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Back to the topic, I'm wondering if the B5 is the sweetheart of the line, the larger driver in the B6 often muddies the sound in many inexpensive speakers. The F5 is not receiving the same accolades as the B5, anyone compare the two bookshelves side by side?
You obviously haven't heard the ELAC line.
Interesting comments from a thoughtful crowd. With another day of listening to my new B6's, they do not fail to satisfy. However, I did swap back in my Dali Zensor 1 monitors, their lowest-cost speaker I believe or nearly so, and while the sound of the Dali's is not nearly as expansive as the B6's, the Dali's do have a greater sense of delicacy and poise (not very descriptive, I admit) than the B6's. Remember this is with about 35 hours on the ELAC's so take that into account. At any rate, AJ has created a hell of a speaker at its price point and after listening to 6 hours of classical music on the B6's today, they are very very enjoyable. As I listen to 98% jazz, I might be inclined to think that the B6's will truly fit the bill for a rocker and maybe the Dali's shine a bit more in the presentation of jazz. It is not fair to conclude anything until I get the B6's run in so there is that. And, as I sit here listening to them, I just smile at the fact that they only cost $300! The LF response of the B6's betters that from the Dali's by a fair margin and I think that aspect of the B6's sound has a lot of appeal.To the issue of buying US gear only, I appreciate patronizing US companies of all sorts and have done so. But those that say that they only buy US gear, the fact of the matter is that 90% of all consumer products are built overseas or at least most of their parts are. I doubt that hardly anyone can say that they have a flat screen TV sourced and built in the US, as an example. Does anybody have the cell phone or computer built in the US? Rather doubtful. On the other hand, lots of Toyota's are assembled in the US. So, it is an international economy and enjoy your participation in it. That is my take anyway. To the issue of tweaks to the new ELAC speakers, I will say that I have had a least a dozen pieces of gear tweaked over the years, going back to a Hafler amp and preamp in the 80's to my current Oppo 103 CD player. I nearly all cases, the improvement was sonically noticeable and rewarding. That said, almost never were the cost of the tweaks recoverable upon resale. If you have a legacy piece of gear, no worries. However, if you are like me, and have a penchant for swapping gear on a routine basis, the costs of the tweaks never ever pencils out. Tweaking the B6's with what Danny has in mind might or might not make sense unless you can do the tweak yourself, which I can not. In closing, it is a joy hooking up with you learned folks on the C&C forum as it took me many years to find this niche in the audio world. A parting thought, as a frame of reference, I reiterate my earlier comment that I much prefer the B6's to the KEF LS50's, the much heralded, but to my ears, a vastly over-rated speaker and difficult to drive. All the best, Whitestix
I did swap back in my Dali Zensor 1 monitors, their lowest-cost speaker I believe or nearly so, and while the sound of the Dali's is not nearly as expansive as the B6's, the Dali's do have a greater sense of delicacy and poise (not very descriptive, I admit) than the B6's.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts Whitestix. I absolutely love the Dali Zensor 1's. Treat em' right, and they'll give you GREAT tone!
I don't think the Elac Debut speakers will be giant killers, slaying speakers costing many times more. But I do think if you compare the Elacs to many other speakers in the sub-$1000 price range they will more than hold their own (at least based on my hearing them at a couple of the audio shows). It is no small feat selling a decent or good sounding speaker at the price point of the Elac Debut series.
Sir, I agree with your observation, particularly that ELAC has created such an excellent-sounding monitor for a small price. I keenly await a comparison between the B5 and B6 versions, and more particularly, a comparison of either of them to the KEF LS50's. If lots of folks prefer the ELACs to the $1500 KEFs, then they might be judged to be "slayers of speakers costing many times more". While I haven't had the KEF's in my system for a couple of years, my recollection is that the B6's are much more musical to my ears. The KEF's always were perceived by my ears as a being very aggressive and tapped out the ability of my then 175 wpc Plinius integrated amp to drive them to decent SPL's. In contrast, my 35 wpc Music Fidelity integrated amp drives the B6's to thunderous SPL's with clarity and with ease. YMMV, of course. Sorry for drifting off topic and I again say I agree with the thrust of your comment. With the robust offerings of sub-$500 monitors on the market, it bewilders me why every home and dorm room in the US doesn't have a pair of such speakers.
They are nice sounding speakers for the price but not at the same level vs the LS50 imo. There's no getting around the fact the ELAC uses an inexpensive tweeter and good tweeters aren't cheap. Not that the ELAC tweeter sound bad, it's fine... probably very good for the price of the speaker but the LS50's concentric drivers are far better imo.
Maybe the drivers are better but the sound not as good as the Elac. That's why Mr. Jones is so good creating this kind of sound with inexpensive drivers.
Andrew Jones is an awesome engineer, not a miracle maker. Enjoy the Elacs for what they are : Budget speakers that perform highly in many parameters similar to more expensive speakers. Stop being so concerned about their place in the market. If you bought them and enjoy them, then what else really matters?