GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

November 1, 2007

 

Today’s Loudspeakers: Advanced Technologies, High-Quality Parts, and Great Sound at Low Prices

About ten years ago, the bulk of low- and medium-priced loudspeakers weren’t all that special -- not in terms of what they looked like or how they were built. Most came in lousy-looking, vinyl-veneered boxes made of MDF or even cheap chipboard, with driver and crossover parts that weren’t much to write home about. The most successful such speakers were usually those whose designers had worked hard to wring the best sound quality they could from such ordinary parts -- not unlike a great chef who can make a fabulous meal out of everyday ingredients. But in the last ten or so years, that trend of mundane lower-priced speakers has begun to change -- something I noted in my original review of Axiom Audio’s M3Ti loudspeaker in December 2000.

Unlike so many boxy, ordinary two-ways available at the time, the Axiom M3Ti had features that I hadn’t expected to see in a speaker costing $275 USD per pair. One was its cabinet, which, while made entirely of MDF, wasn’t just another rectangular box: the front baffle was wider than the rear panel, and the sidewalls sloped. Many makers of exotic and rather expensive speakers tout the advantages of asymmetrical cabinet walls in eliminating internal standing waves, but here was such a cabinet in a speaker costing only a few hundred bucks. Then there were the drivers. Again, some manufacturers of expensive speakers make a big deal of their use of custom-made or self-made drivers instead of off-the-shelf models. The inexpensive M3Ti’s titanium-dome tweeter and aluminum-cone woofer were designed and built by Axiom -- this in a complete speaker system costing hardly anything at all.

The Axiom M3Ti had other notable features I could list, but my intention here is to show that it delivered features normally found in much more expensive models -- not speakers costing anywhere near what Axiom was asking. The M3Ti changed my expectations of how a good inexpensive speaker can and should be built. Most important, it sounded fantastic, bettering many speakers at the time that cost two, three, or four times as much. For the next few years, the Axiom M3Ti was the benchmark against which I judged other, often more expensive speakers.

Then, in 2002, Mirage released what I consider to be a truly groundbreaking loudspeaker: the original Omnisat ($250 each). What made the Omnisat so special wasn’t just its high parts quality or fine sound, but the technology and engineering that had gone into its design, and that brought Mirage’s Omnipolar technology to a previously unimaginable low price. (Omnipolar is Mirage’s take on the omnidirectional loudspeaker; that is, a speaker that radiates sound all around itself -- the full 360 degrees -- in a controlled way.) Before the Omnisat, you had to spend well over $1000 to get that kind of technology. Now it was available for a few hundred.

Mirage accomplished this with its unique, patented Omniguide module, in which reflective saucers atop and below the drivers are aligned at precise angles to disperse sound according to Mirage’s Omnipolar design scheme. I wouldn’t be surprised if the level of engineering that went into the Omnisat’s design was more advanced than that found in some exotic speakers costing 100 times more. A lot of the credit for that goes to Andrew Welker, creator of the Omniguide and Omnisat and still head of design for Mirage.

Largely through my experience of the Axiom M3Ti and the Mirage Omnisat, I became convinced that a great inexpensive speaker no longer had to be a simple two-way in a plain, vinyl-veneered box. I now knew that today’s consumers could expect advanced engineering in inexpensive speakers, and should no longer expect designers to simply make the best of the parts they had to work with -- the parts should be first-rate, too. If Axiom and Mirage could do it, why couldn’t everyone?

I wasn’t the only one thinking this way. Since then, many companies have greatly improved their loudspeakers. As a result, consumers today can find all kinds of speakers whose parts quality and technical features are very advanced. The result is inexpensive sound that, on average, is far better than anything we’ve had in the past.

For example, earlier this year, I reviewed Paradigm’s Atom Monitor v.5 ($249/pair). The Atom Monitor v.5’s drivers are designed and built by Paradigm, and the cabinet’s vinyl veneer could be mistaken for real wood. How Paradigm builds this speaker entirely in Canada and sells it for $249/pair is as much a miracle as the sound itself. The Atom Monitor v.5 is a testament to the skill and efficiency of modern speaker design and manufacture -- you can see how it’s made in my January 2007 article "Birth of an Atom."

Another example is the Monitor Audio Silver RS6 loudspeaker, which Philip Beaudette reviewed in June. The Silver RS6 is every bit as impressive as the Atom Monitor v.5, though at $999/pair, it costs a lot more. But the RS6 is a lot more speaker -- a floorstander in a beautifully finished cabinet, with real-wood veneer, that would be impressive at twice the price. Furthermore, the Silver RS6 uses Monitor’s Ceramic-Coated Aluminum Magnesium (C-CAM) drivers -- technology trickled down from the company’s higher-end speakers -- and seems to embody the engineering chutzpah of those bigger, more expensive speakers. You used to have to pay thousands for a pair of speakers built as well as the Silver RS6; here it is for a hair under a grand.

This month, Philip reviews a speaker equally impressive -- the stand-mounted X-718 from Usher Audio Technology. While $1300/pair might seem a lot of money compared to the other speakers I’ve been talking about, especially as you pay extra for the stands, consider this: The X-718 features a level of cabinetwork normally found only in speakers costing about twice its price, and it has the parts quality to match. Furthermore, the speaker’s performance seems to live up to this craftsmanship. Philip compared the X-718 with his reference speaker, the PSB Platinum M2, another stand-mounted design. The PSB costs $2000/pair, but he liked the X-718 more. That says a lot.

Jeff Van Dyne reviews a speaker this month that’s certainly innovative -- the Duevel Planets. Like the Mirage Omnisat, the Planets is an omnidirectional design that looks as unique as it sounds. But while the Planets won’t set price/performance records the way the $500/pair Omnisat did, at $1295/pair it doesn’t seem outlandishly expensive, especially considering Jeff’s positive comments. Perhaps that’s because the Planets is based on Duevel’s much more expensive omnidirectional models. Once again, advanced technology makes its way into an affordable loudspeaker.

Whereas yesteryear’s inexpensive loudspeakers were rather pedestrian affairs, today, most speakers I see feature advanced technologies, high-quality parts, and tremendous performance at reasonable prices. In fact, with what I now see being offered for under $1500/pair, it might be time for the makers of more expensive speakers to sharpen up. If we can now expect such impressive speakers for so little money, it makes you wonder if spending more actually does guarantee that you’ll get something better.

…Doug Schneider

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