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Waiting to hear impressions of anyone who attends. From others who've heard the Phantom at demonstrations, the summation seems to be that it sounds impactful and impressive, but they aren't sure it will play with the detail and subtlety that expensive separates will. If any of you can get any sense of this, I'd like to hear it.
If you are close to Seattle, head over to Definitive Audio for their special 40th Anniversary Celebration this Thursday from 5-9pm and hear the Phantoms. Stereophile and many other company reps will be there also. Check this one out. http://www.stereophile.com/content/music-matters-10-seattle-thursday
That comment about the music having a feeling of being "forced out" sounds like a byproduct of the DSP correction as well as the amplifiers having to deal with the inefficient drivers. In HT situation and casual listening, it might be a minor quibble BUT for critical listening, it may be a deal breaker.....Meaning for anyone used to a decent pair of speakers and excellent sources, it will fall below what is acceptable. Nice first impression. I think Devialet will sell a whole bunch of them. I wish that their release will be successful as it will only bring the price point for this technology down for many of us.
The mid range driver is key in a three way system and I have seen only one reference to that in the Phantom. I had presumed that the mid driver was a ring radiator of some sort around the tweeter, but behind the grill. I did see one illustration though where it appeared the arrow pointing to the mid driver went to what looks like a hard plastic ring about 5" diameter and about 1" wide surrounding the grill but flush with the outside surface, and looking superficially like an extension of the cabinet surface. If that's true, I'm not surprised that it at least sounds unusual.I just re-visited a review site linked to earlier in this thread, I think, and there are some significant new comments added from people who have heard this speaker, starting around Feb 19:http://www.digitalaudioreview.net/2015/01/the-devialet-phantom-is-a-new-frontier-best-of-ces-2015/
Well "Mono and Stereo" does have some very good photos. Most of the pages don't qualify as reviews. More like information sheets.
I'm very interested. The price isn't high at all. For less than $4500 you get stereo speakers, amps, DAC, bluetooth, Wi-Fi, etc. and you don't need interconnects or speaker cables. All very neat and compact. Even if these don't outperform $50,000 worth of separates and speakers, they still certainly represent an unprecedented bargain. If one of you guys buy my horns, I'm in.
Found a worthwhile review at Slashgear.com with lots of images. Most intriguing, lots of features to like (active, coaxial, opposing woofers, etc.) but my concerns are:1.) How well the electronics hold up to those incredible sound pressures inside the cabinet and microphonic feedback issues.2.) Ideal room position for generating bass is not the same as for mids/highs and how would it accommodate additional subs (swarm)?3.) The built-in DAC becoming obsolete long before the rest of the speaker.
Here is a fairly detailed review from Wired Magazine: http://www.wired.com/2015/06/review-devialet-phantom-2/