any one give the Polk Lsi25 a good listen?


They are closing these out a such a good price I am tempted to buy them just to see how they stand up.
Flabby bass? Wide soundstage? Open natural sound? Perhaps someone can enlighten me? Comparisons?
shoe

Showing 2 responses by lush

I owned LSi9's for years - fantastic speakers. They're a great all rounder. Other speakers I've used in the past include Aerial Acoustics, Totem, Tannoy and Dynaudio...the Polks were up there - the ring radiator was special.

I used Krell or Simaudio amplification and a number of digital sources and cables.

With regards to other speakers I've auditioned...too many to list but all the usual suspects...Wilson, Revel, Focal and many others...

The LSi series wasn't 'mid-fi' in my opinion - Every speaker has inherent weaknesses.
I've used the following over the years: Aerial Acoustics, Totem, Tannoy, Dynaudio as well as Polk Audio LSi 9's. I thought the Polks were excellent and certainly not mid-fi. Switching to Totems was a major disappointment for me in my system with all of the genres except Jazz that I listened too.

The Polk name is mid-fi but the LSi's certainly weren't. I've listened to all the usual suspects - Wilson, Revel, Focal as well as rarer brands like Krell, Reference 3a, Kudos and various Italian brands.

The LSi's were a poor mans Krell resolution - the bass wasn't as tight or clean but the airy sound with the Vifa tweeter sure was sweet. The LSi's benefitted from power. I used SimAudio and higher powered Krell, the LSi's benefited from the Krell power output.

A great fun speaker that is easy to listen too. Doesn't have the 'audiophile badge' but is certainly an audiophile speaker capable or resolving complex music with a warm tone and deep soundstage with pin point imaging. At three feet from the back wall with proper toe in (I used WASP) they really shined, a dedicated 250wpc power amp probably would have kicked things up a notch or two.