Good musical speakers that go low? Help


I am looking for a good muscial speaker (4k or so used) that really does good deep base, but in a controled manner.

I have a fairly powerful SS amp (kraft) so current should not be an issue.

Oh and to make things even more difficult I have a wife which means the speaker can not bee over 50 inches or so. No super towers here.

Must a go with a sub?

Ken
drken

Showing 2 responses by raquel

Regarding the above post about Vienna Acoustics Mahlers and their bass performance, I have Mahlers in my second system and really love the speakers, but it is incorrect to say that they excel at the reproduction of deep bass (40 Hz. and below). In fact, they begin to roll off below 40 Hz. and are down a good 12-13 db. at 25 Hz. according to Atkinson's measurements. In my room, they are likewise down a good 12 db. at 20 Hz.

The Mahlers have very impactful, powerful midbass (40 Hz. to 80 Hz.) that makes them sound very compelling in large rooms (and makes them sound like hell in most smaller rooms), but if it is deep bass you want, I suggest you look elsewhere. In any event, speakers that do deep bass tend to be hard to place properly and often end up sounding lousy as a result (for example, my Salons were never right in the bass at our old apartment).

PS - The Eton woofers are ten-inch, not eleven-inch.
Drken:

My apologies to the extent this exchange hijacks your thread.

Sbrtoy:

I have run my Mahlers at various times with a Bryston 4B-ST and VAC Renaissance 140/140's Mk. III's, but mostly with Rowland Model 6 monos, which can each dump forty-five amps into a speaker on peaks (they also feature a high damping factor and high slew rate). The measurements were taken from the Stereophile Test CD 3 bass warble track played on a Levinson 37 transport into a Levinson 360s DAC into a Shack meter, all readings corrected for the meter's calibration errors. Cabling was all Kimber Select (including the digital cable, which was a Kimber Select 2120 XLR).

I stand by my above comments. If you use an spl meter and test disc in your listening room, I suspect you'll find that the deep bass is not there (unless, of course, your listening room has a particularly sharp mode in the bottom octave that the speaker is exciting). It is interesting that Sumiko, the U.S. distributor for Vienna Acoustics, has never published a real frequency response figure for the speaker's low bass performance, saying only that the low bass extends to 22 Hz. (without decibel information, this figure is meaningless).

As for Stereophile's measurements, I think it is a bit much to dismiss them out of hand.

In my main system, I use Salons, which measure flat at 20 Hz. in my listening room, and can say that the Mahlers simply do not compare in the very bottom octave.

PS - If you have actually measured the woofers and find them closer to eleven inches than ten, I stand corrected. Sumiko's website say this about the Eton woofers: "Woofer: 2 x 10 in. honeycomb cone".