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I'm sort of in the market for a new pair of speakers. Yeah, I got that itch. In my search I've stumbled across the Ronins many times and been impressed with what I've read and the theories behind their design, especially their OB setup. Unfortunately, they are too expensive for me and probably too big for my listening room, hence my interest in the Sentinel. Has anyone here besides Paul listened to them? I was also wondering if they would work well with my room and amp. My room is long and narrow, about 10.5' x 18, but I can pull them out into the room as far as I want. My amp, a Jungson JA-88D, is a pure class A design that puts out 80 watts and plenty of current.I currently own a pair of Tyler Audio Taylos, which, while great, are lacking a little in the bass department. I've tried a sub before, but prefer them without as I was never able to setup the sub properly. Am I wrong to believe that the Sentinels will best them in the bass dept. in addition to providing the spaciousness and midrange clarity OB speakers are known for? I'm also a sucker for environemtally friendly designs; I think the bamboo looks killer .Any thoughts, comments, concerns or experiences would be much appreciated.
Hiya Paul,The Sentinel's are up right after I finish writing about an amp I have in house. I'm nearly done done with that article (I need about another week to tidy things up with it). Once I put fingers to keyboard, it will take about 3 weeks to actually write.
Thanks for the feedback. Does anyone have a picture of the Sentinel in bamboo? I've seen the Ronin in bamboo but never the Sentinel. I've only seen the stock photos of it on the Nomad Audio website which look great, but I don't think it's in the bamboo finish.
Do you get paid to write reviews? I was always curious about this field of audio because a person that knew a few writers said they got nothing really...I hope it isn't true and that somehow there is compensation for you and the many others that make valueable contributions to the audio community.What amp is under review, btw?Quote from: Scott F. on 5 May 2007, 01:56 pmHiya Paul,The Sentinel's are up right after I finish writing about an amp I have in house. I'm nearly done done with that article (I need about another week to tidy things up with it). Once I put fingers to keyboard, it will take about 3 weeks to actually write.
Quote from: Audioexcels on 5 May 2007, 02:08 pmDo you get paid to write reviews? I was always curious about this field of audio because a person that knew a few writers said they got nothing really...I hope it isn't true and that somehow there is compensation for you and the many others that make valueable contributions to the audio community.What amp is under review, btw?Quote from: Scott F. on 5 May 2007, 01:56 pmHiya Paul,The Sentinel's are up right after I finish writing about an amp I have in house. I'm nearly done done with that article (I need about another week to tidy things up with it). Once I put fingers to keyboard, it will take about 3 weeks to actually write.Hi Audioexcels,Let me start with the easy one first. The amp is the SoundQuest SQ84. It's a push pull 6V6 that also doubles as a headphone amp. Regarding getting paid for reviews, yes I do get paid. Steve Rochlin, owner and editor of EnjoyTheMusic pays me $100 per article (music articles are $25). Considering the time I invest in writing each article, the $100 literally works out to about a buck per hour (for me anyway). If you've had the misfortune of reading any of my stuff, I suffer from what I call 'diarrhea of the fingers'. I've often been heard screaming "Help!, I'm typing and I can't stop!". For some reason my articles turn out to be (usually) more than eight to ten pages in Word (before I add pics). The average internet writers only do between four and five pages. Unfortunately, I tend to labor over my articles. It literally takes me weeks to relate into words what I want to communicate about the piece of gear. For me, writing is a very slow and deliberate process. Very, very seldom have I ever 'cranked out' an article.Some of the magazines pay more, some don't pay at all. When I was writing for TNT-Audio, we didn't receive anything. I understand that the print mags pay along the lines of $1000 (or so) per article. Trouble is, becoming a regular writer for them is next to impossible. Their 'stable writers' are lucky to have one article per year published. When you have a passion like audio combined with writing, you need an outlet. Publishing just one article per year would kill most writers with a passion. So, we choose to write for guys like editor Steve. He edits with a very light touch. He lets me write pretty much whatever I want. I've never seen him hack chunks out of my articles. He just spell checks, fixes punctuation and on occasion cuts down my run-on sentences into something more readable. All in all, I do this simply out of the love of music and high end gear. The money I make writing barely covers the additional electric I use because of all the gear I have.