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I'm curious what changes were made.
If it were me I would do nothing until I heard the Sonodyne SRP400...
What he read ...or what he failed to comprehend?
I believe this is the thread in which Dennis Murphy measured the speakers in question and was grilled by a bunch of clowns. Which one if these jokers is you (I assume you use another name on the site)?http://www.avsforum.com/forum/89-speakers/1504045-cambridge-aero-2-bookshelf-speaker-4.html#/forumsite/3207/topics/1504045?page=4
I was looking at those a few years ago. Active speakers are always a safe bet in the studio.
This is the measurements that Brent Butterworth took this year, of the tower and bookshelf speakershttp://hometheaterreview.com/images/Aero-FR.jpghttp://hometheaterreview.com/assets_c/2014/05/Cambridge%20Aero%20measurements2-12371.php
Sorry, I trust Dennis Murphy more than those guys. From what I recall, these speakers have restricted highs and very limited upper dispersion (closed in with small sweet spot). I'd love to hear a shoutout between the little Murphy modded Pioneer speajers and the Aero2s. It would be more fun if everyone was required to listen to both speakers off axis.
Sonodyne now is one of the few "cheaper" monitors which has stuck with class AB amplifiers. Most of the other economy monitors have gone class D.
Cast aluminum enclosures too, which seem to work good for Genelec.Steve
I guess you are referring to an earlier model of Sonodyne...
Them measurements also show restricted highs - it was not put there as a contradiction.He even noted it in his review about the soft and low level highsI auditioned the proto type AA monitors - I know they have a good tweeter.I already know from communicating with someone, about how the 2 speakers compared.Now do you want to guess the results?This would be the off-axis measurements from Dennis of the Aerohttp://www.avsforum.com/photopost/data/2311750/2/2e/2e6b6a9b_Newvs50hoursoff-axis.jpeg
True. It seems, though, that these trounce similarly priced alternatives, such as Genelec, KRK, JBL, Yamaha, Dynaudio, Alesis, M-Audio, Mackie and even the cheapest Geithain–all the popular contenders.
Maybe the Cambridge speakers needed a couple thousand more hours break in! Measurements don't lie,, but I'm sure our audiophool friends can hear things modern science unable to measure or capture.
So have you heard any of the Cambridge Speakers with BMR drivers?
Nope, but I don't fancy speakers with limited high end dispersion and FR. If that's your preference, go crazy on the Cambridge speakers.
If it were me I would do nothing until I heard the Sonodyne SRP400. They are causing a massive buzz right now in pro monitoring circles and apparently possess all the characteristics you mention in spades. Don't let the apparently limited LF extension fool you, apparently they sound huge and, most importantly, the results translate to other speakers. $750 a pair. Sweetwater is sold out (no surprise) but more are on the way.Googling will reveal raves in Gearslutz.com threads and elsewhere.Here's a comparison between the SRP 400 and some other highly esteemed (and good) monitors, like PSI and Quested.https://www.gearslutz.com/board/high-end/925003-new-sonodyne-srp-line-vs-psi-vs-quested-vs-old-sonodyne-impressions.html