After several years of rotating through various speakers, we have finally reached the pinnacle; enter the VMPS RM/X speaker! These speakers look beautiful and sound fantastic.
Arrival:The speakers arrived two weeks ago. Picking up, moving around and unpacking these beasts was no easy feat. Probably re-aligned the vertebrae in the back a few times lifting these 350 pound dreadnaughts. Needless to say, these speakers are very well packed. By the time we got the final box off, we wondered why we were being so delicate moving the boxes around. They are double boxed, and have more styrofoam and bubble wrap for bracing than a mars rover landing kit.
Once unboxed, we were extremely pleased with the finish of the cabinets. They look absolutely beautiful. The grills are not very easy to remove; I managed to snap a couple of the plastic mounting pieces on the side grill

. Makes the decision to leave the grills on or off very easy; these grills are going nowhere

.
Photos of the setup:
http://www.blackmorgan.com/home_theater/RMX_Speaker_Setup/index.html The initial sound:(It sound be noted that the speakers are located in a partially finished HT room. The room is super bright; trim, doors, carpet and room treatments to be added over the next month or so.)
Connected the speakers to both a Panasonic XR/45 (direct digital in, 400+ hours, custom PC) and a Krell KSA-50S fed XLR by an Anthem AVM-20. These speakers are very revealing, and it only took around 20 minutes to decide that the Panasonic XR/45 is finding a new home in the upstairs theater room. The Krell/Anthem combo was used to break in the speakers for the next week or so.
The VMPS RM/X sounded stunning in the mid-range, good in the highs, and dropped fairly sharply around 40-50Hz out of the box. Proceeded to remove more an more mortite from the bottom woofers until two marble sized (around 1/2 to ¾ inch diameter) balls were collected. After playing an 80Hz to 10Hz break-in track for a few days, the bass began to open up. Moved the speakers (ouch, the back again!) to a few different locations after testing the room for peaks and nodes. The speakers sounded very good in many ways, just lacked a little punch in the bottom end.
Sound after short break-in:After a couple of weeks, the speakers are positioned around 4 feet from each side wall and around 2-3 feet from the rear speaker to front wall. Soundstage width is 13 feet center-to-center. Distance to listener is around 15 feet, and the speakers are toed in about 1-2 feet in front of the listener. There is still around a marble sized ball of mortite off each of the bass drivers, and the pots are positioned near 12:00 position. The speakers are now playing much more solidly down to around 25Hz or so. They drop a little in test tone past 25Hz, but you can see the side woofer moving. Not going to spend too much more time playing with the controls or position until the room is complete.
What a treat it is to listen to the RM/X (or the ‘Vaders’ as my wife calls them). There is so much detail, engaging mid-range, and enough highs and lows to satisfy most if not all songs and movies. There is still more potential in the extreme bottom end. The imaging is great and should improve following carpet / room treatments. Soundstage is wide and gives a sense of around 4 to 10 feet deep.
It seems like every music track and movie scene has something new to be experienced. With such a revealing sound, this can be the greatest gift or an awkward grimace depending on the source material recording quality. Definitely satisfied with the sound quality to this point. The speakers present a good soundfield in phantom mode for movies as well.
Short note on associated equipment:Not intending to get off topic, but these speakers make source equipment strengths and weaknesses very clear; so it may be worth sharing this recent experience.
Mentioned previously was the Panasonic XR/45 vs. the Krell KSA-50S. We could not bear the fatiguing highs of the XR/45 on these speakers for more than 20 minutes. In addition, the spaciousness and dynamics were not sensed to the degree of the Krell’s capability. Power wise, we never took the Krell out of its second bias level, which is around 25 watts per channel.
As happy as we were with the sound of the Krell/Anthem combo, one couldn’t resist but wonder if a power issue was at play with the lacking deep bass. Decided to add a Carver Professional VR 1600 to the mix. After only a few hours of break-in time, the Carver easily showed that it was the one to use moving forward. The Carver Professional added more punch to the lower bass, slightly more detail, and matched the great sounding mid-range quality of the Krell. The distinct difference of the two digital amps (Carver Pro vs. the Panasonic) is that the Carver Pro is far more dynamic, spacious, and accurate in the highs. It also has deeper bass than the Panasonic and Krell.
So to summarize the equipment, it is clearly evident that the listening experience can change appreciably depending on the source components. The RM/X is revealing enough to show even the slightest of sonic differences. For the next while, we’re setting on the Carver Pro VR1600 (XLR) fed by Anthem AVM-20 combination. The Panny is now driving the other theater room, and the Krell is now driving the rear speakers.
Overall:Extremely satisfied with the VMPS RM/X. Brian Cheney has produced a wonderful speaker package that has great build quality, finish and sound. Add the price/value into the mix and the RM/X exceeds expectations.
Thanks to John Casler, who has been a pleasure to work with through the purchase process. One can tell immediately when chatting with John that he loves his job and this hobby.

Also thanks to those that have taken the time to compare VMPS speakers to other familiar models and manufacturers. Without the opportunity to listen to VMPS before a purchase – it can be a sense of a stretch. However, with various comparisons to other speakers, one can better grasp what to expect with the VMPS sonic signature.
Photos today:
http://www.blackmorgan.com/home_theater/RMX_Speakers_2/index.htmlLooking forward to further enjoyment once the listening/viewing room is complete. Until then, the room will be full of tunes and movies; there’s never enough of music when a speaker sounds this great!
-Steve.