#16
|
|||
|
|||
I'm running a pair of PSB B-25's right now. They do a decent job but due to setup and the room I have them in which is quite dead I've been thinking of something else.
|
#17
|
||||
|
||||
A lot of the newer speakers pack a lot of sound in a small space and they're very efficient to power up. I'm in the speaker stone ages though, as I'm running a pair of OLA's (original large Advents) connected to a Nakamichi Receiver 1. If you have the room, the OLA's are hard to beat for the money. You can find them on the market with refoamed woofers in the $200-250 range. Either way, pass on the Bose.
|
#18
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you for the suggestions folks, the Bose were a "hey, if you want them..." kind of thing. I appreciate the offer but I'll politely pass for a few reasons. I'm not looking to have to dig up any of the Gold Bullion I may or may not have buried in the basement to pay for a new set of speakers, really looking for good bang for the buck units in new or suggestions/experience for more vintage units.
Towers wouldn't bother me but I do have to live with Mrs. William and unless I want to set it up out in one of the barns mid-sized to bookshelf sized is what I'm looking for. Do bookshelf units these days have decent bass response? I don't need ground thumping but good bass in proportion to midrange and high would be preferable. William |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
Ohm 4's on my main system. Nothing matches the warmth and open sound.
|
#20
|
|||
|
|||
I'm no audiophile, but I vividly remember the feeling I got back in the day of hearing Bose 901s. Maybe not the most technically 'articulate' speaker as some have alluded, but there was a certain feeling of spaciousness, or concert hall 3D vibe that nothing else touched. This talk makes me want to unpack my old turntable system that I've had in boxes for years....
__________________
“A bicycle is not a sofa” -- Dario Pegoretti |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Related to Dynaco?
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I haven't heard the Snell KIII's but the KII's (post Peter Snell) are very nice and were designed by Kevin Voecks, who went on to design a lot of very well regarded and expensive speakers. Quote:
Regarding Bose, I think some of their early speakers can sound okay in the right system, but there's an audio nerd joke: Amar Bose saw Paul Klipsch (who designed horn speakers) at an audio engineer's convention, and he formed his hands into a trumpet and put them around his mouth and said, "Hello, Paul!" And Paul Klipsch put his own hand OVER his mouth and replied, muffled: "Hello, Amar!" |
#24
|
||||
|
||||
Bose speakers are a strange phenomenon. Some people love them, others hate them. Not quite sure why...but it is what it is. Long ago I sold hifi, and briefly worked at the Tweeter store just a couple of miles from the Mountain (Bose headquarters). People walked into that store knowing they wanted Bose.
If you love Bose speakers, they're a great deal. If you don't, there are many other speakers out there. Speakers are highly subjective. Everyone's ears are different. I'll never forget the first time I heard a pair of Maggies. Friend of mine sat me down, put a female vocalist on the turntable and said "just listen." I fell in love. The clarity and depth of the music was phenomenal. 35 years later I still haven't owned a pair. 20 years ago I bought electronics in preparation for owning Maggies (Adcom separates) but never had the room or wifely support for dedicating space to planar loudspeakers. So I have B&W speakers. They do the job for me, and frankly, I don't do much critical listening these days. They just work, and they don't require much fuss...just like my Record 10 components.
__________________
Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#25
|
||||
|
||||
Dynaudio, I misspelled the brand name. I think they are a company in Denmark. Google to confirm
__________________
***IG: mttamgrams*** |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
I think ADS made some wonderful bookshelf speakers. I still have some L500s in my bedroom system. The good news now is that they had butyl surrounds rather than the foam ones that disintegrate so you needn't worry about re-foaming the woofers.
|
#27
|
||||
|
||||
I used to have the CS2s, then CS2 2 and then 2.3s. Ultimately ended up with Linkwitz Labs Orions which got me off the merry go round for good.
Tim |
#28
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Only problem i see is with vintage speakers is that they age and will need that foam rubber ring replaced, but it can be done at home or there are specialists ho offer the service. @rwsanders, could you elaborate what you think is the quantum leap new speaker construction took? It may be a bit off-topic, but recently i shopped for a small speaker system to go with the computer and smartphone. The Yamahas i wanted were out of production, so I ordered a set of bluetooth-enabled Logitechs, similar pricetag ~100€. They were test-winners in that pricerange everywhere i looked, were recommeded as a replacement for the Yamaha and were praised for their sound quality. Truth to be told, they sounded like excrement, and i located a NOS set of the Yamahas; They aren't Hifi, but at least they don't make me cringe. I wonder if today's HW testers judge by their ears rather than the feature sheet?
__________________
Jeremy Clarksons bike-riding cousin Last edited by martl; 09-30-2018 at 02:10 PM. |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
There have been some great improvements in audio technology since the mid-70's when I got hooked as a teenager into the audiophile world. There are now high resolution streaming services that bring a renewed life to recorded music, and to bring out the most of the more highly detailed sound modern speakers are needed.
You can even get a cheap digital Pyle amp for about $100 (ok, shoot me for saying that) and run a decent high end pair of modern speakers that are well priced like ELAC, and have an amazing system. I run a pair of ELAC Uni-Fi UB5, which are $499 new (and you can get used for less) with a Tandberg 3012A amp acquired from a fellow forum member. The sound is breathtaking, you are there, wow this sounds great good. The older speakers are often reissued these days with updated drivers, or you can run an older pair. Chances are these will sound fine, but for better sound the newer speakers are just amazing. And who's the wackadoo who started the stereo thing? Run the speakers diagonally in a room, you'll be amazed what happens. Sound stage opens up, and you'll be in the music, vs. sitting in front of the music. You can even run older speakers like that, and just envision yourself in a record shop like in the movie High Fidelity. |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
People will make fun of me I guess, but the Andrew Jones Pioneer components (I do not remember the model numbers) are really excellent for the money, and I had some Advent and B&W speakers before. I still have the B&W but the Pioneer impressed me. But the room and other components and personal taste matter more than any abstract recommendations.
If this thread is about Bose only, I never heard them in my rooms, so I cannot say definitively, but I thought they did not sound so special at all when I did hear them. It is so subjective though. If the Bose were locally free to try, though, of course I would try them. Why not? At least ypu learn a new thing by direct experience and not other opinions only. |
|
|