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I compared their sound quality to a pair of brand new B&W 704 ($2800) and the used Ref3a were far less fatiguing.A friend who's an audiophile says don't bother with older speakers as the technology has improved dramatically to make most moderns speakers much better sounding at the same price point.Are people in agreement with this statement: that newer is better than older speakers?
Paul,whereas the MMs run the woofer full range, I think, I don't think this is a general philosophy of Ref 3A. Their M3, if I'm not mistaken, is a 4 way with complex design - KEF style clamshell isobarik woofers in dual chambers, "mid bass coupler", midrange and tweeter in the version I heard in '93. It sounded reasonably accurate, tonally, but dead - as most multi way high order crossover designs seem to, in my experience.
The real question here is knowing what you want. Obviously you don't have a price range nailed down. I don't know if the B&W or Ref 3A sound anything alike. What kinds of music do you listen to? How big is the room? What sonic attributes are you after? How loud do you listen? What speakers have you been listening to and what don't you like about them? What amp will you be using? I'd take a step back and maybe do some soul searching about this. Half the fun of being an audiophile is in the hunt.
Unless I missed it, no one mentioned the age of components in an older speaker. The problem is thru time voltage and current bombardment slowly renders a capacitor to the eventual value of 0 MFD. The effects on the mid-range and/or tweeters is that their effective cross-over point has been lowered by aging caps. Now they are expected to reproduce the entire spectrum which will certainly result in their failure. Do you have to worry about a 9 year old 3a, not yet....hopefully. I do think that when speakers age 20 years, all of the cross-over capacitors should be replaced. By the way, I have a couple of old Dynaco speakers ($89.00 in 1975) that will out-do many $1k speakers of today.W
The Sansui's look like they have old Heil Air Motion Tweeters....but they are described as 'horns' so probably not.If they were Heil's, they'd probably be worth every penny of that $242 they fetched on ebay recently
I'd disagree ... the big improvements have been tweeters than can handle incredibly low crossover points with shallow slopes and woofers with much lower distortion motors, higher excursion, and a linear Bl curve. You're right too, construction methods have come a long way in the last decade.
Really low cross-over frequencies for tweeters usually produces a more realistic presentation from a sonic perspective, but usually has one bad side effect; low power handeling. Some designs will comprimise somewhere in the middle, raising the cross-over a bit to gain more power handeling. Some manufacturers go for the 4th order steep cross-over, which can muck things up, like phase and time alignment. I want a new pair of speakers myself and these are issues I'm wrestling with, along with cost.w