Silverline Preludes : Still a good buy?


Hi, thought I'd ask the question as I know there are a few owners of the Preludes here at AG.
I'm very close to signing up for a pair of these slimline floorstanders and it's a bit of an undertaking as I'm in Australia and they'll end up costing me about $500-600 over their US starting price by the time they arrive at my door down here.
I looked at Totem Arro's and I've looked at several Aussie manufacturers as well but I keep coming back to the Preludes and everything I read about them pleases me but I'm probably breaking cardinal rule #1 Audition your speakers...listen before you buy!
I can't of course but I see them as a way for me to advance my modest system as it stands at the moment.

I'll be driving them with either of my two intergrateds, my Rega Mira3 or my Redgum SonofaGum(you may not know this amp in the US) with a Rega Apollo doing cdp duty and I'll try bi-wiring and single but I've read that these will go well with tube amplification and that's what I'd like to do eventually.

Do you think these are still a good buy, are there any other slimline floorstanders I should be thinking about in this price range?
The Silverline company itself has been very helpful so far in quoting for freight and providing info and that also helps sway you when people come across as helpful and not every company does as I know from exp.
Buying from overseas can be fraught with pitfalls but I'm hoping that this will go smoothly if I take the plunge.

Any advice you could supply would be appreciated.

Cheers TL
thelid

Showing 3 responses by wolf_garcia

OH NO!!! Kidding...I've upgraded everything around my Preludes and they've responded by sounding better and better, and they were great right out of the box!. I use an older REL Q150e sub with them and in my room they sound AMAZING. The most recent tweak was simply moving to the 4 ohm tap on my Jolida tube power amp, and that seems to have improved things a little more...made the amp happier it seems since a minor low level mechanical buzz lessened. I have my Preludes on butcher blocks to raise them up 3 or 4 inches and stuck Vibrapods under them instead of using the spikes. Not sure why that works, but it does. Note that the Preludes take some time to break in, so be patient and you'll be rewarded with some mojo. Note that Alan Yun told me to NOT biwire them as they're more coherent with single wiring...I tried both and I ended up agreeing with him. You can carefully pop off (flat screwdriver used carefully) the plastic rings that cover the woofers and tighten the wood screws once in a while...the tweeter has a rubber damping thing that I have not messed with, so that's been left alone.
I wanted to raise the Preludes up a little (just to line up the tweeter with my ears, which likely isn't necessary but hey, I couldn't help it and didn't want to move my ears) and I found some butcher blocks at a Home Goods store that were cheap and exactly the footprint of the Preludes. Painted them flat black and stuck small rubber feet on them so they don't move (a stack of 2 per side), and they look like they belong there. The Vibrapods are under the Prelude bases on top of the blocks in an Oriental rug based environment, although the Preludes are on the floor just missing the rug. I informally tested the Preludes low frequency limits with a test CD and although they are surprisingly full range, they don't have much going on below 50hz...the REL just sweetens everything and charges the room somehow to make it sound simply better, and it really makes the Prelude system sing (the REL is unobtrusive...you barely see it behind the left speaker). I had been using a Forte' 55 amp but changed to the Jolida out of curiosity and because they're so inexpensive it's hard to lose (plus they accept the nice XLR cables I had).
I do listen to Classical and the Preludes do that just fine. I'm a believer that good speakers should work with everything. Musical information among different genres is the same thing really...complex acoustic piano harmonics, orchestras, well produced bands...all have lots of things for a speaker to sort out.

The Preludes in my room don't have a bass hump (in my listening spot anyway), but there are some standing waves around the room that are interesting but harmless.