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  1. #1
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    Consumer Reports...

    The 2003 guide reviews Bookshelf speakers(page 301). Again Bic dv62si scored higher in accuracy than B & W 602 s2 and much better than klipsch SB3s I own. The B & W runs 550 and the klipsch 450 while Bic at 200 and discounted on net a number of places for 110-120/pr.Pioneer, Bose and cambridge sound also have high rated speakers at low cost. I realize that CR is not the bible but they do test these things. I note also that Sony is making well reviewed reasonable speakers with Kevlar cones like B & W. It is afterall just a piece of plastic. Its becoming obvious that good speaker design parameters readily available and no reason why one mfg cant knock off an approximation of anothers for a fraction of the cost.It may be time for us to consider some of the alternatives to high priced cadre of names thrown around on this forum. As a bonus, a lot of these low cost, high value speakers are made by well established companies with a excellent track history....the highest rated on the list is the Pioneer S-DF3-k for 350/pr prior to discount which can be considerable. When is the last time someone touted Pioneer or Sony speakers on this forum? Hey, when the 57 chevy came out, they were seen as low cost mass market entries and became classics...By the way, I am among the guilty and have been looking at B & W, Paradigm etal myself. For the cost of a couple of meals out, I might try those Bics and report on them.

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    Let me know whatyou think if you get the BIC's im thinking of a new pair too and am on a budget. I was actually looking at Wharfedale Diamond 8.1's($199) and got told that Dayton also had a nice kit($139) but you actually build the speakers.

  3. #3
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    The issue that I've always had with CR's speaker tests is that they rely almost exclusively on these statistically based accuracy scores. Deviations in the midrange are scored the same as inaccuracies in the extreme high and low frequencies, where much less of the audio information comes from with most music and movie soundtracks. The charts themselves have some value in that you can look at how the manufacturer voiced a particular speaker model, and compare that to your own preferences. But, to then put use this one measure as the basis for a ranking without regard for where the inaccuracies occur is a flawed methodology because research done by the NRC and other entities have ranked midrange accuracy as the most important factor. Also, CR has no provisions for off-axis performance or distortion levels.

    I totally hear you on unearthing some gems that might be otherwise disregarded because of where they're sold or how much they cost. The thing about all of the aforementioned research that's been done over the past 20 years is that entry level speakers nowadays sound much better than before (all you have to do is compare the $200 bookshelf speakers of today versus those speakers that used to come with those matched rack component systems and also sold for roughly around $200). And speakers do sound a lot more similar than before because manufacturers have a better idea of what defines people's sound preferences. But, just in my own subjective listenings, those speakers that come from specialty manufacturers just have a higher overall audio quality to them.

    I'm also curious as to how Bose placed in this year's rankings. With their recent lawsuit against the CEDIA over the rights to the word "lifestyle" it seems that their lawyers have been turned loose again. It may a coincidence, but Bose has ranked fairly high in the speaker tests ever since they sued CR in the early-90s (a case that CR won). And they still sued CR despite tests that make special accommodations to Bose speakers (since the late-70s I believe, CR has used multiple microphone locations to test Bose's direct/reflecting speakers; because of this, they used to evaluate Bose speakers separately, but subsequently began including them in the rankings despite the obvious difference in methodology).

    A while ago, CR rated the Bose 301 ahead of the B&W DM602. When I read that, I just happened to have both of those speakers in my living room, and I couldn't help but laugh at that. The DM602 so far outclassed the 301s, it was ridiculous. Absolutely no way, under any circumstance should the 301 possibly rank ahead of the DM602. This is not "IMO" this is just reality! As much as 2+2=4 and up is up/down is down, the DM602 blows away the 301, end of discussion.
    Last edited by Woochifer; 11-13-2003 at 02:36 PM.

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    I agree, and yes again Bose ranks high as do some other "bargain" speakers like Pioneer,Yamaha,CSW,Sony. Top 5 in Consumer Reports tests are(bookshelf) CSW Newton series M80,Sony SS-MB350H(a best buy),BIC America Venturi DV62si,Bose 201,Boston Acoustics CR75. Of the 18 they tested Klipshc Synergy finished dead last. So I know they test them but don't really know the criteria and do know they did not even test a bunch of speakers, some even moderately priced that would have beat(in some cases crushed) the ones they did test. I know you can't test them all but do think that soem PSB,AR,B&W(they did test B&W center channels),Wharfedale,Paradigm,etc would have added to the testing.

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    Suspended Smokey's Avatar
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    In which CR issue is the new speaker evalutation. Is it in nov 03 issue?

    Could you please post more info about top 5 five speakers they ranked such as acurracy # and bass responce.

    Thanks :)

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    interesting Review by someone here...

    Who owns both pioneer and B & W 602s aug 8, 2003
    http://www.audioreview.com/Bookshelf...3_4290crx.aspx

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    2003 paperback buyers guide..

    Quote Originally Posted by Smokey
    In which CR issue is the new speaker evalutation. Is it in nov 03 issue?

    Could you please post more info about top 5 five speakers they ranked such as acurracy # and bass responce.

    Thanks
    It was from a paper back book guide...no publish date but still in bookstores. Attached find #1 rated pioneer model.
    http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/pn..._33401,00.html

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    My wife subscribes to CR and I got my info out of the 2004 Buying Guide. Top 5 Bookshelves are
    1.CSW Newton series M80: 94 accuracy/VG bass handling/$400
    2.Sony SS-MB350H(a best buy): 92accuracy/good bass handling/$100
    3.BIC America Venturi DV62si: 91accuracy/good bass handling/$200
    4.Bose 201series V: 89 accuracy/VG bass handling/$220
    5.Boston Acoustic CR75: 90accuracy/fair bass handling/$300

    and some other notables and where CR thinks they rank

    9.PSB image 2B: 88 accuracy/excellent bas handling/$370
    16.Polk Audio R20: 83 accuracy/Good bass handling/$150
    18.Klipsch Synergy SB-3 Monitor: 79 accuracy/excellent bass handling/$450


    Center Channels
    1.NHT SCI: 92 accuracy/$300
    2.Boston Acoustics Bravo Center: 92 accuracy/$200
    3.Boston Acoustics CRC: 91accuracy/$250
    4.B&W VM1: 87 accuracy/$200
    5.Acoustic Research AR2C: 86 accuracy/$450

    Rear Surrounds
    1.CSW Newton Series MC100: 91 accuracy/$140
    2.Infinity OWS-1: 87 accuracy/$275
    3.Bose 161: 84 accuracy/$160
    4.NHT SB-1:accuracy 83/$300
    5.JBL northridge N24II
    6.B&WLM1
    7.Polk RTi28

    so I really dont know what to make of it. Im sure they review stuff but have heard quite a few of these and think they are way off but who am I to say

  9. #9
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by C Bennett
    so I really dont know what to make of it. Im sure they review stuff but have heard quite a few of these and think they are way off but who am I to say
    I would hope that CR put some kind of disclaimer about center and surround speaker matching, since they evaluate those speakers separately from the mains. To me, it's absolute BS to evaluate those ancillary home theatre speakers without any kind of tie-in to how well they all timbre match. By doing these kinds of rankings, it's almost as if they recommend that consumers simply buy the highest ranked speakers or the best buys off of each category and put a system together that way. But, since their "accuracy" scores say absolutely nothing about their tonal characteristics, taking this kind of approach can result in highly mismatched voice characteristics between the different speakers. And with 5.1 sources, it's best that the speakers sound as similar to one another as possible. I mean, if the main speaker has a linear midrange response with a large boost in the highs, while the center speaker has a more uneven midrange response with a tailed off high end, it disrupts the seamlessness of the front soundfield and creates a more incoherent front soundstage. If CR does not recognize that the main, center, and surround speakers function as an interrelated set, then they have no business making speaker recommendations.

  10. #10
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    Yo c-bennet

    Quote Originally Posted by C Bennett
    Let me know whatyou think if you get the BIC's im thinking of a new pair too and am on a budget. I was actually looking at Wharfedale Diamond 8.1's($199) and got told that Dayton also had a nice kit($139) but you actually build the speakers.
    If you're looking at the BIC's let me reccomend these. B.I.C. America DV62CLR. They're listed as center speakers at most places, but they're also left and right speakers. You can find them around $100 each and you get DUAl 6" woofers with the tweeter. You'll still need stands, but This will probably have a much fuller sound then the single woofer speakers in this price range. This speaker got rave reviews and Ed Frias also has a modification for the crossover that makes it sound better (supposedly). If you get three of these for the fronts you'll be rockin. I'd say this is a great contender in this price range. just thought I'd bring it tou your notice.

    -joey

  11. #11
    RGA
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    Hahahahaha.

    I purchased my 1994 Pontiac Grand Am off of the OUTSTANDING reviews by Consumer Reports...much better than before yadda yadda.

    Worst piece of crap I've ever purchased. Of course three years later I read the Lemon-Aid and newer Consumer Reports which also call the car a piece of crap.

    Consumer Reports is a pitiful excuse for the basis of making a purchase...especially in audio. Open your ears up and listen to this stuff than basing your opinion off of the term "ACCURACY" which they don't even know what it is.

    There is accuracy based off of a graph...and then there is accuracy to the reproduction of a musical instrument...there is no "PROVEN or even "credible" correlation between flat speaker response equating to a "Good" speaker. Since no speaker is flat. A slight spike in the treble is a helluva lot more irritating than a fairly large dip in the midband. Yet the large dip will come out worse in this stupid magazine.

  12. #12
    Suspended Smokey's Avatar
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    Smile Thanks.

    Thanks Debbie and C Bennett for CR speaker information. I may have to go local bookstore and pick up a copy. And that link for Pioneer vs B&W sure was an eye opener.

    Given that Pioneer speaker that was rated number 1 in the earlier issue is no longer available, then one have to look at Sony or BIC if need a good cheap speaker

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    Pioneer is still available

    Quote Originally Posted by Smokey
    Thanks Debbie and C Bennett for CR speaker information. I may have to go local bookstore and pick up a copy. And that link for Pioneer vs B&W sure was an eye opener.

    Given that Pioneer speaker that was rated number 1 in the earlier issue is no longer available, then one have to look at Sony or BIC if need a good cheap speaker
    .....at etronics.com for one....believe it was 245/pr

  14. #14
    My custom user title This Guy's Avatar
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    Wehn I said this speaker got good reviews, I was talking about guys that wee you doing the mod on the speaker in DIY forums. I don't even know if CR reviewed it and I never even read their reviews. I was also judging it by it's specs, it being pretty much the only bookshelf with 2-6" woofers in it for this price, and BIC is usually a good name fore low-mid end audio.

    -Joey

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    "There is accuracy based off of a graph...and then there is accuracy to the reproduction of a musical instrument...there is no "PROVEN or even "credible" correlation between flat speaker response equating to a "Good" speaker. "

    First. You would have to determine what 'GOOD' means. This is a sweeping generalization. Different people can interupt a lot of different things by what 'good speaker' means. Do you mean sounds GOOD to YOU(preference of sound)? Do mean it is a GOOD speaker as far as how close a specific individual or set of measurments is to perfection? Do you mean it is GOOD as compared to it's accuracy to the actual live sound recorded vs. the playback on a controlled linear recording situation? Do you mean it's GOOD as far as 'realistic' sound on an average set number of recordings(but then too WHO? Perceived realisim can depend alot on the listeners experiences with actual live music(better judgement) and his/her psychological biases.)? Do you mean it is a GOOD speaker relative to it's price -- then you need to qualify that in order to specify one of the previous specifications(in what manner is it good?). The list goes on....... Good can mean a whole lot of things. :-) One example I would pose: you might be surpised at how many heighly regarded audiophile headhpones sound very little like a real sound source(linear instrumentation/measurment micrphones supplying a live feed, with the original event being recorded avaiable live for reference) when taken off and put on for instant comparisions. You might be even more suprised at how a very specific headphone that is only considered 'average' or even 'below average' by many audiophiles sounds very much like the live source. I have learned that peoples' preferences often times have lttle correlation with absolute 'accuracy'. Anotehr variable is that the above example is using feed from precision measurment micrphones, that is not EQed. Fact is that most recordings are not performed with such micrphones, but instead, vintage and or popular designs that are not very accurate. Also, most engineers may EQ the fnal mix before it makes it to release. It is possible that some speakers and/or headhpones may actually compensate for some statistically based variable such as the average EQ or mic/mic techniques used on final releases, as opposed to a linear source.

    While I believe that consumer reports fails miserably at speaker evaluations based on their insufficient measurements and imporoper methodologies, a speaker's performance can be accurately measured with the correct set of measurments and proper analysis. One needs to examine the impedance(to understand amplifier interaction), impluse response(from which phase, csd, amplitude/frequency response data can be calculated), harmonic distortion and itermodular distortion characteristics. Their is one more critical detail, you must perform: polar response(power response) measurements; the specific csd and amplitude/frequency response considering all dimensions, to understand the indirect radiation behaviour(s). But, these details would still ony tell about a speakers performance, not the room you may place the speaker into. Howver, a generalization can be concluded to predict performance in specific types/sizes of rooms if you full set of measured data about the speaker, as noted above.

    "Since no speaker is flat. A slight spike in the treble is a helluva lot more irritating than a fairly large dip in the midband. Yet the large dip will come out worse in this stupid magazine."

    I assume you mean a peak of specified magnitude to a dip of equal magnitude, then that would be correct. The peak would be more audible, according to established research data.

    -Chris
    Last edited by WmAx; 11-15-2003 at 12:32 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    Hahahahaha.

    I purchased my 1994 Pontiac Grand Am off of the OUTSTANDING reviews by Consumer Reports...much better than before yadda yadda.

    Worst piece of crap I've ever purchased. Of course three years later I read the Lemon-Aid and newer Consumer Reports which also call the car a piece of crap.

    Consumer Reports is a pitiful excuse for the basis of making a purchase...especially in audio.
    Don't read CR. Obviously you do not understand it. The 94 car was tested short term, not how well it will perform in the future. You should have consulted with the car models history in the past, how reliable it was.
    One only has to look at the Mercedes reviews. They rate very well. But the history is not very good over time.

    I suppose their more objective audio reviews may not be everyone's cup.

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    Talking You really need to take a test drive-for about 5 years

    RGA, your problem is that you should have bought a tube type car. We all know that you will never be happy with a solid state car. Not only that, but you should buy something much more efficient, like a Prius. Or an Auto Note!

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    I don't trust Consumer Reports

    I remember them rating Scotch brand VHS tapes as number 1 and I was skeptical as I had never heard a good Scotch audio tape. It turned out that the VHS tapes were so poor that stores closed them out at dirt cheap and stopped selling them altogether.
    There have also been other instances as well when they rated something very high which turned out to be crap down the road. I'm sure they get it right sometimes but I don't put much stock in their reviews of anything.
    By the same token, if I own a product that they rated very high or number 1, it makes me feel smarter somehow. Apparently, we're kind of like dumb animals and even if we made a bad decision, as long as someone pats us on the back and says "good boy", we feel better.
    Bill

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    Quote Originally Posted by jbangelfish
    I remember them rating Scotch brand VHS tapes as number 1 and I was skeptical as I had never heard a good Scotch audio tape. It turned out that the VHS tapes were so poor that stores closed them out at dirt cheap and stopped selling them altogether.
    There have also been other instances as well when they rated something very high which turned out to be crap down the road. I'm sure they get it right sometimes but I don't put much stock in their reviews of anything.
    By the same token, if I own a product that they rated very high or number 1, it makes me feel smarter somehow. Apparently, we're kind of like dumb animals and even if we made a bad decision, as long as someone pats us on the back and says "good boy", we feel better.
    Bill
    I hope you stopped reading that mag. Obviously you find nothing useful in it.

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    I don't read it

    I'm sure there might be some useful info in it but I'd rather read your review or someone else's who doesn't get paid to talk about how good or bad something is. Seems more like advertising to me. It is supposed to be unbiased but if you pay me enough, I'll tell you anything you want to hear and so would most people.
    TV ads for insurance, as an example, they all claim to have the best rates available. I may not be very good at math but this seems physically impossible.
    Anyway, I don't trust much information that is written to rate products that are sold to make money. Paranoid, skeptical, call it whatever you like but too much BS has been written IMO.
    Bill

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    CR is not perfect

    They make mistakes as well. But they are better than whatever comes next. They are the most reliable single source of info on audio stuff.

    But their most valuable contribution is to give you some idea of the relationship between price and quality; in the case of speakers--not much. The Nov 03 tests showed that the top half of the speakers cost only 20% more than the bottom half. That isn't much, considering that the total range of prices varied by 8:1. IOW, you don't get what you pay for. (But you might pay for what you get.)

    What CR tests tell me is that you can get a damn fine pair of speakers for $100. This doesn't surprise me; mine cost $60, and they sounded better than NHT SuperOnes.
    Norm Strong [normanstrong@comcast.net]

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    Smile Advertisment.

    Given that they don't accept advertising either give their evaluations more punch also

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    So they test and rate for free?

    Do they do this out of the goodness of their heart? I don't trust them even if they sometimes get it right. I've known many people who trust this organization to tell the gospel truth only to be disappointed later. Reliablity seems to be a big issue as many new items test well only to fail much too early. If you like the mag, read it, rely on it, whatever you choose. I'm a very skeptical person and have learned not to trust much of what is written about anything.
    Over the years much hype and good reviews have been written about inferior products. Money talks, like it or not. Being an independent and supposedly unbiased reviewer means nothing to me. Underwriter's Lab has approved products for use which they themselves determined were unsafe. Aluminum wiring for example was approved for electrical applications in spite of their tests which failed it. Why would they do that? Because big companies like ALCOA have lots of money and stand to lose a great deal if they were unable to sell their product. Many people died from fires that were caused by aluminum wire. The problem has been solved by creating different terminals for aluminum wire but they didn't exist when the UL approval originated.
    Ford Motor Company decided that it was cheaper to pay a few lawsuits than to change the fuel tank explosion problem on the Pinto.
    So, a few people were severly disfigured or killed, Ford was making good money and employed lots of people. Dont' get me started...
    Bill

  24. #24
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jbangelfish
    Do they do this out of the goodness of their heart? I don't trust them even if they sometimes get it right. I've known many people who trust this organization to tell the gospel truth only to be disappointed later. Reliablity seems to be a big issue as many new items test well only to fail much too early. If you like the mag, read it, rely on it, whatever you choose. I'm a very skeptical person and have learned not to trust much of what is written about anything.
    Over the years much hype and good reviews have been written about inferior products. Money talks, like it or not. Being an independent and supposedly unbiased reviewer means nothing to me. Underwriter's Lab has approved products for use which they themselves determined were unsafe.
    Consumer Union is a nonprofit organization, and I think it does mean something that they don't accept advertising. My issues with them have never had to do with their integrity and their commitment to the organization's consumer protection mission. The problems I've had with CU is with their expertise and methodologies. They are spread so thin in rating everything from peanut butter to insurance companies to digital cameras that I question their ability to come up with meaningful research designs for everything that they rate. While I don't think their objectivity is in question, their competence often is. With their speaker tests, they are so obsessive about maintaining objectivity that they basically conduct flawed tests based completely on a single statistical measure, and no accounting for how speakers are actually used (i.e. with most of the sounds originating in the midrange, meaning that inaccuracies in that frequency range are much more significant than issues in other areas). I think organizations like CU are absolutely necessary, because just about every other source out there has a more commercialized agenda. Of course, that doesn't mean that whatever CU says is gospel. You just need to parse out the information that you can rely on from them, and take other bits with a grain of salt.

    UL has a very different mission, since they were founded basically to provide safety research for the insurance industry. Their mission is not about consumer protection, it's about minimizing risks to their clients. If they knowingly approve dangerous products, then they would presumably have their own constituency to answer to, since lawsuits and claims are exactly what insurance companies don't want. But, ultimately they don't answer to consumers, they answer to the industries that support them, and those are typically companies that are paranoid about safety.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jbangelfish
    Do they do this out of the goodness of their heart?
    No they do not. CU's business is selling magazines that provide (supposedly) unbiased product tests and other consumer friendly information. It would not be to their advantage to intentionally violate this trust.

    It's fine to question their methodologies and conclusions, as Woochifer does. But to accuse the organization of intentionally skewing the ratings demonstrates an ignorance of the business they are in and the strategies they must deploy to be successful (i.e. keep their readers).

    I still remember the audio salesman at a now defunct national chain once tell me that CU did not like a certain speaker because the speaker manufacturer would not advertise in CR. As a regular reader, I knew there is no advertising in the magazine. Since he was either ignorant or a liar, I walked out of the store never to return, and to this day, I am skeptical of claims made by sales people.

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