Stereophile - Sabrina 5


Hate to rag on Sterophile again, but one of two things are true.  One, the Sabrina speakers they reviewed were wired incorrectly or Wilson is now shipping with inverted midranges. 

All that work to reduce distortion to vanishing levels only to totally ahem, add custom flavor to the frequency response.  

Honestly if I was reviewing this speaker I'd have stopped to reach out to them before publishing, just to be sure this speaker shipped as intended. 

https://www.stereophile.com/content/wilson-audio-specialties-sabrina-v-loudspeaker-measurements

erik_squires
Post removed 

What I will say is this speaker was $21k 2 years ago 

I don’t see any big changes to justify a $7k price hike ,thsts nuts.

I was considering them last year ,but -0:chance at that price,and very snooty 

little to no discounts. Having owned a Audio store  I know that the speaker including packaging is roughly $25% of the cost , for materials,labor, R&D and profit 45-50% for the dealer on average. 
I buy products at minimum of 20% off including shipping if buying New.

I am semi retired I now upgrade by. Buying mint used within 1-2 years old ,and save over 50% of the products original cost , it makes sense to me .

Wilson Audio has always been a polarizing brand due to cost, off the shelf drivers, company arrogance and even aesthetics. My first lengthy demo was with the Cub 2. It was a ruthlessly revealing loudspeaker that belonged in a studio not a living room. About 25 years have passed and heard various models that have added musicality but still retain an aggressive revealing pro studio characteristic. This past summer heard the Wilson Sabrina V and was left with an unresolved opinion. The Burmester 232 felt underpowered maybe due to the speakers having very low hours on them, The new tweeter which was excellent sounded detached(break in?) from the other drivers. The propulsive mid bass and dynamics were impressive for a small speaker which many Wilson admirers value. In conclusion Wilson Audio offers a very specific sound signature/presentation. Have excellent build quality, customer service, resale value and pride of ownership. 

In a 3 way speaker, having the polarity of the midrange reversed is a well known speaker design technique. JBL pioneered that in the 1970s. 

Regarding references to Wilson's speaker drive units. There is a difference between "off the shelf" and outsourced. But that aside, there is no intrinsic reason why vertical integration in manufacturing is automatically better. For example would we assume that BMW or Toyota should not buy from Bosch or Denso and make all their electronics in house instead? Wilson have a very pragmatic approach to make / buy decisions  - for example - acquiring Reliable Capacitors in 2018, but continuing to outsource the manufacture of their drive units.