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I finally made time to finish the kit of this speaker [SP Tech AV-2.] It is slightly modified with vinyl tiles on the walls of the cabinet, some black hole 5, and some spray on damping material designed for rattling car panels I learned about from one of thechairguy's posts. I have 1lb. of acoustastuff polyfill from partsexpress per speaker. Here are a few brief notes after a day of listening.I listen between 1m to just over 2m away. In my 14.5ft.x16ft. room, I hit peaks just exceeding 100db. I may have played it louder at other points, but I wasn't measuring. At no point did the speaker sound strained. I am powering it with an Odyssey Stratos and a CIaudio VPC1 (passive preamp.) Source is the non-oversampling DDDAC1543 with 16 chips in parallel, extra voltage regulator mods, all premium parts, battery powered, fed by a emu1212m pro audio sound card. The Stratos is said to put out somewhere around 150+w@8ohms and approximately doubling into the 4ohm load of the AV-2, so has somewhere around a ballpark of 300w available. Dynamics in spades, it makes big sounds with a natural ease. Could be the even power response afforded by the waveguide, I suppose. I watched Fearless and it was wonderful. Never sounded strained for a moment, I had confidence these speakers could keep up. The woofers were barely moving. Visually, they didn't seem to be moving at all. Putting on a 50hz test tone at 80db made the woofers move about 2mm peak to peak. Strong distortion could be heard by my ears starting well before this point, but this is not program material. The funny thing is I'm hearing more detail from this speaker than my last monitor, the mbow1 designed by Dennis Murphy. Lots more detail. It must be in my head, except I can't quite convince myself that this is true. Take it for what it's worth. I'm hearing lots of things I haven't heard before. So many, I can't believe my ears, really. Was I paying such poor attention before? In any case, I'm getting lots of detail from this speaker, and the imaging is solid. Tonality is quite neutral and natural. String quartets sound like they're in my room, at last. Between my brothers and I, we play all the instruments in a string quartet (besides a few others) many times over, and I have access to a few dozen of each instrument, so I'm fairly familiar with what they sound like up close and personal - such as in a quartet setting, and this speaker can do it. Piano is also done decently, thanks to the dynamics. Upper piano harmonics seem intact, something that was fishy with my past speakers. Waveguide in action? I don't know. Could be. I still have the same bass problems I have had with all box speakers in my room, in the same frequency ranges, which I deal with via EQ, which works fairly well for a large sweetspot. I've got a dipole I'm not using, which had different bass problems - not quite as extreme, but still problematic, just the same. The tonality of the speaker remains relatively constant along the horizontal plane, which is nice. Big reduction in the killer early room reflections in the higher frequencies, no nasty rippling combing effect as I lean left and right. Unfortunately, the imaging is very sensitive to position and shifts far left and right along with your head position. Still sounds good, but the image is way off, with all the L/R mixed channels sliding in the direction of your position relative to the center. The one thing the waveguide did not solve for me. I'm now very confused regarding how you achieve that effect with a speaker. All in all, I'm a happy camper, although I may never build another speaker cabinet again.
The speakers[s-9] sounded really nice, large banks or swathes of sound when called for, like with xylophones, which sounded similar to how they ought, hearing the diffuse ringing of the bells, and not just the striking of the mallets on the wood blocks, and pinpoint when called for, such as with cymbals and brighter instruments. I'm a complainer, privately and in the safe anonymity of online forums, and in this case, there was just nothing much to complain about except for the room's bass. [Even then, the setup’s bass was on the large, ground shaking, and bombastic side, which in retrospect is greatly preferred to the other way around – at least the way it sounded in the demo.] They were very detailed, and in the words of someone else, holographic. Again, to me, my mind couldn't associate the sound with the speakers because the projection of the sound was so large, that it couldn't have been coming from the speakers. With some light jazz trio work playing, listening from outside the auditorium, I could easily be fooled into thinking it was a real trio playing inside. Actually, one of the things that pleased me was how close the SP Tech AV-2 speaker kit I bought and assembled got me to the sound of the S-9. The S-9 did many things better. Despite the AV-2 kit's 8" driver MTM arrays, and a much, much larger visual presence, the S-9 played (much, much how many times can I say much?) louder effortlessly and presented things with much larger images (not lacking in specificity or precision, but with a larger presence, closer to real life.) Imaging was more detached from the speakers than the AV-2. It's hard to compare though because of the very different natures of the two listening environments and the fact that there was not one recording I was able to listen to on both systems. Nevertheless, the AV-2 kit got me close for a fraction of the cost. These speakers deserve a good listen with recordings you are very familiar with - hopefully the RMAF room will be treated for bass. It may be interesting to note that although my own system is reinforced with a subwoofer that is roughly -3db@20hz, very little music actually reaches that range; probably nothing that we listened to came closer than 41hz or so for the low E on a 4 string electric bass. Nevertheless, what bass there was had a much stronger presence, force, and impact in the S-9 demo. Some of the weakness of the bass in my system I attribute to my own room, which is not great, either, but that doesn't detract from the very dynamic bass in the S-9 demo. I would be more than happy to own the S-9 and experiment with bass traps and/or EQ in the demo room, if the room were mine.
Since these speakers are so heavy, I don't anticipate doing any A/B switching with the Timepieces, when they arrive in a few months. However, I am eager to hear the differences.