Magnepan observations.


Heard my 1st Mags,in the mid 70s.Now i have a pair of MG-3.Have read many comments on Mags.Here are my own.They reproduce the music as it was recorded.After all of our tweaks,personal set up preference,and component purchases,many people are not ready for this experience.CD-R COPIES CAN VARY GREATLY FROM TRACK TO TRACK.Dont blame the MAGS.The bass response of the Mags is there.some people just assume they will need a sub or do not know how to listen.Yes Mags need a little power,but more important than watts per channel,is current the amp produces.You must give the Mags room from the walls and each other.You must be prepared for a long burn in period.I have read many comments where a person has sold their Mags,after only 3 to 6 months listening and complaining about how disappointed they are.I listen on average 6 to 8 hours a day.After 3 months the Mags are still getting better.All of us have a preference for a sound we like.Not everyone will appreciate the accuracy of, or the sound stage given by, the Mags.
energizer
Hi Puerto.yes i did sound like a commercial.Did not mean to.Just trying to clear a few things up.Mags are not for every one.But a lot of listeners miss the boat.
I've owned Maggies for OVER 30 years.
My original MG-1 panels, bought used, went thru a rebuild in White Bear Lake and were sold a few years ago to be replaced by 1.6s

Try flipping them around. Swap 'em back 2 front. If you like it better, try THAN swapping them left / right to get the tweeters back outside.

Cheapest improvement I ever made.

PS: older panels were made to have the magnets on the front. I don't know when that happened, but when I noticed it is when I rotated them. Better!
I wonder how much of the "burn in" with Maggies is just our ears getting used to the very different type of sound they put out.

I used to have planar magnetic computer speakers growing up. I switched to standard dynamic type speaker a few years back. Since then every time I go back and forth between dynamic & planar magnetic it takes a few minutes for me to acclimate to each speaker's respective sound.

That being said I just got the MMG's (waiting on the 1.7's to come in) and they do seem to have a considerable burn in time.

That being said, as time goes on they do seem to keep getting sweeter and sweeter (regardless of the cause of this perception). I'm about 2 months in at this point and loving them.

I don't get the whole room placement problem everyone mentions though. I've experimented with various placements and they all seem to sound great. Whether they're 2 feet off the wall, 5 feet off the wall, doesn't seem to matter as long as you aren't right on the wall.
mmgs are the best speaker for the money ever made. you can learn about acoustics and work to make them better. i,ve never heard a speaker do what they do. very unique and interesting.i,ve had b and w, ohm f's celestions, mb quart, mission,dcm,polk advent,dahlquist, kef, genesis speakers over the last 30 years with gear like mcintosh, luxman, decco, cyrus, nakamichi. magnepans are the most fun to listen to and unique transducers i,ve ever owned. i.ll get more gear but will always have a pr of magnepans, preently using emotiva gear for values sake and the results are very good. this is subjective obviously and i,ve never owned the super expensive gear like wilson and acoustic research but i,m sure they are incredible. but for value consider advents in 1976 for 300 dollars or mmgs in 2010 for 600. if you index the dollar value magnepan is a very ggod value