0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 23086 times.
There are some good suggestions here. Axiom might not be among them as they measure pretty poorly in some parts.FYI, I organized a $2k monitor speaker comparo a few years ago. You might find it interesting. Read about it here ...http://forums.audioholics.com/forums/threads/2010-great-northwest-gtg.67150/Format, protocols, measurements, and results start around page 5.Anything from Salk gets my vote, folks.
Can you please tell us what you mean by "measure" poorly in some parts? Axiom's manufacturing philosophy is all about the family of curves. Neutrality and linearity are paramount. They also have an in-house anechoic chamber to further these measurements which is impressive because many "higher" end vendors do not have one. I'm not saying they can complete head to head with the likes of Magico, PMC or Amphion for example but for what they are and the market they capture... yes, they belong here. BTW I attended a double blind listening exercise where Axiom's M3V3 went against B&W's diamond series stand mount (5 times the price of the M3). Audience was split 50/50 as to their preference. Quite extraordinary and very interesting. And this was not even Axiom's best bookshelf.
What does "family of curves" mean? I just hopped on their site; boxes and rectangles seem to be the family tree. I really like curvey speakers.
What does "family of curves" mean?
I also find it interesting that the audience was filled with (per Lofft) Axiom's most enthusiastic customers. (And only a 50% preference? ) Hmmm.....
The best small speaker I've heard so far is the Raidho D-1, I heard them at Command Performance A/V in Falls Church Va..They sound much bigger than they look and they seem to completely disappear into the re-created sound-stage. The speakers also pull off the magic trick of not sounding short in bass extension, reproducing an amazing amount of bass for their size even though the laws of physics have not actually been repealed. Scotty