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I got the sense of a good deal of collegiality. Mark is very open minded. He considered every idea I passed on from forum participants, even the ones I thought he'd summarily reject. And I got the sense that he takes everyone's views into account when he makes a decision. He'd say things like "When I raised this point, Wendell said ---, and Jim said ----, and so we decided to go with it." And this is true of everyone in the company, not just an inner circle. He said that when they were considering adding the supertweeter to the 1.7, he'd go with it only if everyone who worked on the factory floor liked it better than the version without. And they listen to customers and critics as well.Another thing I noticed was the great respect everyone there has for long-time employees, with their knowledge and lore. There's so much skill in an operation like this. When a valued employee retires or falls ill, it can leave a hole that's difficult to fill.
I owned Maggies in the late 70s and early 80s and the then dealer in Syracuse, NY was very enthusiastic about Mr. Winey and his passion for the product. I then joined the Logan camp for 30 years and stayed with them for many of the same reasons Josh mentioned about Magnepan. Unfortunately, Logan lost the founder and has seemed to have also lost that passion as a company. That and the direction of its products convinced me to look at Magnepan again and I am glad to return.
Josh:I'm feeling a sense of slight guilt as I trolled the asylum and saw many of your posts regarding your magnepan visit. I loved your comment about the website that purports QC horrors that simply are not true. Of little or no surprise is the down to earth folks that run Magnepan, Jim & Mark Winey and Wendell Diller. It makes me feel good about myself insomuch that I own speakers made in the USA from a company that cares and puts forth true high-end from their entry level to their flagship model at prices that working class stiffs, like me, can afford.My 2.5's are the center piece of my system even though they cost the least!Jim
I think tri center was the most interesting, and it has the most bizarre effect -- when you listen to it, stereo stops working until the next day! When Wendell warned me about that, I didn't believe it, I was thinking "Eh, I'll just listen through whatever it is." And then I heard it and started switching back and forth between two channel and tri center with the remote, and sure enough, the two channel stereo shriveled up into a little misshapen thing. It sounded almost like mono. I could still hear all the tonal qualities of the 3.7's (superb, BTW, I see what the fuss is about), but the image reminded me of the Star Trek episode where the witch and warlock turn out to be little squealing things from Alpha Centauri. Wendell says the stereo illusion starts working again the next day, and I guess he's right, because I was just listening to something on my computer speakers and they sound OK.And I loved the Mini Maggies. All that advertising guff about them being like having a 3.7 on your desk? It's completely true. Mark stuck a CD in his player, pressed play, and my jaw dropped. It's still dropped, several days later.
Why stop at the tri center, why not go all the way to multi channel audio? Magnepan claims that the tri center sounds significantly better than stereo. Those who have heard the tri center system concur. I cannot believe that Magnepan would say that multi channel audio with front, center and rear speakers is not better than stereo. I suspect that they might say that multi channel audio with front, center and rear speakers is better than tri center and stereo systems.Nobody disputes that multi channel audio is significantly better for home theater than stereo or mono entertainment systems. Nobody disputes that multiple speakers are significantly better for car audio than stereo or mono speaker systems.So the last bastion for stereo superiority seems to be the audiophile market. The reasons why this is so include the expense of quality multi channel audio (3 times the cost of stereo) and the space and room arrangement issues of multi channel audio.My belief is that multi channel audio with multiple Maggies will almost always sound superior to stereo Maggies so long as the electronics for each Maggie speaker is of equal quality. Unfortunately when most audiophiles hear multi channel audio at audio shows or dealer showrooms, it is with electronics such as A/V receivers, HDMI or Class B and lower electronics that they would never consider using or being completely satisfied with for stereo.Of course the other obstacle or issue for many audiophiles is the vast majority of music and sources are stereo and mono, not multi channel so multi channel audio is not worth the expense or effort. That may be true but IMO if you want the best you have to look at multi channel.
I have to disagree with most of what you posted. The idea of an audiophile home system is to as closely as possible, replicate live music. Quite frankly, I cannot recall a time when I was seated in the middle of the stage, nor would want to. Take that back, I saw Pink Floyd and they had a 64 speaker surround sound system, but it didn't catch on. More to the point, one can acheive a magnificant three dimensional soundstage with two planars, I know as I have. There is no hole in the center, in fact the center is very balanced and full. Car systems are unique and do not render a valid comparison for too many reasons to discuss. Surround sound is fine for movies and such, but not for home stereo IMHO.There is a place for multi-channel with planars for home entertainment and Magnepan is a player in that market and rightfully so. I do agree that most Home Entertainment Stores don't have high-end Multi-Channel setups and I suspect it is because they know that only a rather small percentage of their customer base would fancy spending big bucks for such a system. Tri-channel is viable for most conventional box speakers that do not produce the soundstage of planars. One thing for sure, Tri-channel Magnepans would make it a hell of lot easier in the speaker placement to get that holographic soundstage that can be at times elusive with two speakers. Jim
Where Magnepan and I might disagree, is that they strongly feel that the Tri-Center concept is better even when listening to stereo sources. I don’t know but in general I am against using any digital manipulation for analog sources, except for subwoofer frequencies. Perhaps for 16/44.1 digital I might be more receptive to experiment.
I keep forgetting, did you get to listen to that all foil MMG that Wendell threw out there as a prototype that won't make it into production?