which would you buy?


The Kef q900 or the Golden ear triton 7? Both about the same price $1500.

Room is about 15 x 15. No sub wanted. (Apt/condo)
The triton 7 sounded good but I haven't heard the Kef but they get good reviews. I listened to the new paradigm prestige 85f? They were nice but over my budget at 2k per speaker. I did hear a kef r700 that was also over budget at $1700 per speaker and sounded too large for my room. So I thought the cheaper kef or triton might work well.
128x128labguy

Showing 4 responses by labguy

Teflonscoundrel, thank you.
Telescope_trade , I am not familiar with Silver line prelude. Had 2 Honda preludes, liked those. ;-)
Thanks everybody! I heard the Triton sevens and they sounded great. my local Kef dealer doesn't have the q 900 on display for me listen to but I've listened other Kef and liked them. I'd be hesitant to buy focal without hearing them. I listened to some paradigm V20.5? bookshelf and they sounded too bright in the treble with an Anthem 225 amp. Kiko65, I agree that the GE7 are insanely impressive, and sound rich and full, but I'm not sure how tight and punchy they are, I'll need to listen again. My current system will need a dac added so I may be selling my yamaha a s500 integrated and getting a peachtree nova? or nad?, etc?. I will stay with solid state (not tubes). My current speakers are Acoustic Energy Aegis 3 towers, and they are quite good for the price I paid, but the are old and and I don't want to buy anything that isn't a noticed improvement. I listen to jazz, classic rock, modern rock hard rock heavy metal industrial, some country,blues female vocalists,minimal hip hop R&B,etc. Just about everything except reggae.
The focal 836v look to be an impressive speaker too. I'll have to see if there are any local dealers that have them. I may be able to spend $2k in order to best the AE Aegis 3, but if I choose wisely, they new speakers will last me a decade. It's the delicate balance of finding the right dac+integrated around $1500"ish" to tie the chain together in shockingly glorious acoustic bliss that makes me say "damn that sounds mind blowing" 2 years down the road long after the newness of a recent purchase wears off.