In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS

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G E

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In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS
« on: 6 Jul 2024, 12:56 am »
My VMPS speakers continue to astound me in my listening sessions.  They delight for hours on end, never wearing me out. Quite the contrary. Speed, detail, 3D sound field, and a beguiling creaminess make them  performers for the ages.

A few years ago I wrote of my experience with the Pass Labs XP-32. It remains a centerpiece of my system.  And I still have my Bryston 28 Squared mono blocks.  Not sure if I have written about my turntable upgrade.  Been using a Well Tempered Amadeus with Grado Reference cart. Last year I decided to move up to Well Tempered’s 254 GT AND get Grado’s Aeon cartridge.  The one that is second in their line up.

As luck would have it they ran out of turntables in the US so I had to wait. They arrived just after my back surgery last summer and it was late October before I could take delivery.  And it took a while to dial it in as I wasn’t able to stand for more than a few minutes at a time.

And the improvement in all aspect of sound reproduction were out of this world. Lots of glowing praise written about these two products… and all of it is on the mark.

Recently I joined a friend visiting a high end dealer in Buckhead to hear some of the Wilson stuff. He goes on at length about this brand so I was curious.  What I heard had merit but I wouldn’t trade what I have in exchange. No way.  Don’t recall the models, but one retailed for $75k and then we heard the “big” pair that lists for $300,000 and was mated with high end D’Agstino amplification.  This was a curious listen. Oodles of detail and frequency extension but everything felt disconnected. In service of detail instead of the music is my impression. I wouldn’t want it if I could afford it.

So folks, if you get the upgrade buzz, maybe address the upstream electronics first. My experience with my RM-30 series 2 is they will not be embarrassed by some very nice electronics.

Brian designed and built some incredible speakers for not much money.

opnly bafld

Re: In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS
« Reply #1 on: 6 Jul 2024, 01:34 am »
Brian designed and built some incredible speakers for not much money.

 :thumb:

GeorgeAb

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Re: In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS
« Reply #2 on: 13 Jul 2024, 05:35 pm »
Brian got a lot right. His use of ribbon drivers, simple crossovers, tuneable speakers, subwoofer design, golden ears, and his educating us to be better audiophiles set him apart from the rest.
 
Brian educated us on room treatments decades before it became commonplace. His article in 1991 in Stereophile “Hi-Fi Retailing: The Avid Audiophile’s Advisory” https://www.stereophile.com/features/548/index.html described in a humorous way how to make simple changes to improve the sounds of our room.

Brian was not afraid to call out the industry he spent his life working in in articles like “Money and the High End: The Price is the Product”. Brian bucked that trend and provided great value never gouging the customer.   

His use of simple, low parts count crossovers is the key to his speakers ability to image so well. That was the “minimum phase” part of Veritone (Minimum Phase) Speakers VMPS.

Integrating his speakers with different environments, as our rooms are different, by providing tuneable speakers (the V in “Veritone” Minimum Phase Speakers) with the use of L pads to attenuate different sections is another example of what set Brian apart from other manufactures who provide one size fits all. 

His subwoofers are nothing fancy using a 12” and 15” driver with a large passive in a decent sized enclosures works well. With that much surface area pushing air the drivers do not have to make large excursions resulting in clean bass. Simple, but effective.
 
For me, what Brian got right and why I cherish VMPS speaker is the use of ribbon midrange that goes down to 250 Hz in the Ribbon Monitor series of his later speakers. The imaging and speed of these drivers are why I love VMPS. Challenging to integrate a ribbon driver that disperses sound in a column with standard drivers that disperses in a cone, particularly since their sound pressure rolls off differently as distance. Not an issue with one seating position, but with rows like in a show not sure how Brian pulled it off which brings me to my last point. 
 
Brian’s ears were incredible! He could not only hear, but knew how to make corrections based on what he was hearing. The sound he was able to achieve at shows is legendary! Winning Best in Show in 2002 at the Consumer Electronics Show with a $5K speaker competing against all price points shows his talents of not only designing great speakers, but making them sound good in any environment. 

« Last Edit: 13 Jul 2024, 06:50 pm by GeorgeAb »

G E

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Re: In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS
« Reply #3 on: 13 Jul 2024, 10:40 pm »
Brian got a lot right. His use of ribbon drivers, simple crossovers, tuneable speakers, subwoofer design, golden ears, and his educating us to be better audiophiles set him apart from the rest.
 
Brian educated us on room treatments decades before it became commonplace. His article in 1991 in Stereophile “Hi-Fi Retailing: The Avid Audiophile’s Advisory” https://www.stereophile.com/features/548/index.html described in a humorous way how to make simple changes to improve the sounds of our room.

Brian was not afraid to call out the industry he spent his life working in in articles like “Money and the High End: The Price is the Product”. Brian bucked that trend and provided great value never gouging the customer.   

His use of simple, low parts count crossovers is the key to his speakers ability to image so well. That was the “minimum phase” part of Veritone (Minimum Phase) Speakers VMPS.

Integrating his speakers with different environments, as our rooms are different, by providing tuneable speakers (the V in “Veritone” Minimum Phase Speakers) with the use of L pads to attenuate different sections is another example of what set Brian apart from other manufactures who provide one size fits all. 

His subwoofers are nothing fancy using a 12” and 15” driver with a large passive in a decent sized enclosures works well. With that much surface area pushing air the drivers do not have to make large excursions resulting in clean bass. Simple, but effective.
 
For me, what Brian got right and why I cherish VMPS speaker is the use of ribbon midrange that goes down to 250 Hz in the Ribbon Monitor series of his later speakers. The imaging and speed of these drivers are why I love VMPS. Challenging to integrate a ribbon driver that disperses sound in a column with standard drivers that disperses in a cone, particularly since their sound pressure rolls off differently as distance. Not an issue with one seating position, but with rows like in a show not sure how Brian pulled it off which brings me to my last point. 
 
Brian’s ears were incredible! He could not only hear, but knew how to make corrections based on what he was hearing. The sound he was able to achieve at shows is legendary! Winning Best in Show in 2002 at the Consumer Electronics Show with a $5K speaker competing against all price points shows his talents of not only designing great speakers, but making them sound good in any environment.

Elegantly stated, George!

G E

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Re: In praise of Brian Cheney and VMPS
« Reply #4 on: 13 Jul 2024, 10:42 pm »
Listening again tonight and I’m drawn in by the tonality of the lead guitars.

Brian nailed it.