I'm still very disappointed that I was not able to attend the show. A family committment prevented me from joining in on all of the fun. Seeing and hearing audio gear in person is probably the best way to make a decision or an assessment regarding which gear sounds best (to each of us and our highly subjective views) but shows can be tricky. If someone is unfamiliar with a piece of gear or a manufacturer, they seem to grade very strictly, and they are quick and comfortable giving negative feedback. People often say things like, "those speakers sounded awful", or "speaker XXX totally stomped all over speaker YYY" when they don't know the manufacturer or if they don't have a relationship with the manufacturer. When their favorite manufacturer has a room that sounds bad, or that others criticize, they are quick to attribute it to bad synergy with associated equipment, bad room or that the speakers were new and did not have time to break in. Others only make negative comments about brands that are safe to criticize and do not comment negatively on their fanboy brands. This is common human nature and I'm not sure people realize they are even doing it. In many cases, the reasons for not commenting negatively are legitimate. Many rooms are not suitable for certain pieces (large speakers often sound bad in small rooms and bass is often difficult to control in small rooms, etc.) and manufacturers are often forced to team up with other manufacturers (for budgetary or logistical reasons) whose equipment may not play nice with their stuff. People are quick to defend their favorites but do not extend the same courtesy to brands they don't know or more mainstream brands that are "safe" to criticize. There is probably no way around this but I hope people take this into consideration and do not substitute second hand accounts of people who audition gear at shows in place of actual auditions. The negative comments (and positive comments for that matter) are often not even handed. Just my opinion...J
Steve, Aurora's have amazing bass. To me the bass sounded way more powerful then the Breeze or Cirrus.I did not have a real long listen, but they sounded pretty amazing to me. I would say that maybe they did not have the detail and refinement of the Breeze or Cirrus, but maybe they would sound even better in a bigger room. The fit and finish of the Aurora was outstanding. I would think buying the stands would be mandatory due to their size and shape. At $2750 with stands I thought they were a steal. So if you are looking for a good to great all arounder , and don't want to add a subwoofer, I feel like the Aurora is a steal at their price point.Todd
Selah AudioRick (Selah Audio) brought a pair of bi-amp speakers he named the Gamechanger ($10-12,000).Don Keele of Audio Artistry was also in the room explaining the technology behind the design and also his CBT36 kit ($2,000) that is being offered from Parts Express. I have heard several line array speakers in the past and not been moved by them. I really liked the appearance and size in person. I understand that some will not understand. I apologize for the poor phone pictures I posted. Hopefully there will be some high resolution photos posted here or on Selah audio website to see how high quality the workmanship is on the speakers.This system was spectacular with all types of music I heard on them over the course of both days. These were built as a fully active pair with electronic crossover and eq duties being handled by a DEQX. Multichannel amp and source from Marantz. The dynamics I heard on this system were in another league from most systems I have ever experienced. This system had a jump factor that has to be experienced. I have to agree with the name Rick gave them Several days later I simply cannot get the sound of this system out of my audio memory.If I was starting a new reference system these would likely be the speaker I would build around.-Nick
Thanks for making some good points. I think it's a lame excuse for a speaker manufacturer to blame the front end equipment. Most of the audible problems with these shows are one of three things (or a combination of) - room acoustics, recordings, and the speakers. The bass issues can be just as bad (or even worse) in the larger exhibit rooms. I would be hesitant to criticize a system that sounds bad if I don't know the recording. The system might be really good and just exposing flaws in the source material. I had a few visitors to our room bring in music that had obvious problems (miking,compression,etc). If I was a listener and judged the speakers based on those tracks my comments certainly wouldn't have been positive.
Did anyone get the specs on the Aurora? Sensitivity, Freq response, size, etc. The idea of an 8" woofer in a stand-mount has some appeal.
Beautiful measurements Pete. Wow. Those are in room folks. I'd guess that ~200Hz dip of -5dB is likely due to the room. That's a good deal smaller in-room dip than you usually see in such measurements (for example, in the most recent Stereophile in-room measurements of the $7k Joseph Pulsars see the trough from ~200Hz that is about 5dB down until close to 100Hz, where it DIPS again to -10 dB, before climbing to a +5dB peak around ~50Hz. This was for a speaker that Fremer was raving about). And great off-axis measurements. Very very nice. And I thought I was a fan before seeing those measurements. 1100Hz crossover point to boot? Damn. OK gotta stop raving before someone starts hurling "fanboy" accusations at me.
Pete, how would you compare the sound of the Aurora to the Cirrus?