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Albireo:Can you share how you are liking the Mini's over the Kef's, and vise versa?Thanks, Rocket_Ronny
In the 201/2's case, that means a bit of a treble lift (wow, duh!). On the flip side, the Minis will appear to have less (fake?) air if you're used to that sort of thing.- The KEFs are the more transparent speaker by a hair -- although very hard to know whether this is a due to some slight frequency response difference -- but I simply can't shake the impression that I'm hearing a metal-dome tweeter. Kinda wish KEF had used something that moved the resonance a bit higher up (perhaps beryllium?). Nevertheless, the KEFs' treble is easily characterized as sweet, and as I mentioned I find the 201/2s the more detailed of the two. That's saying something, as those with SP Tech speakers will know!
It has to be said that the KEFs center image does move extremely linearly across the stage as you move to one side: I don't know which presentation is technically correct.
Double,Is there a frequency graph on the Minis yet? Maybe we could do a comparison that way.Mike
Nice write up! Very informative. Give us more when your ready.Mike btw I heard the full range KEFs, the Ref series and they sound awesome. My impression was that the tweeter sounded very natural. And the build quality was freaking unbelievable! I only spent about twenty minutes with them, but I was curious right away if the tweet would have a negative effect. From what Ive read you can adjust the high frequency on the back, yes?Mike
Seems to me that a speaker with more limited treble dispersion will by default be able to keep the center image more stable as you move off-axis, but that isn't saying which way is more right or wrong!
Quote from: Albireo on 21 Aug 2008, 03:18 pmSeems to me that a speaker with more limited treble dispersion will by default be able to keep the center image more stable as you move off-axis, but that isn't saying which way is more right or wrong! I don't think so.... Having owned Acoustat's back in the early eighties, these speakers were no merely limited in treble dispersion, but extremely directional from top to bottom - and without a waveguide at that! Yet they were known for being a "head in the vice" listening experience. Any lateral movement of your head would cause the image to radically shift. They were not the type of speaker that could fill a room with sound. Having that degree of directionality, room interactions were kept to an absolute minimum.
Maggies aren't in the same class or category as electrostatics. Also they have a much wider dispersion.Extreme directionality, could it be something fundamental to electrostatic speakers? Perhaps, after all when the Quad ESL 63 debuted it's claim to fame was it had a wide dispersion. But on the few occasions I heard them I wasn't impressed. Was it because the wider dispersion led to room interaction?
It seems marketing campaigns along with the critics of the time duped people into thinking the wider the dispersion the better. Now we know that ain't true.
VMPS still holds true to the "wide dispersion" ideal.