and a Harman Kardon DVD 25. So far my speakers have been the bookshelf Tannoy Revolution 1 - they have done a good job for its size and price - but it is time for me to move on and up. I wold like a floorstander this time.

My living room is about 6.5 meters long and 3.8 meters wide - with a little 2*2 meter extension in the end of the room. The height of the room is 2.85 meters and I have a wooden floor. (We will possible get a carpet/rug to place in front of the speakers very soon)

Music first! The speakers' primary function is stereo for music purpose. But the plan is to move the Tannoys and use them as surround speakers. So surround is important to, but stereo is the main purpose. I listen to pretty much all kinds of music. I like details, accuracy and a well controlled deep bass.

I am getting quite keen on Dynaudio Audience 72 or 82. My price limit is about USD 2000.

I would like to hear some comments on these speakers for my system, please. Will my receiver be able to drive the speakers well enough? (I know an upgrade of the receiver would help, but right now I don't have the money for that). What are the pros and cons? I might give Dali Evidence 870 a listen - they have a pair on sale where I live, so they match my price range.

I have listened to, and excluded these speakers:
System Audio 1750
B&W DM604 S3
... among others... I had a whole list...

Well, that's it for now! I would really like to hear some comments and experiences on the Audience 72 and 82 and the Dali Evidence 870 as well!

Kind regards and happy hifi to all of you!

S. Jensen

NickWH
04-20-2004, 05:48 PM
I was driving Dynaudio Audience 42's with an HK AVR 220. A year later I upgraded to a Plinius integrated amplifier. My suspicions were correct: I was missing out..on detail, imaging, bass weight, dynamics, you name it. My suggestion is, unless you feel like investing more money into amplification in the very near future, seek out 6 - 8 ohm speakers with higher sensivity. There are very few A/V receivers out there that will do Dynaudio speakers justice (like maybe B&K). You have a nice home theater setup, it would be a shame to start from scratch due to a speaker upgrade (like I did!). Have you looked at Jamo, KEF, Monitor Audio, Mission, etc.?

RGA
04-20-2004, 06:03 PM
To follow up on the last poster your budget might get you an entry level Standmount Audio Note speaker. High sensitivity, easy to drive and a lot of bass at good volume and maybe the best bass and dynamics you'll hear from any standmount at any price. Works well with low powered tubes and the speakers are upgradeable later.

Try and find a dealer to audition...Dynaudio is good mind you they were in the running - but they need a lot more power which costs even more money and then it still wasn't as good to me.

As for very impressive deep bass you'll need a sub(preferably two) - that is true whether you have a standmount or the Dyn 82 http://www.triodeandco.com/Prod_Loudspeakers.html

ppopp
04-20-2004, 06:16 PM
Have a look at PMC speakers. As well as ProAc if they don't have to floorstanders. PMC sound is very rich with great bass extension and imaging to die for.. ProAc monitor speakers are amazingly musical with masses of detail, particularly in the upper frequencies. Both are designed with music in mind for their singing purposes, although neither will less than excite you with movies (depending on the quality of the sound in the production of course).

nusiclover
04-20-2004, 10:57 PM
seems you really like your bass....
if this is the case then dynaudio 82's are hard to beat for the price.
however, as a dyn owner i can tell you that the 72 and 82 are not really audiophile speakers. they have overpowering bass and this affects the overall presentation.
if you are looking for a killer stanmount speaker that delivers bass down to 25hz and truely is an audiophile speaker with great imaging and excellent dynamics, id recommend von schweikert vr-2. these retail for $2495, but boy are they worth it. the treble will remind you more of the dynaudio contour series then the audience.

S. Jensen
04-21-2004, 05:52 AM
Thank you very much for the replies so far.

I knew my amplifier could be a problem with the Dynaudios. I am sure that a more powerful amplifier could improve the sound quality, but I am very excited about a test session with the Dynaudios and a receiver like mine or something similar. I have spoken with three Dynaudio dealers in Denmark. They all assured me that the HK AVR 5500 (US AVR 520) could to the trick with the Dynaudios. Well, that might be some typical sales person talk, I am still skeptic, but at least one of them has quite a good reputation for his honesty and dedication to audio.

I have read all the reviews on the 72 and 82 on this site. Over all people are very happy with them. Again, I can see that the amplification the reviewers use beats mine - except for a few. One guy, "Paul from Berkeley, Ca, USA" is extremely pleased with his Audience 82 and he uses an Arcam A-85 amplifier. I am sure my HK matches that one. I think this should be the right link to the review:

http://www.audioreview.com/Main,Speaker/Dynaudio,Audience,82/PRD_124976_1594_1180394crx.aspx#reviews

Now, I might give my self false hopes and expectations, but I guess there is no other way out than to bring along my receiver and give the 72s and 82 a good listen.

NickWH: I have read a review in a Danish forum with a guy who drives the 42 with a Marantz SR 4300 and is quite pleased with the result. Perhaps he is in for a pleasant surprise if he upgrades his amp.

I have decided on floorstanders this time. It has helped me to limit the selection.

I know of very few stores that sell Audio Note and Von Schweikert, but I might look into that. I mostly know of Audio Note from RGA, and I take that as a very good recommendation. I once heard some Von Schweikert, and as far as I recall they did a very good gob - but they were also a bit pricy.

I have looked into some other brands also. I guess Klipsch could be interesting, but I must say the craftsmanship and finish does not impress me very much. I am sure they sound quite good, but off hand they don't look so good. See, there is another parameter...

Jamo D 590 might be an option. They are on sale over here for USD 1000 a pair, but in my opinion they are not as good as the Dyns. But perhaps I should look more into them. I have also auditioned some Monitor Audio Silver. Sounded quite good, but the looks did not fall into my taste.

Nusiclover: You are partly right about my emphasis on bass. I miss some bass in my Tannoys right now, so I am a little focused on that. A sub is the last thing I will buy, so that is a part of the reason why I am very keen on the 82 - several reviewers appreciate the bass of the 82 so much, that they don't care much for a sub. For instance this review:
http://www.hometheatersound.com/equipment/dynaudio_audience_82_122c_42w_sub30a.htm

Once again, I appreciate your input! Keep it coming, please. I will keep you updated on my experiences and final decision.

Kind regards and happy hifi!

S. Jensen

manek
04-21-2004, 06:33 AM
The jamo D590 are very good once they break in......dont pass that one up yet. It may be just the kind of speaker you like. They to are 4 ohms.

Quad 22L would also suit you well. Give it a listen. 6ohms nominal load

Ofcourse my favourite Cadence Diva would be just ideal for your amp, 8 ohm load.

NickWH
04-21-2004, 07:46 AM
Nusiclover, you really crack me up. About a month ago you had such a hard-on for all things Dynaudio, you had to have them no matter what. Now they are "not audiophile speakers." Now Von Schweikert is the speaker to beat? In a few of weeks I'm sure their will be a new flavor of the week. You are all over the place, I can see you hitting the upgrade treadmill hard.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion, and to express them here, however, I would like to remind S. Jenson that these posts must be taken with a grain of salt. All things audio are way to subjective to go on opinions alone. You know what they say about opinions...

Listen for yourself and good luck with your purchase.

topspeed
04-21-2004, 10:09 AM
Nusiclover, you really crack me up. About a month ago you had such a hard-on for all things Dynaudio, you had to have them no matter what. Now they are "not audiophile speakers." Now Von Schweikert is the speaker to beat? In a few of weeks I'm sure their will be a new flavor of the week. You are all over the place, I can see you hitting the upgrade treadmill hard.


I don't think Nusic is slamming Dynaudio at all. As a 52se owner, he in fact has more insight than most as to the Dane's sound. I think he was simply stating that these particular models aren't as balanced as the Contour line and might not be the sound the poster was looking for. He has stated that he is really enjoying the MF/Dane combo now (especially with the mirrors out of the way ;)). I liken the difference between the Audience vs. Contour comparison to the B&W 600 vs. 700 lines whereas the 700 are more balanced and cohesive than the 600's. Neither are bad, but there is a difference. If the poster is bass happy, there are few speakers in this price range that will have the kind of accuracy and energy in the 20's like the VR2.

Soundbro
04-22-2004, 09:46 PM
I have gone through painstaking personal research on finding a speaker that did it for me and did it for my budget, and I keep coming back to the Paradigm Reference line. Speakers are highly personal in nature, but if there's a better value out there, I haven't seen it yet. Take a set home and demo them.

RGA
04-23-2004, 05:30 PM
Mr. SoundBro

I had the opportunity to listen to Paradigm versus several others of similar cost. I could have had the Studio 100 for instance but chose the Audio Note for slightly less money. I don't particularly think the Paradigms are any better than anything else in their price points and IMO certainly no giant killer nor are they high end speakers to me. Then again they're(Studio Line) not really any worse than those in their price range so naturally some will like them better.

RGA
04-23-2004, 05:39 PM
I know of very few stores that sell Audio Note and Von Schweikert, but I might look into that. I mostly know of Audio Note from RGA, and I take that as a very good recommendation. I once heard some Von Schweikert, and as far as I recall they did a very good gob - but they were also a bit pricy.

S. Jensen

VS and Audio Note are small companies compared to many of the others and as such they will be tougher to find. Audio Note requires a dealer that carries them to carry the complete audio chain. Not carry the top models but the delaer has to have a room with a complete Audio Note set-up -- a turntable, amp, cd player and speakers and cables. Many small dealers simply cannot afford to carry Audio Note which means only a larger or deep pocketed store can carry them since even their entry stuff is pretty pricey.

You have to go with what is in your area - I liked the 52Se as value moreso than the contour line - interestingly the only Dynaudio Dealer went under here - so if you were in my market then Dynaudio would be the tough one to find ---so it depends on markets. Soundhounds in Victoria British Columbia is the biggest Rega turntable dealer in all of North America - they carry a huge range of gear which helps me listen to a variety of stuff against each other. That said there is no Von Schweikert here - at least not yet.

In the end you can only listen to what's available...if VS and Audio note are available then check them out - if not and Dynaudio is the king of the hill in your area then the choice is a good one. You can't listen to everything. The 52 was and is very solid speaker that should be good to live with long term.

Mr Peabody
04-24-2004, 12:47 PM
Not to put your receiver down but HK isn't even in the same league with Arcam's anything. Arcam should be something you look to upgrade to. Not all watts are created equal.

You have come to a couple observations that we agree on, first Dyn's sound much better than B&W and Klipsch are very poorly crafted. I have found Dynaudio to be the best dollar to performance ratio out there. I have Dyn Contours across the front and A52's for surround. I also have a second system which has an Adcom pre/power amp driving some A62's. I haven't had the opportunity to play with HK in a long time but if they are like the receivers of old which were fairly high current and discrete output sections, I'd say you will be fine running Dyn's. Obviously, you will gain better sound with a better amp. From what you have said about your listening habits I believe Dyn's are the speaker for you. They are very neutral, detailed and have the best bass response of any speakers I have heard. What I mean by neutral is that they aren't one of these speakers people can say they sound good on rock but not classical or vise versa, Dyn's sound good on everything I have played through them. Also by neutral, they do not color or add to your signal. If someone found them to be too bass heavy it had to be the equipment driving them. My 62's sound very different when I hook them up to my Krell than when driven by the Adcom. You may say that's to be expected. Yes, but if the Dyn's had a signature of their own, which they don't, that characteristic would show to some extent in any system they are in. For instance, if they had a bass hump, that would be noticed no matter what amp drove them. I have had several amps hooked to the 62's and they have done a good job of revealing the characteristics of each amp.

Please let me know what you thought when you do your listening test. I know you want floorstanders but you should give a listen to the A52se, it's a killer for the money. But it may be difficult to match to a center speaker.

S. Jensen
04-26-2004, 05:32 PM
Thanks for the new inputs - I would like to comment on some of them.

NickWH: Thanks, I will try to take any input into consideration, but also remember, that good taste in sound is very different from person to person. Something you easily can forget when people make very "factual" statements on speakers and sound.

I have done a little research on the Von Schweikert VR2, and they are a bit too expensive for me. So is Vienna Accoustics Beethoven, I am afraid. A dealer contacted me and gave me a good offer and invited me to a listening session. Tempting, but I am afraid it is out of my league financially. :rolleyes: It seems that Paradigm has left the Danish market - so that option is out as well.
Another dealer has suggested me to look into the Tannoy Eyris series. I know very little of the Eyris series, but as with many other speakers I have heard very different opinions on them. I have read some poor reviews of it, but they might be wrong. Who knows. As RGA concludes, then I have to face that it will be impossible for me to listen to all speakers available. Something new will always come up and the markets are different in every country.

Again I would like to comment on the bass emphasis. Do not get me wrong. I am very much interested in a speaker that is able to perform some low, powerful and tight bass, but I am not at all into Cerwin Vega etc. I would like the main speakers to perform some good bass when needed. For instance when watching a DVD movie or when listening to some rock or some classical music like Wagner.

Mr Peabody: Thank you for your thoughts on the Dynaudios. I am happy about your rating of Dynaudio and that you think my amp will do the trick with them. Your description of Dynaudio in general is very similar to my impression of the brand. I am well aware of Arcam being superior to my Harman Kardon AVR 5500. Only I thought it was the characteristics of the sound, not the actual power of the two receivers/amps that was the main difference. Arcam would certainly be an upgrade - and a beautiful one - but there are also more powerful receivers in that market. But that is another topic for discussion.

Now for the listening session with my own receiver, which ultimatively will help me make the final decission: Some extra work came up, so I am not sure I will have the time to test the the Audience 72 and 82 this week. I also need to book some time in advance when bringing along my own receiver to the dealer. I hope to get that opportunity very soon.

That's it for now, I will keep you updated!

Happy HiFi and best regards

S. Jensen

3db
04-27-2004, 05:21 AM
They are in the price range your looking at

S. Jensen
04-28-2004, 04:31 PM
Hello 3db

Thank you for the input. PSB seems to be a nice company that makes good speakers. I looked into it. There is a Norwegian distributor, but no Danish one. I am afraid that leaves PSB out for me.

Best regards!

S. Jensen

nusiclover
04-28-2004, 08:14 PM
Nusiclover, you really crack me up. About a month ago you had such a hard-on for all things Dynaudio, you had to have them no matter what. Now they are "not audiophile speakers." Now Von Schweikert is the speaker to beat? In a few of weeks I'm sure their will be a new flavor of the week. You are all over the place, I can see you hitting the upgrade treadmill hard.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion, and to express them here, however, I would like to remind S. Jenson that these posts must be taken with a grain of salt. All things audio are way to subjective to go on opinions alone. You know what they say about opinions...

Listen for yourself and good luck with your purchase.

chuckles are free nick - glad i can offer up. :D
about my statements, dynaudio 82 are regarded by What! HiFi as "not audiophile" (i can provide issue # at request)...i agree that they have lots of bass that sometimes shadows over the mids and highs.
about Dynaudio, i think they make a good product- especially if you like dynamic sounding analitical sharp precise speakers with good fast bass (as far as bass precision id say they are hard to beat). I must say that if i were starting over id go with VR and i may do that in the future (this is because i found VR to be more rich in sound - musical rather than analytical), but for now i am very pleasaed with my danish investment. Furthermore, i am not swaying Jensen away from Dynaudio, merely adding some thoughts/reviews. This is for informational purposes only and not intended to persuay. Following with this however, i would like to say that Jensen, thread starter, has asked for Dynaudio or...? I believe that Jensen was looking into other options and feedback. I also said "82 are hard to beat for bass lovers". I think this is a rather good point. As far as my liking a different speaker every now and then, well, whats wrong with that? I dont always get vanilla ice cream, sometimes i do like a different flavor. Cheers.

Mr Peabody
04-30-2004, 11:57 AM
I guess that would depend on what ones meaning of audiophile is. My friends have been to the Dynaudio factory and the fact is they are nothing less than top notch. Dynaudio builds their speakers entirely in house, hand made. They wind their own coils, build their own drivers, cabinets and every part of the speaker. I don't think too many of your "audiophile" speakers can say that. In fact, many use Dynaudio drivers, like Sonus Fabor and Wilson did use some. Dyn's are closely monitored for quality and held to a tight tolerance. In my opinion Dynaudio is one of the most accurate speakers you can buy at any price point. If this isn't audiophile, I don't want audiophile.

As I stated in my earlier post, Dyn's are brutally honest and will reflect imbalances in your electronics, as well as in recordings. Some people can't handle the truth.

NickWH
04-30-2004, 11:59 AM
dynaudio 82 are regarded by What! HiFi as "not audiophile" (i can provide issue # at request)

Well, if What! Hi-Fi wrote it, than it must be true....

nusiclover
04-30-2004, 01:13 PM
oh goodness, sometimes people take things tooo serious (and i have noted this commonality especially present at this forum).
Here is what What! HiFi said:
Dynaudio 52: excellent speakers
Dynaudio 52se: definitely a special edition to the excellent 52
Dynaudio 82: not for someone looking for a truely audiophile speaker.

they like dynaudio, a lot, as do i, as do apparantly you. But, they made the comment specific to the A82. And i concede. That comment is that the 82 have a lot, and i mean a lot, of BASS. Perhaps too much so as to compare them to ALL of their other speakers. Perhaps all that BASS (i mean have you ever seen these monsters?) makes the A82 not a true audiophile speakers.

so, this may or may not be true, depending on your definition of "audiophile". Well, i think that What! HiFi, and myself, are using audiophile as a conglomorate for people who like to listen to music represented in a certain form. And that form does not have BASS that totally weighs more heavy than the mids and highs.

BTW, i dont think either Peabody or Nick have Audience 82. am i correct?

nusiclover
04-30-2004, 01:20 PM
ironically, do your dynaudios have HUGE BASS?
i know that mine have very tight and articualte bass. i also know that the bass does not engulf the mids and highs but that all 3 are rendered in a very "audiophile" way. how do yours sound?

Mr Peabody
04-30-2004, 02:07 PM
I am not shooting the messenger here. I just tend not to agree with the magazine. I thought it was fine to bring what the rag, I mean magazine said into the discussion. My Dyn's do in fact have the best bass response of any speaker I have heard but that is not to the detriment of the total frequency response. To say they are bass heavy implies they
color or are not neutral and that simply isn't true.

I don't understand really what is meant by "too serious". I have to admit, I may be, because I don't want to mislead anyone with anything I say. I tell it straight to the best of my knowledge and experience. My neck hair has been raised on these boards by personal attacks and mistruths. I do try to be respectful of you all. If I cross the line feel free to let me know. So much of audio is personal taste, no right or wrong. On the other hand there are certain truths and guidelines you can bank on and there is enough confusion already so I don't let mistruths get by. For example only, please don't get sidetracked, there is a certain faction on these boards who tell people there is no such thing as high current amplifiers. This is a mistruth I couldn't let go unchallenged. I also admit I don't know everything and have been corrected on subjects before. I appreciate those who provide references for there information, like websites. I do try humor at times as well, if you read my reply to the post "rubber or butal".

nusiclover
04-30-2004, 02:26 PM
your speakers shouldnt b bass heavy at all. once again i am referring only to the audience 82 model. by "too serious" i was actuslly referring to my comment of not audiophile being misconstrued by what some magazine has said. maybe i shouldnt have sourced it, but i do think providing sources can be useful in supporting ones arguments. perhaps i misconstrued What!HiFis comments on the a82. still, howerver, i believe they provide a lot of bass in relationship for what the audience tweeter does for the highs.

RGA
04-30-2004, 09:02 PM
As RGA concludes, then I have to face that it will be impossible for me to listen to all speakers available. Something new will always come up and the markets are different in every country.

S. Jensen

I would like to throw in two arguments - one from me and Audio Note's designer who in the mid 90s wrote an article for Positive Feedback magazine - who are quite tough on equipment.

Firstly - There are speakers out there like the Audio Note's, Spenders, Quad electrostatics that have been around for decades - basically tweaked up but the same general speakers. And classics which are still considered some of the best speakers ever made. The fact is nothing over the last 20 years is especially new except that today's CHEAP speakers are better than cheap speakers of old. There are MANY people who for example covet the Klipshhorn and believe thatthe B&W Matrix Series was and is better than the new more expensive Nautilus line.

I have more or less been listening to stuff since 1990 when I bought my Wharfedales - their last good speaker before they ran into financial trouble and produced some pretty average to terrible speakers in the Modus and Rubiance lines.

There is very little music below 40hz and a sub(preferably 2 if you want true stereo because bass is directional because Subs have a habit of going above 40hz - nce they do that I can ALWAYS tell you where it is in a room) will do a better job than ANY floorstanding speaker at ANY price producing the lowest bass at a HIGH volume level which, if set-up properly, will integrate unheard. The bonus is that high quality well set-up subwoofers with standmounts will cost you less than a big floorstander for the most part.

Don't listen to anyone who starts talking about a neutral speaker - if Dynaudio is Neutral and other speakers sound different - which they do - then that means all other speakers are not neutral...and D'uhh the Dynaudio Evidence at 70k sounds a helluva lot different right?

The 52 is not a perfect speaker - others have said it's much better than the comparable B&W's I would disagree. It may be better suited to their taste or the way they think music OUGHT to sound - there is no way to know which is accurate.

Enter the philosophy piece from Audio Note - who were not advertising their stuff it's simply a better way to audition gear - if you are on the search for accuracy. Forinstance with their way of listening you would know immediately that the Bose 901 is a total piece of crap - you may know that anyway BUT more people buy 901s than the competition so perhaps people get tricked by the extremely large soundstage.

http://www.audionote.co.uk/anp1.htm

By the way this is not to say Audio Note speakers are perfect either - It is still going to come down to preferences. The top end doesn't jump out at you neither does the bass.

I strongly recommed you listen to their gear because it is a bit of curveball into the mix - They are based on a 1940s box designs revamped by Snell and re-revamped by Audio Note. Math is the same today and if you get it right the first time and materials get better you can add on. I am sick and tired of seeing a company change tweeters every 4 years - what was the previous tweeter garbage? Obviously or why change it? (This does not apply to companies who are forced to meet a cost because they have no choice). But where Audio Note has a huge advantage is no marketing costs, little payroll, low overhead, R&D has been done and now it's a matter of tweaking.

Like the Sugden A21a integrated amp which has been selling in current form since 1989 and still thumping way more expensive amps and EVERYTHING I have ever heard in its own price range - you don't NEED to advertise you don't need features what you need is a great product and when the customer who has never heard of either brand goes in and listens to the old antiquated designs first scoffs --- and then after listening to the mainstream supposedly superior designs scratches his/her head and will never go back - because the big conglomorate's sound sounds like a glorified telephone in comparison. They seem to lack dynamics, bass at volume, and lifelike sound.

Another poster on another forum once said - if they're a big name chances are their best avoided. I would hardly go to that extreme but I find it interesting that on an anecdotal level of my own experience that a no name - not great looking speaker like the AN K can totally and handedly outclass the N805 in ALL areas.

It also takes balls for a dealer who carries HUGE easy to sell names like Paradigm, ML and B&W etc to put them in a corner and present the unknown(well not to the ultra rich) Audio Note front and center(and for 2 years now so not just a flash).

You'll find some with more bass MAYBE- but LISTEN to the whole piece of music - if you're paying attention to treble, bass, soundstage, detail, then the speaker is overly drawing attention to itself -- sure on some recordings it might if they're inept --- but before I had these speakers I though a lot of recordings were truly terrible like Amanda Marshal's first album. I have heard it on 100k systems and it did sound horrible. Ahh not so in fact it is a very solid recording and it is ruined by inferior dreck.

Jesse Cook's acoustic guitar was so horrible through highly touted well reviewed conglomoprate speakers I had to shut it off I had a headache - many get the attack but not the decay of instruments and the latter is critical IMO - and most will NEVER ever hear a speaker that does it right - certainly not if big box chains with 6 inch multi woofers in a slim box with a metal tweeter is all you hear.

And all are welcome to disagree which many will of course. Some swear by Electrostas and Planars and they don't cut it for me - so it's all about TASTE.

NickWH
05-01-2004, 05:05 AM
You are right RGA, nothing in speaker design has changed in 20 years. Not the cabinet materials used, not the driver technology, not the crossover design. Certainly, there has been zero advancements in computer aided design and the manufacturing process. It's all just marketing hype in the hopes of getting your money. Those EVIL corporations!

RGA, are you on the Audio Note payroll? I don't know about anyone else, but I'm getting a bit tired of the Audio Note info-mercials that you constantly post. It's great that you like your speakers and I'm happy for you, but 99.9% of your posts mention Audio Note (and/or Sugden) and it's getting a bit old. We all like the equipment that we own (obviously, that's why we bought it), but you are taking this to the extreme.

If it were up to you, we'd all upgrade to Sugden integrateds and Audio Note speakers and there'd be no reason to post on this or that OTHER board anymore, because in your opinion we'd all have the PERFECT system. You are so diligent in your lengthy posts that it's as if you are getting personal satisfaction from recommending such products in the hopes of proliferating your 'poor' uncommercialized brands. Or, maybe it's just audio snobbery on your part.

Somebody please tell me I'm wrong? Go ahead, flame me, I don't care anymore...

RGA
05-01-2004, 11:55 AM
You are right RGA, nothing in speaker design has changed in 20 years. Not the cabinet materials used, not the driver technology, not the crossover design. Certainly, there has been zero advancements in computer aided design and the manufacturing process. It's all just marketing hype in the hopes of getting your money. Those EVIL corporations!

RGA, are you on the Audio Note payroll? I don't know about anyone else, but I'm getting a bit tired of the Audio Note info-mercials that you constantly post. It's great that you like your speakers and I'm happy for you, but 99.9% of your posts mention Audio Note (and/or Sugden) and it's getting a bit old. We all like the equipment that we own (obviously, that's why we bought it), but you are taking this to the extreme.

If it were up to you, we'd all upgrade to Sugden integrateds and Audio Note speakers and there'd be no reason to post on this or that OTHER board anymore, because in your opinion we'd all have the PERFECT system. You are so diligent in your lengthy posts that it's as if you are getting personal satisfaction from recommending such products in the hopes of proliferating your 'poor' uncommercialized brands. Or, maybe it's just audio snobbery on your part.

Somebody please tell me I'm wrong? Go ahead, flame me, I don't care anymore...

You are correct that I do likely over expose a bias to these two companies. Part of the reason though is that most people have never heard them - and even more-so have never even HEARD of the companies. They are tough to find - not in every state or province - and when you don't advertise and the products are not in shiny packages then many will bypass them EVEN when they're in a local store.

My posts reflect the price point of the poster and recommend an audition not to buy something unheard. The AN K spe is now priced at $2250.00US and I'll recommend it to those in that price realm.

At sub 1k you'll see me mention B&W, Energy, PSB and possibly Klipsh, Wharfedale, Linn etc. Sub 1k amplifiers and I won't mention Sugden.

I think the issue is the following. Most of us including me start with relatively inexpensive systems and we ALL get to know the players: Paradigm, B&W, PSB, Energy, Klipsh, Jamo, JBL etc. Then we we have more money $2000.00 instead of $200.00 we ASSUME that the players at the higher price points are these exact same brands. I may be happy with my Honda Civic hatchback but if I were to spend 100k would I not look at Ferrari? They have a specific interest in building the best sports car (whether it is or not I suppose is still subjective). With speakers and audio there are just SO many choices.

A company like Reference 3a for a long time only made $6k and up speakers - few carried them. Samll magazines like UHF gave them, like Sugden a couple of reviews but alas most people could not afford them. Some of these companies like Audio Note and Reference 3a and probably the folks at Avante Guarde and Gershman Acoustics build their compnaies from a point of PASSION - since none of them will ever outsell a Paradigm or a B&W they MUST sell a superior product or one that is different and equal to be able to stay in business. Audio Note's owner was rich before he ever started the company - this is a hobby for him- he builds cost-no-object systems first and then works down. But the design is virtually identical and that is why there is a house sound. The B&W 302 I had does not sound like a N801 - no matter how B&W likes to talk about trickle down sound.

And unfortunately you have me cold in that I think Audio Note is the best - at least of what I have heard - because the best system I have heard was an all Audio Note system - and at around $50kcdn it sounded better than many I have heard at several times the price. I'm going to want to tout that.

Lastly I have heard the AN E Sec a 20kUS speaker - it has the same box design as their entry level $2500.00US model but with lesser cables/crossover and parts. But if the AN E is 80% the speaker that that the SEC version is then it would still be better than the N801 at $11,000.00US --- and that does not happen often and the N801 is an excellent speaker. When i heard them I was scratching my head - who the hell is Audio Note and how do they have more bass while maintaining a smoother midband and a more cohesive sound than the 3-way larger beautiful B&W N801?

And not everyone will be partial to this kind of sound - some will be die-hard Electrostat lovers and I understand why - they have a distinct sound period. You won't convince them to buy or in some cases even try ANY boxed speakers because they believe ALL boxed speakers have too much colour. They are equally as passionate as I with their choice. I know why I would not want an Electrostat but I also know why people love them...so I say listen to different DESIGNS.

Listening to a 604 and a Studio 100 and some other slim line design to me is listening to the same sound with slight alterations in the treble/bass etc -- listening to those against an electrostat will yield a far greater degree of DIFFERENCE in sound - or a Klipshhorn - or an Audio Note or an Avante Gaurde etc. Try and listen to stuff not stamped out of the assembly line-O-matic products.

Mr Peabody
05-02-2004, 12:31 PM
I beg to differ with your statement that there have been no improvements in speaker manufacturing over the last 20 years. If that was true, all our drivers would still be mostly paper. I believe that speaker companies like any other company has to continually improve on their product or they would find themselves outdated and out of business.

It sounds like you hunted for a speaker to make Jessie's guitar sound the way you wanted it to rather than the way it was supposed to be. I have faith that all the expensive equipment you listened to could not all be wrong in the reproduction of the recording. Not that expensive equates to accurate, I just have a hard time believing that Sugden and Audio Note is the ultimate reference system. I do believe that you are thoroughly pleased with it and that's what counts in your book. You just paint with a wide brush of condemnation of other equipment.

Obviously, the Evidence will do best what Dynaudio does in comparison to an Audience or Contour series. I am convinced from my listening that at any price point Dynaudio will be more accurate to the recording and the equipment characteristics than any other speaker offered at that price point or even higher to a point. The majority of recordings made are poor quality and accurate is not always the most pleasing. Then again, unless we were there during the recording and had photographic memory, accurate is as subjective as anything else in audio. Any of us who have heard live music though should be able to tell when they hear something that comes close. For instance, many listeners want strings to be warm and lush, I was recently listening to a string quartet in a college auditorium and they didn't sound like that at all. The instruments sounded somewhat cold, more like the way my Krell is criticized for sounding. I know there are many variables in this example but on most classical recordings my Krell and Dyn's reproduce strings more like the live strings I have heard. If tubes or Sugden make them warm and lush, and if that's what you like, that's fine, it's colored, not accurate. I guess the bottomline, we both can agree on, it comes down to personal preference.

RGA
05-02-2004, 03:12 PM
I beg to differ with your statement that there have been no improvements in speaker manufacturing over the last 20 years. If that was true, all our drivers would still be mostly paper. I believe that speaker companies like any other company has to continually improve on their product or they would find themselves outdated and out of business.

It sounds like you hunted for a speaker to make Jessie's guitar sound the way you wanted it to rather than the way it was supposed to be. I have faith that all the expensive equipment you listened to could not all be wrong in the reproduction of the recording. Not that expensive equates to accurate, I just have a hard time believing that Sugden and Audio Note is the ultimate reference system. I do believe that you are thoroughly pleased with it and that's what counts in your book. You just paint with a wide brush of condemnation of other equipment.

Obviously, the Evidence will do best what Dynaudio does in comparison to an Audience or Contour series. I am convinced from my listening that at any price point Dynaudio will be more accurate to the recording and the equipment characteristics than any other speaker offered at that price point or even higher to a point. The majority of recordings made are poor quality and accurate is not always the most pleasing. Then again, unless we were there during the recording and had photographic memory, accurate is as subjective as anything else in audio. Any of us who have heard live music though should be able to tell when they hear something that comes close. For instance, many listeners want strings to be warm and lush, I was recently listening to a string quartet in a college auditorium and they didn't sound like that at all. The instruments sounded somewhat cold, more like the way my Krell is criticized for sounding. I know there are many variables in this example but on most classical recordings my Krell and Dyn's reproduce strings more like the live strings I have heard. If tubes or Sugden make them warm and lush, and if that's what you like, that's fine, it's colored, not accurate. I guess the bottomline, we both can agree on, it comes down to personal preference.

Firstly I think it's a dangerous game when discussing accuracy - a very popular paper on accuracy was written by Peter Qvortrup and showed up in Positive Feedback over several issues...it is the best audible gauge for a listener to determine accuracy and probably a reason why the AN E is used by Hi-Fi Choice and Stereophile as a speaker to measure gear.

Sugden is not the best by any stretch --- it is the best that I could afford --- to me. I heard my Speakers with an Audio Note integrated that frankly wollops my Sugden but at the price it should.

Paper woofers are still made by the likes of VIFA and are used mainly because they are lighter and faster than any other material while raising the sensitivity.

As for new designs - disagree that they are better they are new for marketing reasons better? Not so. Different yes.

As for what sounds better to me is of course the reason but it also sounds like an instrument. The Slim lines design speakers lack body and dynamic realism. I'm well aware of the Dynaudio Sound - I like their gear - but I didn't end up with it for a reason.

I would not say Dynaudio will be more accurate to everything else unless you've heard everything else. The Contour and Audience line IMO sounds very good - neither for me is what I would choose.

psonic
05-03-2004, 05:33 AM
S. Jensen - I happily own the Audience 60's, they do not suffer from exaggerated bass, more the tower version of the 50. The 62 may be worth a listen, it sounds very similar to the 52 and you can take the cash you save toward a power amp. The 4ohm dynes will push the h/k very hard, the sound will be more rigid, compressed, and sometimes strained at higher volumes compared to a power amp. It may also be bright and lacking in bass. The power amp run off your pre-outs would let you see some of the potential of those marvelous speakers. Yes, the other poster was right...you will be OK, the h/k will run them, but to a much lesser level than an amp. A used amp or a dealer in-home demo would allow you to test inexpensively. Not to knock the h/k, it just wasn't designed to sound it's best under a load like the dynaudio. I'd say dynaudio + amp is very good solution for you... :)

Mr Peabody
05-03-2004, 07:31 PM
You and I have agreed on several observations, Bose pretty much suck, as well as most Klipsch, neither of us are B&W fans, on Sennheiser and the sound of the MF X-can. But, on Dynaudio, what is the problem? You say you are aware of their sound yet you through them in with your stereotypical condemnation of slim line designs. Dynaudio is synonimous with dynamic sound. How can you say they lack dynamics? Unless you have heard them on crap electronics. Even with my Adcom gear the Dyn's had wider dynamics than the few others tried with this amp. By dynamics, I mean a wide frequency response and fast transcient response to produce a lively reproduction. The bass response is a stand out attribute because it is superior to other speakers I've heard. Something that struck me from the first time I heard a pair was the natural decay of cymbals. I would not trade my 2.5's for B&W's top Nautilus, not Revel's $10k speaker, nor Thiele, I have heard these and thought they fell very short in comparison to my Dyn's which actually cost much less.

I understand choice. I love Martin Logan but Dynaudio is what I have at home.

I know one big difference between you and I is the fact that you read a lot of audio magazines where I read virtually none. I feel they are biased. Most only cater to certain brands, usually the ones advertising with them. There have been a few things on Stereofile's A list that I have had a chance to hear and led me to question that validity. But this is another discussion.

I might also add that there are those music lovers who are not bass fans. They are perfectly happy with a speaker that has a leaner bass response, like the "British" sounding speakers.

RGA
05-03-2004, 10:09 PM
I'm not attacking Dynaudio at all - I would take the Dynaudio 52 in its price range now that the CDM 1NT is gone. But to me these were the two best I had heard in the price range. The CDM 1NT has a midrange suckout which knocked them out and the 52 is too laid back and while the treble was smoother lacked openness. Still I greatly like the speaker - but there is a reason they have a Countour line just as B&W has a Nautilus line - room to improve.

I always listen with very good gear. I would say the lowest end gear I audition with is something like the top of the line Arcam Integrated...generally I try and listen with amps I know best. Unfortunately Dynaudio has been dropped here so I cannot get access to them for a while. Soundhounds is in discussion with Dynaudio to pick up the line though to replace Totem.

I'm simply saying that both of us have a pretty hard passion for what we bought and we need to be careful when we speak in terms of "accurate" which is an unknowable quantity. There are too many design approaches - Maggie and stat lovers swear by em and I like part of the planar sound - I understand the appeal but they are not for me. I am also fully aware that Audio Note's sound will not be for some. One reviewer said he was not a fan of Audio Note speakers but when he heard it in the system he changed his mind - this simply illustrates that system matching is critical.

If I based my opinion on the first time I heard the N801 I would have said the speaker sucked - with top of the line Classe no less. Listening with a Nuvista 11 watt tube amp in a non treated but VERY large room with the speakers 6 feet from all walls it was absolutely gorgeous. Problem is in a normal room they sounded very boomy with a bright treble.

The Contour S1.4 ran into a lot of the problems many small standmounts I listened to ran into and it was dynamics and bass at higher SPL. Adding to this a difficult impedence and lowish sensitivity gave it a shu in sound similar to the Totem Model One. Though I prefer the actual sound to most other speakers I heard for around the same price it's awfully tough to go from a fullish range floorstander like my Wharfedales (despite the flaws) for something that sounds so small.

It's simply an issue of taste cause I can recommend Dynaudio easily - but I have found looking back over all the speakers I have liked over the last 15 years and I like a more sensitive design. Inneficient small slim speakers are not, to me, dynamically acceptable. I'm not talking about bass but bass thins out quickly too - an attribute of most standmounts and pushed enough my speakers are not exempt from this. But there was a reason I favoured the Reference 3a MM De Capo over the competition for so long...Higher sensitivity bigger speaker physically with larger drivers and can play louder with deep realistic bass.

And if you ever want to buy a SET amp which I wanted to remain a possibility the 3.7 - 33.1 ohms of the S1 is totally unacceptable - best not to have more than a 12 ohm swing. So I had a lot of factors when shopping - also the fact that I got the AN K at roughly half the retail price certainly didn't hurt matters.

As for reviews: There was not a single review of the AN K spe anywhere - there still isn't except for a two line blurb from Hi-Fi Choice I only found months after I bought them. Most of the stuff that gets class A or B in Stereophile I don't like - or I don't think should get a rave.

46minaudio
05-04-2004, 07:09 AM
Peabody you have to understand.RGA has the only opinions that matter.If he says the AN is better than the dyns well then it is a fact and we all have to accecpt it. All one has to do is look at his expert reccomendations.Hell you can go to a lawnmower forum where one asks for the best 48 inch lawn mower and he will reccomend the ANs.He says owner reviews are worthless,then turns around and quotes owner reviews of the ANs.He says print reviews are worthless then turns around and quotes printreviews..He babbles these long winded post about Stereophile then turns around and post ( the AN E is used by Hi-Fi Choice and Stereophile as a speaker to measure gear.).Need not worry though one day maybe we can all have ANs.We just need to dump our crappy DYNs, B&Ws,Paradigm,Klipsch,and every other speaker that is slim,metal tweeters,horns,palners,and just dont meet MR goldenear RGAs aproval..

Prefuse
05-04-2004, 10:38 AM
You and I have agreed on several observations, Bose pretty much suck, as well as most Klipsch, neither of us are B&W fans, on Sennheiser and the sound of the MF X-can. But, on Dynaudio, what is the problem? You say you are aware of their sound yet you through them in with your stereotypical condemnation of slim line designs. Dynaudio is synonimous with dynamic sound. How can you say they lack dynamics? Unless you have heard them on crap electronics. Even with my Adcom gear the Dyn's had wider dynamics than the few others tried with this amp. By dynamics, I mean a wide frequency response and fast transcient response to produce a lively reproduction. The bass response is a stand out attribute because it is superior to other speakers I've heard. Something that struck me from the first time I heard a pair was the natural decay of cymbals. I would not trade my 2.5's for B&W's top Nautilus, not Revel's $10k speaker, nor Thiele, I have heard these and thought they fell very short in comparison to my Dyn's which actually cost much less.

I understand choice. I love Martin Logan but Dynaudio is what I have at home.

I know one big difference between you and I is the fact that you read a lot of audio magazines where I read virtually none. I feel they are biased. Most only cater to certain brands, usually the ones advertising with them. There have been a few things on Stereofile's A list that I have had a chance to hear and led me to question that validity. But this is another discussion.

I might also add that there are those music lovers who are not bass fans. They are perfectly happy with a speaker that has a leaner bass response, like the "British" sounding speakers.


I agree. I own a pair of Dynaudio Contour 1.3mkII's and they are FAR from lacking dynamics. Perhaps RGA was referring to the Audience Line which I have not heard.

RGA
05-04-2004, 05:28 PM
Peabody you have to understand.RGA has the only opinions that matter.If he says the AN is better than the dyns well then it is a fact and we all have to accecpt it. All one has to do is look at his expert reccomendations.Hell you can go to a lawnmower forum where one asks for the best 48 inch lawn mower and he will reccomend the ANs.He says owner reviews are worthless,then turns around and quotes owner reviews of the ANs.He says print reviews are worthless then turns around and quotes printreviews..He babbles these long winded post about Stereophile then turns around and post ( the AN E is used by Hi-Fi Choice and Stereophile as a speaker to measure gear.).Need not worry though one day maybe we can all have ANs.We just need to dump our crappy DYNs, B&Ws,Paradigm,Klipsch,and every other speaker that is slim,metal tweeters,horns,palners,and just dont meet MR goldenear RGAs aproval..

First where did I say Dynaudio or B&W or Klipsh sucked? I was telling Mr. Peabody why I chose one speaker over another and I said all along that this was the sound I heard. A personal taste issue. Just as Mr. Peabody chose Dynaudio because the B&W and Klipsh did not live up to his criteria in one or more criteria. Some people choose B&W over Dynaudio too and some would choose the Paradigm over Dynaudio - especially if you're on a tighter budget.

As for the reviews i have been over this numerous times. I don't support the notion that you should buy speakers off of a review - WHEN all the products from that reviewer get rave reviews. Not every product is excellent - or I should say not every product is excllent to all people. I ask you Mr. 46minaudio does the B&W N801 sound EXACTLY the same as a JM Labs Utopia to you? Both get class A ratings in Stereophile and both are very good speakers but does that mean you should just flip a copin and order one up - does that mean you would not much prefer one to the other? Maybe you like a class B or D speaker over what they gave a class A.

Same applies to HiFi Choice - they review in a PANEL of listeners. I show a review from them because rarely does somehting ever get 5 stars - and even then I note that many of the 4 star stuff I like over the 5 star stuff. I add the reviews for Audio Note as more of an information guide about the speakers - but your point is taken that I should quantify that when I post the review. The fact is people like to see reviews. I can say reviews are irrelevant all I want - they are to me since I bought a speaker that has been around for decades and no reviews on it. But I also know most people are not like me and want to see reviews to help them feel better about what they are buying.

My intention with the review is not to get you or others to BUY a speaker but put them on your radar so when you're in a shop and you see the plain looking Audio Note (Audio Note who?) that you might actually give them a try. Not everyone out there lives in an area that has a dealer the size of Soundhounds that carries 15 different brands of speakers that you can listen to side by side with the top end gear. If it was not for my dealer Audio Note would have completely went under my radar and I would own a significantly inferior speaker right now - TO MY EAR. Someone else goes in and might like something else - or may choose a nicer looking product (A vvery valid reason).


It's not entirely different that movie reviewing. Is Ebert always right? never right? sometimes right? - or is it even an issue of being RIGHT at all. It's preference. You can find a critic/reviewer that you MOSTLY agree with and once you do you may rely on their advice and see something they say is good even if the preview didn't thrill you.

Speakers are the same way. I dislike a certain sound - some people on this forum agree or hear things the way I hear them and will seek out my suggestions and give it a try...I recommend you try as much as possible. Potlicker owned a set of Paradigm Studio 40s and did not like their highs he found them to be bright he knows that was a complaint I had so he agrees with me on the speaker's general sound and decided to give my suggestion a try. Obviously if you're a Woochifer who loves the speaker then you're hearing it differetnly - though I did give the 40 a very very good 8/10. otlicker however had the same reservation about the speaker I did if you don't then you're fine I guess.

I add the side stuff about what the revieweers own to basically advertise for the company because they don't advertise. Audio Note just started with a distributor in the US. Yet reviewers from Stereophile and enjoythemusic OWN the speakers in Enjoythemusic's case the J is their reference speaker or the one the reviewer personally owns. Yet Stereophile does not review Audio Note...they use them to test amplifiers though as a reference. What does this say?

Distributorship comes into play and that is one reaosn I don't love Stereophile. For instance I was recently pleased that in the November Stereophile they reviewed the Sugden A21a a very impressive reivew. This amplifier has been around since 1989. But only now have they bothered to review the longest running amplifier in history. On the general forum I spoke to the reviewer who said it was the best integrated amplifier in its class. Ie; the best integrated for $1600.00. Yet since 1989 they had some MF or Arcam or Bryston given the class B award. Do you see where I am going with this? The company that did not advertise was not huge but was the best was completely missed. Stereophile reviews the big conglomorates and compares them to each other - great but that is different from comparing the best. This is why I have problem with reviews and why I always recommend you LISTEN to the gear for a long time and not let reviews sway you.

Unfortunately, I have to use the reviews to support my recommendation or why the hell should you or anyone else bother to make a probably lengthier drive to seek them out? I would rather people NOT buy blind based on any of my recommendations - just to listen to them - not everyone can hear an AN K directly against the Studio 40, Reference 3a MM de Capo, N805, etc like I can and did.

tqn999
05-05-2004, 03:23 PM
I haven't come back to this forum for almost 2 years, and now after reading through this post, it hurts me ... again, just like it did 2 years or so ago, when everybody talked about Norh, pros or cons.
It seems in our audio community, some of us easily intimidated by the crowd, or simply want to be different, for example, if so many people have B&W, then I will look for something else, maybe unknown.
I'm afraid of the old time, when the obsession of "new finding" causing so much contradiction.

I just want to post for my personal opinion as a forewarn, maybe it's good, maybe it's bad, exploring new gear is good idea, letting other know about your finding is a good deed, but don't let it go too far. If any of us here still remember that "Norh" time, it scares me just to think about it.

S. Jensen
05-07-2004, 02:56 AM
Back on track....

Yesterday I auditioned the Audience 72 and 82 at my local dealer. The speakers were hooked up with the Harman Kardon AVR 5550 (The US model AVR 525) which is very similiar to my AVR 5500 (US 520). They have about the same specifications, but the 5550/525 is a 7.1 model.

Besides the great sound, I was surprised how loud they could play on that receiver. The receiver did get hot, but even though it is an old model, it had not been used before. Perhaps that matters? Or is that a really bad sign? Heat seems to be a typical Harman Kardon problem.

Now, the sound from the 82 was in a way bigger with more bass. During this thread a few people have noticed my emphasis on the speakers ability to perform some good bass, so that I don't need a sub right away. Well, I thought it was almost too much. There seems to be three obvious explanations for this:
1: The Audience 82 has too much bass for my taste
2: The receiver could not handle the 82, so that the bass did not sound right.
3: The listening room was not big enough for the 82 to sound good. The room was not very big, and on the product sheet Dynaudio leaves out the option for using the 82 in a small room - but without saying what a small room is.
(and the fourth option could be the evil combination of reason 2 and 3 ;) )

The Audience 72 played very well from the beginning, they seemed to be easier to position also. Right away the stereo perspective was very good. Again this might be because the Audience 72 is a smaller speaker in a small room - and perhaps because the receiver could handle it better. I must say I really liked the way it performed. I have difficulties describing good sound in English as well as in Danish, so let me just say they sounded very good :p I missed a litle of the bass from the 82 I think - but just a little.

Now, I am glad that I don't have to decide upon yesterday's session. The dealer offered me that I could bring home both pairs of speakers, so that I could listen to them in my own room for a weekend. I am really looking forward for that! I am excited about how the 82s will perform in a larger room and how warm the receiver will get. Right now it is a very close race between the two models - closer than I had thought.

I will keep you updated! If you have any comments on my observations about heat from the receiver, bass performance, and room size etc. then please post a reply. Also: If any of you know of any tricks and hints for speaker testing, then please let me know.

Happy HiFi to all of you - and best regards

S. Jensen

RGA
05-07-2004, 12:45 PM
I haven't come back to this forum for almost 2 years, and now after reading through this post, it hurts me ... again, just like it did 2 years or so ago, when everybody talked about Norh, pros or cons.
It seems in our audio community, some of us easily intimidated by the crowd, or simply want to be different, for example, if so many people have B&W, then I will look for something else, maybe unknown.
I'm afraid of the old time, when the obsession of "new finding" causing so much contradiction.

I just want to post for my personal opinion as a forewarn, maybe it's good, maybe it's bad, exploring new gear is good idea, letting other know about your finding is a good deed, but don't let it go too far. If any of us here still remember that "Norh" time, it scares me just to think about it.

I'm not sure who this is to but if it is to me I think you need to look more carefully at the two companies before you make a comparison. nOhr is an internet seller selling relatively mid level gear with really funky looks and possibly good sound - mixed reviews abound so I don't know for sure. There is no dealer network in the US.

Audio Note is not as big as B&W - but then B&W isn't as big as Bose but I'm sure most would agree that B&W is 10 times the product maker that Bose is - so size doesn't count. Audio Note has been around for more than 2 decades and is both a retailer and a kit maker. In actuality the products have roots of more than 4 decades - so it is not a fly-by-night internet outfit that may pack their bags in two weeks.

Audio Note is well known in high end circles for making the ELITE equipment because cost is no object. And while we can't rely on reviews to buy a product we can at least say they review Audio Note equipment. The highest review ever given to a digital product in Stereophile or Hi-Fi Choice was to the Audio note DAC 5 -- neither magazine has reviewed any nOhr product to my knowledge. It is also impractical for many magazines to review amplifers which sell for $250,000.00US or turntables at over $20k. If barely anyone can afford to buy it why review it? I'm amazed they reviewed the DAC which retailed for a stupid $49,500.00US and was not even the top model.

I'm not saying these prices are WORTH the money at all - but it's up to the individual to determine "worth" as $50k to Bill Gates might be like a penny to us.

I am an ex owner of B&W DM 302 speakers - and I regret selling them because they would have been great for my home theater - but because they change so drastically their speakers every few years the 303 would not match - nor would the new center channels. Oddly the 303 I find to be worse for more money in many areas. Granted worse is still better than everything else I've heard for the same money but oh well.

B&W is a safe buy a good buy generally and easy to turnover on the used market --- I was not buying a speaker I figured I might want to turnover like the N805(as good as it is something had me doubting) Then I heard the De Capo from Reference 3a(another that can't be compared to nOhr) and the Audio Note K and my doubt for the N805 grew. Nothing against the N805 --compared to most of the big names it's probably the best IMO for the money

Ohh and LOOKS play a factor - let's face it if looks matter then B&W wins against most of the competition and you don't give up a lot of sonics - hmm maybe that's the reason they're in the top 5 speakers sold. Good mix of both.

S. Jensen
05-09-2004, 01:08 PM
Back on track....

Yesterday I auditioned the Audience 72 and 82 at my local dealer. The speakers were hooked up with the Harman Kardon AVR 5550 (The US model AVR 525) which is very similiar to my AVR 5500 (US 520). They have about the same specifications, but the 5550/525 is a 7.1 model.

Besides the great sound, I was surprised how loud they could play on that receiver. The receiver did get hot, but even though it is an old model, it had not been used before. Perhaps that matters? Or is that a really bad sign? Heat seems to be a typical Harman Kardon problem.

Now, the sound from the 82 was in a way bigger with more bass. During this thread a few people have noticed my emphasis on the speakers ability to perform some good bass, so that I don't need a sub right away. Well, I thought it was almost too much. There seems to be three obvious explanations for this:
1: The Audience 82 has too much bass for my taste
2: The receiver could not handle the 82, so that the bass did not sound right.
3: The listening room was not big enough for the 82 to sound good. The room was not very big, and on the product sheet Dynaudio leaves out the option for using the 82 in a small room - but without saying what a small room is.
(and the fourth option could be the evil combination of reason 2 and 3 ;) )

The Audience 72 played very well from the beginning, they seemed to be easier to position also. Right away the stereo perspective was very good. Again this might be because the Audience 72 is a smaller speaker in a small room - and perhaps because the receiver could handle it better. I must say I really liked the way it performed. I have difficulties describing good sound in English as well as in Danish, so let me just say they sounded very good :p I missed a litle of the bass from the 82 I think - but just a little.

Now, I am glad that I don't have to decide upon yesterday's session. The dealer offered me that I could bring home both pairs of speakers, so that I could listen to them in my own room for a weekend. I am really looking forward for that! I am excited about how the 82s will perform in a larger room and how warm the receiver will get. Right now it is a very close race between the two models - closer than I had thought.

I will keep you updated! If you have any comments on my observations about heat from the receiver, bass performance, and room size etc. then please post a reply. Also: If any of you know of any tricks and hints for speaker testing, then please let me know.

Happy HiFi to all of you - and best regards

S. Jensen

Can anyone give me some input or feed back on my experience with the Audience 72/82? Any thoughts?

Best regards,

S. Jensen

RGA
05-09-2004, 10:01 PM
Looking a the specs it is actually evident that the 82 is the easier speaker to drive - and both should be fine. How much are these speakers? If I recall the 82 gets well over $2500.00. It sounds pretty good but requires a lot of juice to get it to actually sound open.

I am personally a fan of more sensitive and easy impedence loads. For less money you could probably swing the Audio Note AN E / D standmount (or other high sensitive speaker) which will have deeper bass response and will be far easier to drive. Even the J standmount will clock in at 25hz bettering these models. (The money you save in amplifier power you can get a higher end speaker). This rview pits it against speakers all of which cost double to 5 times the price - the Klipshhorn is still widely considered one of the best speakers ever made - it is very good one of the few "classic" speakers I have heard. http://www.stereotimes.com/speak071701.shtm

The dynamic ease you get with high sensitive designs to me is critical.

Try and think long term - maybe when you upgrade from the receiver you might want to try a tube amp or Single Ended tube amps and the Danes will not like them - unless you have $10k for high watt tube amplifiers.

As for the bass issue it may be a positioning issue - the 82 should probably be pulled a little more out from the rear and side walls. I had a flagship Pioneer Elite 125 watt RMS receiver and it sludged the bass of my Wharfedales - which in room response goes to 25hz - the receiver could not handle it and it sounded tubby - the Marantz does the same thing - bass comes out sorta like listening to your radio in the car versus the cd - instead of that tight bass(good amp) you get that droning flabby bass(receiver).

The Danes sound good but don't limit yourself if your spending this kind of money - be patient and do as much homework as possible and try to cover all your bases. You may know for sure you may never want a tube amp which is fine - but those are some of the bases I would want covered - because resale on most is not pretty - plus it'sa hassle - high efficiency speakers can take any amplifier at any rating...low efficiency ones can't - and there is zero advantage to low efficency speakers and lots of drawbacks.

RGA
05-09-2004, 10:34 PM
I should say before the Dyn fans flame me because my last post was not expressed very well - my reservation comes only with the speaker's difficulty to drive and my preference - the Dyn 82 Is the best floor standing speaker in the price class that I have heard as is the Dyn 52 in its price range. They offer bags of coherent sound. When I say conjested they are not conjested - just a more conjested than the E - but then so is eveyr boxed speaker I have heard so that is no insult.

I would take the Dyn 82 over the B&W N803 a speaker I like and given the price I can think of no higher praise - you can't go wrong with the dyn's unless you're someone like myself who prefers high sensitive designs for the reason mentioned earlier.

SO if my last post sounded like I was getting on Dynaudio that was not the intent.

S. Jensen
06-24-2004, 03:44 PM
I promissed af follow up this thread to let you people know what I ended up buying:

I finally borrowed the Dynaudio Audience 72 and 82 from my local dealer and gave them a good listen with my own equipment at home.

I was impressed how little difference there was between the two models. The 82 looks like it can outplay the 72 very easily. But listening to jazz there is hardly any difference between the two. Among others I listened to Diana Krall - it sounded marvelous on both models of speakers. The difference appears when you put on some rock music and turn up the volume. For instance on The Whites Stripes - ELEPHANT album you get some good bass and guitar which asks for high volume. Now the 82 gives you more and deeper bass and slam and the music sounds bigger than on the 72. No wonder - the speaker is significantly larger. I would like to point out that it is one of the main differences. And even then the 72 is close to the 82 in performance.

My friends and I were overall very impressed by the Audience 72. In spite of its smaller appearance compared to the 82 it performed surprisingly like the 82 in many cases. Perhaps a more powerful receiver than my Harman Kardon could have pointed out the differences more significantly?

During the test period my receiver only became luke warm. It got a little hot when playing very loud - but then again that seems to be typical of Harman Kardon. I did not have any positioning problems with any og the speakers. The 82 performed better (and satisfactory) bass wise in my living room which is bigger than the test room at the dealer.

The final verdict was that the Audience 72 gave the Audience 82 a good fight. When it comes to rock music the 82 showed its ability to give the extra bass and punch. It sounded as if the music opened up a little more and sounded larger.

It was VERY hard for me to pick the one to buy. Was the 82 really worth the extra money? I ended up buying the Audience 82. My versatile taste in music and the Audience 82's ability to almost make a subwoofer obsolete helped me to decide.

I chose the Audience 82 - but I can truly give the Audience 72 my best recommendations. In my case it was a very close race.

So, now I have a brand new set of Dynaudio Audience 82 with maple veneer finish playing in my living room. I am a very happy camper! :D They sound absolutely great and if the so called break-in-period really helps then I am in for an extra good treat. I am aware of the fact that a more powerful amplifier or receiver will take the speakers one or more steps up the ladder to HiFi Nirvana - and I might very possibly look into that when I save up some money again. Rotel, Arcam or perhaps Cayin (among others!!!) could be interesting to look into. Well - that can be a new post in this forum. ;)

Finally I would like to thank all of you helping me out here! I appreciate all the inputs to take into account when auditioning speakers and search the market. I hope someone can use my thoughts and experiences with the Dynaudios at some point. In the case there are any Danish readers in this forum, I would like to thank KT-Radio in Odense, Denmark, who was very helpful and friendly. Free of charge they let me borrow the speakers and some cables for an extended weekend. Very good service.

Best regards,

S. Jensen

Mr Peabody
06-24-2004, 05:32 PM
I am a convinced dedicated fan of Dynaudio. I'm sure you will have many hours of listening pleasure. You will notice that as time goes on they will sound better and better. Dyn's have an unusually long break in period.

The dealer you mentioned does business the way it should be done and you auditioned the way it should be done.

RGA
06-24-2004, 10:28 PM
The Dane 82 is one of the best floorstanding speakers I have come across for sane money - maybe the best one. Congrats. It was probably a good move getting the 82 over the 72. You can always upgrade amps by adding a power amp and preamp etc later - but you can't upgrade the speaker without taking a loss.

More bass especially good bass is important for the structure of a lot of music. Generally 40hz is good enough for the vast majority of music - better than this and you're doing well.

Congrats on getting an excellent speaker.