My first setup I had when I was 13 about 2001 was my dads old technics suv3 amp, b&w dm110 speakers, denon dcd485 CD player, nad 5120 turntable, my grandads old Sony cassette player and my dad's old teleton tuner. Great and very informative video as usual
@williamrose74343 жыл бұрын
Well, that’s cleared up the basics for me .. and being in the 40+ yrs the contextual understanding even better .. thanks for sharing x
@RMASUPERFLY3 жыл бұрын
Top of the line vintage speakers paired with todays latest amps are one life's biggest pleasures...
@lucasalaniz764 ай бұрын
Vintage amps and vintage speakers...
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
Matching impedance results in NO out of phase cancellations of sound.
@The-Spotlight-Kid28 күн бұрын
Agreed. And you get the pleasure of saving a pile of cash by Not trying to get an = sound from brand new speakers. As for vintage power amps, I'd take a s/h Krell 'KSA 50' (50 watts per ch' with two 1'kva (1000'watts each) huge fat, tall & heavy transformers inside, they can drive anything, even down to 2'ohm bass dips in some fill-range e/stats & can do inefficient boxes with ease, wattage is a misleading marketing tool (without a peak inside or knowing more related output spec's) & less important than maximum 'loud cruising' current delivery spec, i.m.o. P.S. i know next to nothing about class D amps, just their switching power supplies, to a degree.
@socksumi3 жыл бұрын
One other difference in the KEF B200 large magnet woofer is the surround is made of PVC whereas the smaller magnet B200 is neoprene. Visually that's only way to tell them apart when mounted. The large magnet B200 is less common; the smaller magnet version being the one many manufactures used most often. That Monitor Audio used the more expensive B200 on their MA4 tells you just how committed to excellence they were back then. Great discussion of vintage speakers and their differences over the years.
@chriswilson18537 күн бұрын
I know that some B200 and B110 variants, there were several of each, were only sold to manufacturers, others were available to DIYers.
@panblue433 жыл бұрын
Hi! You're right,you say good things about loudspeakers. All of my most natural sounded loudspeakers had paper cone - the Videoton Amethyst (made in Hungary in the 70s) the Wharfedale Mach 3 (made in England in 1985) and what I use now a Heco what has "craft paper" mid-bass driver cone. The old ones were not the best loudspeakers what I had but very detailed, very good at human speech and vocals, and lively performance at the mid range. A big paper cone woofer with weak magnet in closed box=could wonder in the low bass end and very natural in mid bass.
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
Names indicate to the public what the designer was striving to achieve. Pioneer is sounding just like how a Pioneer goes out into the world 🌎 to establish themselves. A bold move not supported by the army. A single sonic pulse that goes out into the world.
@gordthor53512 жыл бұрын
The Polk LS series are great sounding vintage speakers. Nicely balanced, very detailed, yet buttery smooth. Polk accomplished this by using a trilaminate dome made of polyamide, aluminum, and stainless steel. This layered construction produces the smooth response of a soft-dome tweeter along with the clarity and precision of a metal dome. I can't even listen to music on my Polk RTi A9s, but the LS 70s sound great with all music. These do need a decent amp to shine though, even at 90dB sensitivity, they dip to 3 ohms. With a good amp they will stay tight and clean sounding right up to about 300 watts. If driven by a cheap mass market receiver you probably won't think they are nothing special and store them in the closet for 10 years like I did. I was blown away when I hooked them up to my JC1 mono blocks. They don't need that much of an amp, but it doesn't hurt if you want to really turn it up and feel the music. The LS 70s were $1200 in 1992. They are real gems if you can find a pair. I paid $80 for mine and they are in great shape.
@mondoenterprises67103 жыл бұрын
Nice video. I just bought some mint condition Polk 7 b's and am blown away by their closed box sound paired with dual subs.
@stanmyers59943 жыл бұрын
Great video, being a 40 year collector, love hearing the horror stories about paper cones and rubber surrounds, would love to see a video on the AR 3a
@jonmason19553 жыл бұрын
Very interesting breakdown on tweetersin relation to the woofers. You broke ground where other stereo reviewers have not gone. I'm a stereo/audio enthusiast from the 1960s, and caught the bug when my dad vigorously sampled various speakers to match with his system. I love the way you broke(no pun intended) it down in explanation! Thirty-five years ago I purchased a pair of vintage 2way Advents (1970s) that sat lonely in a dusty corner at thrift store. The pair cost $35USD. Large speakers, and, wow! They literally blew me away! But, I did have to replace the woofers shortly after, as they proved rotted from having been in someone's storage. They have been joyously used ever since.
@thisisnev3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a clear and useful guide to speakers, Kelvin! When I was getting into hi-fi in the late 70s I did a lot of research to try and make my limited funds go further. One thing I remember is that there were generally said to be three schools of thought on speaker design, and they broke down geographically. American speakers tended to be punchy and bassy, British & European speakers had a warmer and more laid-back sound, while Japanese speakers were airy and bright. Later on, Japan Inc. addressed this by having speakers designed and built in Europe for the European market.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was going to do a video on this subject I pretty much agree with what you’re saying there is definitely truth in the differences
@MrJason91420023 жыл бұрын
@GeneralCurtis3LeMay I didn’t like the arcam a85 with B&W speakers. It just didn’t sound right and I am not an audiophile
@aussierob71773 жыл бұрын
One of the best vintage loudspeakers which i owned was the Rogers Studio 1 made in England. I bought these speakers in 1984.
@allanthacker60723 жыл бұрын
Had my DM4’s from new and like you say ‘classy’. Nearly 50 years old! Very well built and gorgeous with vinyl. 2020 speakers may be better but at a price.
@whssy8 ай бұрын
I've got the big brother to the Rogers LS2 (LS6a) on my office setup with an Audiolab 8000c+p setup - and it sounds great.
@witchmonkey87453 жыл бұрын
Nice work, Kelvin, it looks like you're as bad as me for hoarding gear.. it's fun to play around with different components and speakers, it never ceases to amaze the transformation that can be had by doing so.
@ebsman3 жыл бұрын
What about Bose speakers ?
@SleekBlack823 жыл бұрын
@@ebsmanCrap.
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
@ebsman Look at the brand philosophy. Names indicate something about the performance design. For example the sound of pioneer is similar to what a real pioneer does. A bold move out into the world and doesn't come with support. You have to buy the support amplifier to stretch out the bold sound. The name pioneer tells you what the sound theory will be.
@acts95319 ай бұрын
I picked up a pair of 1970's vintage Cerwin Vega R-12s at a local auction cheap. I refoamed and recapped them and I'm very happy with the results. The R-12 has a 12" base driver with a paper cone, large magnet and large voice coil, a silk dome tweeter and an adjustable crossover with the dial on the back of the speaker. It's ported in the back also. The walnut veneer cabinets are gorgeous and I keep them fed, waxed and polished to a soft warm glow. I use these as my man LR speakers with a 12" powered subwoofer (a Klipsch spun copper). I set the crossover on the amp to 80Hz so the real base goes to the powered sub and the 12" drivers on the speakers more-or-less act as very large agile mids. The silk dome tweeters are plush and detailed. I realize this might not be the ideal audiophile set up but I'm quite pleased this configuration. I hear things in music that I've never heard before even though I've been listening to that music in some cases for decades. Depending on what your expectations are it's certainly possible to breath new life into old speakers and end up with a very nice sound. Adjusting for inflation of the original price these speakers would today cost a lot, lot more than anything I could afford so I'm happy.
@stereoreviewx9 ай бұрын
Sounds good to me a 12 inch bass driver will really do something for you
@acts95319 ай бұрын
@@stereoreviewx Yes, it does. Even though as I said, I'm not using them for the lower bass frequencies. I set the amp crossover to send everything below 80Hz to the sub and use the speaker's onboard crossover to let the high mids and highs go to the silk dome tweeter. That leaves the mids and low mids for that large driver. This avoids conflicting mids and bass on a two way speaker quite well. The large voice coil and magnet on that 12 inch driver don't have to struggle producing mid-range and bass out of the same cone. When sitting between the two speakers playing music you would swear there's a center channel right in front of you somewhere. It's a bit uncanny. The best part is that with speakers, foam kits, cap kits and wood treatment items I've got just under $200 in the whole package. That's $100 per speaker and had I spent that on modern speakers i wouldn't have nearly as good sound as I do now. The original cost (MSRP) of these C-V R-12s was around $1300 each. In the mid 1970's. When you take inflation into account that would be over $10,000 today. You're very correct about being able to pick up "vintage" components cheap and using them to build out a really great system that produces way, way above its price point. My only wish is that these were the D-12 three-way speakers instead of the R-12 two-way. That's the other side of the coin when it comes to buying vintage audio. You have to be happy with what you can actually get your hands on. Still, I'm absolutely not complaining one bit.
@PlanetTwilow3 жыл бұрын
I have custom system with KEF 8" and 5" woofers that I bought from KEF, the big magnet versions in 1977 ... they are still flawless 44 years later, talk about quality manufacturing and design.
@1ring2rule3pigs3 жыл бұрын
Love your vids but would enjoy actually hearing the comparisons. Despite whatever inferior speakers I'm using, there would still be noticeable differences we could enjoy hearing.
@Yogi-Megan7 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't know this but a natural uncompressed paper pulp cone is one of the best speaker diaphragm materials. AND rather costless to produce hence the use of other materials.
@KevKruz Жыл бұрын
I know it's a challenge to describe to someone what a speaker will sound like, but I can definitely look at this lineup and tell you which albums are going to sound amazing playing out of each one - and which will fall short lol
@RobWhittlestone3 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video - I was right at home - I started being interested in audio/hi-fi in my teens in the early 70's so could really agree with what you were saying! Hadn't sussed the Kenwood had an ABR though. I also agree that old speakers can sound good (as long as the surrounds are intact). I've just renovated some 31-year old Mission 761s with re-wiring and replacement tweeters (my then toddlers pushed in the old Visaton DT94's domes) and hooked them up to my main hi-fi system - they sound fantastic with surprising bass from 6.5" woofers (I think). I was amazed how little the tweeters had changed in those 31 years. They moved the fixing hole centers in by about 2mm - probably to prevent cracking of the faceplate otherwise everything else was identical. The reason claimed then for the elliptical fad was the short distance across is like a midrange and the long distance across is like a woofer so it was a compromise for bass and mid. All the best, Rob in Switzerland
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Interesting stuff thanks K
@XFC4433 жыл бұрын
Really interesting video and good descriptions of the character of these speakers from the past. Nice close-up look at the drive units too.
@stonecoldcustoms Жыл бұрын
Great video, good info! One of the more satisfying moments in the hobby for me, was getting to a point where I could tell if I would like a speaker or not, just based on the looks. Learned to look for some of the things you pointed out like the paper tweeters.
@kevinjekyll15213 жыл бұрын
Yes that is a good description of just how things went, I think from well built but not that advanced to more advanced drivers but the budget was cut for everything else. What is classed as vintage now days I have to wonder? My advice for what it is worth is, if you delve into the vintage audio world you must accept the age of the gear, its use or abuse, what music etc you like, and as he says, names don't always mean you get from one generation to the next the same quality. My favorite new old speakers at this moment are American, while I grew up with British, Japanese, German, I love them all in their own way. Just goes to show, I think you need to really learn what you like, and try and find it, it may take you some time, but it will I think be worth the hunt.
@davidwhitener29233 жыл бұрын
Discovered a pair of University Medallion II in a friend's garage, in his view "taking up space. I looked 'em up and discovered that they were made in '63. Not the top of the line, but #2 for them that year. I bought a class D 50 wpc amp and gave them to my daughter. They were FLOORED by the sound. Highly efficient. (Neighbors complained when her boyfriend watche a Lord of the Rings movie at low to mid volume.) I looked on eBay, and as it happened, there were an identical pair. Starting bid was $795/pair. I just LOVE being at the right place at just the right time.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Wow interesting I’m going to look them up
@edwardfitz-gibbon64843 жыл бұрын
Haha. I love theses reviews. A trip down memory lane. Can I request you bring up your audio level a bit please so that the adds don’t blast my ears. Thanks.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Yeah will do
@aihuateoh34473 жыл бұрын
Sweet collections you have there. Very useful explanations on the characteristics of different woofers and tweeters. Thank you.
@tipstricksss14533 жыл бұрын
The speaker boxes also play an important roll with the drivers. You can have a really nice driver and have it sound like junk if its in a poorly matched speaker box. I see a lot of homemade boom box videos that have zero bass, or those who replace drivers with car stereo speakers into Hi-Fi speaker boxes, they sound terrible with no bottom end.
@Digibeatle093 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this interesting video - a "friend of a friend" - who had a few bob - had a pair of Gale 401s around 1977 or 1978. They each had 2 bass drivers if my memory serves correctly.
@PlanetTwilow3 жыл бұрын
I used the Peerless 1" tweeter with ferro-fluid cooling as well.
@snuffpappy3 жыл бұрын
I'm embarking on a DIY project. I have a pair of JVC SK-303 speakers and will be replacing the paper mids and tweets with Vifa's and adding a new and better crossover. I'm keeping the 12" woofers. These will be my "poor man's" set of decent floor speakers. A little wood filler and gloss black paint and it will be complete. I've had the Vifas for 20 years so its about time. :)
@Sunrayman1232 жыл бұрын
I had Jensen's Model 6 in High School.. I loved them.. Cranked them all the time! They sounded great in my opinion.
@sosonic120003 жыл бұрын
K another good show ol chap. A confusing phenomena is audio to me rather like hieroglyphics personally, but the manner in which you simplify it into laymen terms is testament to your brilliance. Keep em rolling baby..
@andershammer93073 жыл бұрын
When a cymbal is hit its not just white noise that fades. The are quiet sounds between the swish of the cymbal sound. A better speaker will let you hear the quieter sounds while a cheap maybe paper tweeter smears the sounds so you can't hear the quieter sounds.
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
Could be deterioration inside the tiny component values.
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
The black faced amplifiers are TONE amplifiers. They offer thousands of options so you can FEATURE sounds. Your job is to tune them in. 70s amplifiers offer hundreds of options. Those hundreds of versions of the famous sounds are all different to the thousands of versions
@MegaAndroidGamer2 жыл бұрын
Hey kelvin, love your videos man ☝🏻. Recently got really into my hifi, have a pair of leak sandwich 600’s from 1971-1972. Sound amazing to be honest, might have to keep my eye out for more vintage speakers 🙌🏻. Hope you make more vids soon 👏🏻
@WooferCooker Жыл бұрын
I had a pair of the Kenwood LS-5000 as yours. Built really well, passive radiator was very useful, and a decent xover. But yeah, it wasn’t an accurate sounding, but definitely could get loud!
@kurtburkhardt5862 Жыл бұрын
I know we have different gear in the US. I do have some small B&W 110's. The big 802's etc. are a bit beyond my budget. ADS are a US brand on par with B&W in my opinion. I have had some ADS 710's for over 35 years. Bought them used then. They have 2-7" woofers, paper butyl surrounds a 3" soft dome midrange and a 1" soft dome tweeter. Very unique lovely smooth sound. Not super bright but nice and punchy with two smaller woofers.
@mtacoustic17 ай бұрын
These vintage speakers are great sounding; however, the downside is that many are power hogs as well. But, if you have a suitable amp to drive them (usually 200 watts/ch), you're in for a sonic treat!
@joeygonzo3 жыл бұрын
JBL LX44, LX500, LX55 and LX600 get my vote as great vintage speakers ( post 80's era ).
@legomandk99642 жыл бұрын
Hi Kelvin. Nice video. Info from Denmark: The Beovox speakers were designed to be placed on top of a bookshelf horizontal, hence the drivers placement in the kabinet.😉
@fan17013 жыл бұрын
Love that kenwood. I'd make some changes and then it would annoy the neighbors properly.
@madmad85826 ай бұрын
Hi you can get the dent on the Kenwood woofer bye pulling the dust cover with a vacume cleaner just hold the cone first then take the vaume and remove that dent , it works every time , I am the Speaker Doctor from Canada , i like your collection very nice gear . :-)
@stereoreviewx6 ай бұрын
nice to hear from you ...
@scottcarlon63189 ай бұрын
What about tweeters that use ferro fluid for cooling, with age , the ferro fluid dries out and changes the sound of the tweeter and increase’s the risk of failure. Another point of failure with older speakers is capacitors that dry out over time . As far as the woofers are considered, the surrounds loose their elasticity over time that could also led to failure, with the price people are asking for used speakers, I’ll probably just go with new.
@stereoreviewx9 ай бұрын
I would agree that the bargains are fewer and farther between these days Worth noting a lot of people ask a lot of money for Speakers and they simply don’t sell
@gianpiero19633 жыл бұрын
Consigli d'oro ..amo l'hi fi inglese e con Te imparo sempre di più...grazie ancora ti seguo con vero piacere un saluto da Venezia Italy
@adaboy4z Жыл бұрын
I was surprised by the Yamaha NS-670 from the 70s. It's a great sounding speaker.
@AllboroLCD3 жыл бұрын
You should have included the JBL Control ONE you have in the back there, one of their most successful bookshelf monitors and for good reason! Think they are still made to this day, released around 1990 I believe.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I’m doing it next video to
@KRAZEEIZATION2 жыл бұрын
I’m buying a pair of Blaupunkt floor standing speakers from the 80s. These are pretty big and on wheels! They also have 2 woofers in each cabinet. Big buggers but I bet they sound good!
@stereoreviewx2 жыл бұрын
Big speakers big sound
@ObserveNotify Жыл бұрын
1970s the hi-fi speakers, of 10" woofers 3way were the excellent stereo speakers. For the stereo of Two channels. Left and right channel.
@insolentstickleback32663 жыл бұрын
Thank You for the channel, I subscribed recently and am learning a lot through your experience, and chasing rabbits that hop out of your videos. 😆 Found a REALLY nice Harmon Kardon 730 yesterday, local to me. I gave the gentleman $350.00 USD.
@shamanic13 жыл бұрын
Your reasoning, and your approach are impeccable, Sir! Having said that, I am frustrated, because the vintage (and new) speakers you review may be common in the UK, but not in the US. Here in the States, I N-E-V-E-R see many of the models you rate. In fact, there are entire brands you enjoy, which we never get access to - especially with the international fear-driven imprisonment scheme now in it's second year and counting...
@paudor6 ай бұрын
I have a pair of musical fidelity reference 4 and a pair of reference 2 speakers, old but excellent sounding.
@chriswilson18537 күн бұрын
I remember my dad building a pair of speakers using the B200 and T27. My brother ended up having them and he blew up the T27s. I think they are in my parents' attic. The B200s are probably worth a bit of money.
@stereoreviewx5 күн бұрын
you can get hol of t27 secondhand
@btb3003 жыл бұрын
Great information in this video. I've been looking for a pair of speakers for my old Harman Kardon 330B, I will try to find a pair of decent vintage ones instead of new.
@martyjewell56833 жыл бұрын
When my wife and I (me??) were dating in 1981 I bought her an inexpensive system. Receiver, cassette deck and speakers. The speakers were Synergistics S12B. Not bad "sound" for the musically ignorant. A good 8" woofer (-3dB @ 55Hz) but crossed over to tweeter at 3200Hz. Much too high for good midrange dispersion. The tweeter was 2.5" and gave poor dispersion of high frequencies. In a small acoustically live room they sound acceptable on rock music and tolerable on classical. I didn't really understand loudspeaker mechanics then and at $75 a pair, they fit my budget. Use them in my basement workshop now. Drivers and crossovers are so important in a speakers sound. Replaced them in my wife's system with Boston Acoustics A-40 speakers. Caveat emptor when speaker shopping.
@paulallen9433 жыл бұрын
Hi Kelvin Thanks your video s are very interesting and informative, I really enjoy them all! I also have collected and formed many different systems over the years. Just recently picked up a pair of 1985 mission 700LE and was blown away by there midrange quality, they really do sound rather nice and only cost me £20.00 in the wood finish! Have you ever tried a pair? It would be interesting for you to review a pair with your thoughts on them! Best regards Paul Ps keep up the good work! Welldone Kelvin! 😊👍
@Gma7788Ай бұрын
The volume control is the midrange adjustment. Then you remove bass and treble and you get a vintage style warm sound.
@roseedfleming63323 жыл бұрын
.Ed Fleming Have you any information of a pair off speakers I own and still use today, I bought them with my first hi fi system back around 1970 in Vancouver Canada, they are called Mectron mark 7 and were made in Vancouver by Patterson Industries-LTD. They still sound great and I use them now with a Sony amp and turntable. by the way I am 80 years of age.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Can’t say I’ve heard of those Ed anybody else
@dazzfromaus47978 ай бұрын
For me. The only speaker I like are the big Altec Voice of the theatre speakers with the large horns on top.
@patriciawilson96663 ай бұрын
EPI 100's kick ass.
@joeking10192 жыл бұрын
The best demo I never heard. Cheers
@eliasroque2397 Жыл бұрын
Some Japanese brands like Kenwood, Sansui, Akai etc...bought electronic components from Sanyo including speaker drivers, and Sanyo was not exactly known for reliability, now Technics, Yamaha, Mitsubishi (Diatone) and Pioneer had their own division back then, and even these had difficulty keeping up with the evolution of other countries with regard to speakers and the example of this was Pioneer being a brand whose origins were precisely making speakers had to hire a former engineer and creator of the famous JBL L100 to try to improve and innovate its speakers division, and that's when the also famous HPM 100 later appeared.
@inmatejason3 жыл бұрын
I dont know if i agree with the paper drivers not sounding that good. I have a set of mint JBL L36 speakers that i honestly think sound amazing paired with my marantz 2238.
@drs-Rigo-Reus Жыл бұрын
Double tweeters done for dark UK sound due to inferior tweeters and weak ranging woofers. Harbeth still does it. Its difficult to combine a 20cm woofer with a tweeter due to roll off.
@lysdexicsoftheworlduntie18812 жыл бұрын
This video makes me miss my Onkyo TX4500 MkII and my AR3A's.
@herrherrmann2 жыл бұрын
I bought the JBL L50 from ebay. Awsome speakers
@bricktop20903 жыл бұрын
I have a pair of Celestial Ditton 25, in perfect condition” still going Strong 💪🏽
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Big sound keep the drivers screwed in nice and snug
@frantotti97542 жыл бұрын
I always dream to buy one of these speakers.
@barlow29766 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thanks.
@joelbangayan14433 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this..very informative
@husqvarna545markii92 жыл бұрын
I had some 1987 Yamaha 10'' Speaker's tower speaker's
@johnnytoobad77853 жыл бұрын
Buying vintage speakers can be a bit tricky. I personally would never buy one unless I could (1) Pick them up locally (no shipping costs) and (2) personally meet the seller. I am also fortunate to live near "Midwest Speaker Repair" (Minnesota-US) which can re-cone/repair just about any speaker. I guess I am biased towards the "Boston Acoustics" (US) brand since I own two different BA speaker systems. One is 25+ years old and finally had to be re-coned. Love that KEF low-freq driver though...:) I always thought the concept of "passive radiators" was cool. I'm surprised they're not built in to more sub woofers.
@dimitretoushek38923 жыл бұрын
This is very important information 🙂🙂🙂
@paulopereira69963 жыл бұрын
The tweeter on the small MA is a Vita from Denmark, profusely used in that time.
@paulopereira69963 жыл бұрын
Vifa, not vita.
@allanpowell72083 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info Kel. Good watch as always. Cheers
@cyelannford47353 жыл бұрын
Passive radiators are a bad idea for music, but good for marketing... Polk comes to mind.
@D1N023 жыл бұрын
What happened at 13:54 when you touched the MA R252?
@edwardbalboa55283 жыл бұрын
He got a tingle
@richardverney67023 жыл бұрын
Given the vintage covered, it is surprising that you did not include a speaker from Accoustic Research, such as the AR3a. After all, Accoustic Research were the first speakers to use dome speakers, both for mid range and tweeter.
@bartvanransbeeck13413 жыл бұрын
Nice tests, love the oldies kef reference 102 without kube, put it on a yamaha ax590 or bigger and adjust loudness and basscorrection and you'll have allmost electrostatic mids, silky highs and amazing deep bass with dynamics , a steal
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Interesting
@scottdavis08013 жыл бұрын
I found a pair of Epos Epic 2 speakers off of Craigslist that have changed my world, and I'm f$%^ing serious. I had some Triangle Bro3 hooked up. The Epos speaker blow them away!! 😑 🎧 I love the look of the B&W dm 4s. Would like to try them someday!
@Humpunjabi21663 жыл бұрын
Excellent work
@donk18222 жыл бұрын
I use Tannoy DC3000's and TDL Studio 1's, by choice, not because I can't afford to change them. Most modern speakers seem to be all HiFi, no music.
@sweetdave5402 жыл бұрын
just bought some: Monitor audio MA 852
@eismcsquared3 жыл бұрын
Rogers LS3/6 smooth and luxurious, designed and made with a tonne of love. Lol
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Yes the other Roger speakers in that range are quite good it’s like they gave up on those little ones
@eismcsquared3 жыл бұрын
They are being remade by Stirling Broadcast. I would love to do a side by side comparison, old vs. reborn. www.stirlingbroadcast.net/ls36.html
@komedee37392 жыл бұрын
Theres some cool vintage hifi shops out here in Japan I should go make a video
@nicksundby3 жыл бұрын
Great vid, really enjoy this channel
@jumpsuite3 жыл бұрын
you know i feel and hear big livly sound out of mission i wish you would do more on missons speakers
@1jhnpennington3 жыл бұрын
Top drawer as usual. Thanks Kelvin.
@MustangBoss19733 жыл бұрын
A wealth of good information, Thank you.
@brandon27413 жыл бұрын
We have alot in common, love those vintage systems 👍
@gtric14663 жыл бұрын
Like always Great Review...Still waiting on my Onkyo!!!
@johncoops68973 жыл бұрын
I guess that you will celebrate when it finally gets delivered.
@matt.pma.kresnaputra54583 жыл бұрын
This is such a good review man cuz these are all similar prices nowadays im pretty sure.
@jimmybrad1563 жыл бұрын
What are your thoughts on Celestion Ditton 662's?
@lerpack4553 жыл бұрын
Very educational. We see much on expensive new gear but with this field of interest, this was well done. Thank you.
@D1N023 жыл бұрын
Thank you for taking us on your journey Kelvin. To get me started in vintage audio I just bought a Sansui AU-317 before everybody knows about them. Also a set of Beovox 3702 (a bit different from your 3700) for fun and a lovely set of Audiolab Candor II speakers (a Dutch brand). I'd like to know if you have made any adaptations to your home for sound like dispersion and absorption panels and or base traps and such? and what do you thinks about using a equalizer to attune your speakers to your room. The reason I ask is because I noticed how much better my speaker sound when I cup my ears with my hands. It's like instantly throwing 10.000 dollars in improvements at you system.
@stereoreviewx3 жыл бұрын
Yes well personally I just don’t really think about room treatments I suppose partly I’m always changing stuff now I don’t like graphic equaliser is generally speaking because you just lose a lot of detail when you put in 10 pots on each channel .cheers K
@Johnny-ov7qe11 ай бұрын
Happy holidays! Was hoping I could pick your brain… I’m auditioning these 4 speakers: Canton Karat 300, Ohm FRS-7, Dahlquist DQM-9 Compact, Altec Lansing 305. I’m curious if one of the 4 really stand out and if you had to choose one (all in good condition) which would you pick? Sound + looks is important for me since these will be next to my McIntosh setup and my wife is a stickler for appearances in our living room. Also, from a value stand point is one more valuable than the others? These are from a friend so pricing is going to be similar across the board. I just tend to enjoy speakers for 5 or so years and then end up selling them to try something new so I’d like a pair that will hold or increase in value.
@chriswilson18537 күн бұрын
I was given a pair of 1980s Wharfedales. They weren't great. Paper cone woofer, paper cone tweeter with shiny silver dust cap, fake woofer surround, spring clip terminals. Not their finest hour.
@davebroad6423 жыл бұрын
Metal domes were good for the "ting" on the bell of a ride cymbal. Hard thing to get right.
@socksumi3 жыл бұрын
Rigid domes like metal domes are good for pin sharp transients. Soft domes like silk seem better for harmonic realism and mass instruments playing together but soften transients a bit. Of course quality varies a lot in both types and there are good and bad examples of both.
@lerpack4553 жыл бұрын
I have a pair of 1960 Whafedale Unit 3’s speakers working for free if anyone want’s ( 8” and a violet 2” plastic tweeter in each ). Originally would have come in kit form where you make the cabinets yourself. These sounded wonderful with an Armstrong 222 valve amp ( 6. watts p ch ).
@andrewcastro253018 күн бұрын
hello, like your video. Do speakers that have controls on them like Kenwood KL-444A actually change the sound?
@laurentzduba12983 жыл бұрын
All of them from a time when there was still real progress in hi-fi loudspeaker design. To me, it seems that progress in loudspeaker design has been going sideways since 1998.
@andershammer93073 жыл бұрын
In my opinion audio quality has been going sideways since the 80's. I have a system from the early 80's which has had a few modifications that I think will give any new system that"s affordable(say under $10K) a run for it's money.
@laurentzduba12983 жыл бұрын
@@andershammer9307 Might be some truth to that bec. back in 1995, an older audiobuddy of mine wanted to know if I could fix his out of warranty Sansui AUA 707 DR which at the time had been out of commission for 5 years due to its busted output transistors no longer available locally. Long story short, I managed to find the part collected from my Air Force ROTC days - believe it or not a military spec transistor used in Vietnam War era B-52 bombers - and believe it or not, I managed not only to fix the Sansui but also - according to my audiobuddy - made it sound light years ahead when he bought it new back in 1983. He wished, back in 1995 and to this day, that he still has his Abba records after my so called miraculous fix.
@markthackray31852 жыл бұрын
Most entertaining - but I got to say I love paper cones! Maybe my ears are useless 😁 Replace the caps on the crossovers and they will likely sound better.
@stereoreviewx2 жыл бұрын
I kind of agree paper cones can sound great most times they won’t go loud very well though
@neilphilip232010 ай бұрын
Excellent trip down memory lane, very informative and no techy-jargon! Any views on Mordaunt Short's speakers?
@stereoreviewx10 ай бұрын
Well old Moulden shorts from the 70s I would call them polite quite accurate in offensive but I’m not saying they’re bad there’s good engineering there