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Hello all,I have a question for you guys who have heard most of the speakers in Salk's lineup.I'm debating on a purchase between several of his speakers and I'm just kind of weighing my options:Firstly, have any of you heard his HTS speaker lineup? How would they compare to HT 2's, HT3's, and the HT2 sealed monitors? I know their bass extension won't be that great and they would be crossed over with a quality sub so I'm mainly curious about how they compare from the 70 hz on up range.My big debate is whether to go with free standing speakers or whether I can get fantastic sound from an in wall Salk setup.Thanks for any information you might have.
For multiple speakers the HTS series is a very economical option, and the in-wall version has been optimized for that placement. If that appeals to you, or works better for your room, then I think you will find this speaker very satisifying. Due to the break-up of Tymphany and the fact that the original Vifa woofer is no longer available we have switched to the SEAS CA18RLY woofer. This the big brother to the woofer used in the Songtower, and in my opinion it is a real step up from the orginal woofer, especially in midrange resolution. Even though the CA18 is a larger woofer than the CA15 in the songtower the use of a modest sized sealed box limits the bass extension in the HTS speakers, so use of a subwoofer is recommended, if not intended for the HTS system, so I would factor that in if you want a powerful home theather system. I lived with the current HTS design in my own system for a while and found it to be a very satisfying performer, and one of very high value for the price, especially when it was running with my subwoofer. In fact, the little MT version makes a dynamite minispeaker all by itself. The MTM offers greater sensitivity and dynamics though.Jeff B.
Quote from: Jeff B. on 20 Sep 2009, 07:10 pmFor multiple speakers the HTS series is a very economical option, and the in-wall version has been optimized for that placement. If that appeals to you, or works better for your room, then I think you will find this speaker very satisifying. Due to the break-up of Tymphany and the fact that the original Vifa woofer is no longer available we have switched to the SEAS CA18RLY woofer. This the big brother to the woofer used in the Songtower, and in my opinion it is a real step up from the orginal woofer, especially in midrange resolution. Even though the CA18 is a larger woofer than the CA15 in the songtower the use of a modest sized sealed box limits the bass extension in the HTS speakers, so use of a subwoofer is recommended, if not intended for the HTS system, so I would factor that in if you want a powerful home theather system. I lived with the current HTS design in my own system for a while and found it to be a very satisfying performer, and one of very high value for the price, especially when it was running with my subwoofer. In fact, the little MT version makes a dynamite minispeaker all by itself. The MTM offers greater sensitivity and dynamics though.Jeff B.That's what I was kinda leaning towards actually.I was thinking about picking up a 5 channel HTS setup and using it upstairs for the time being and eventually replacing the front channels with HT3's and an HTC or something along those lines in my next place.I just wasn't sure how good of a performer the HTS is because frankly you just don't hear much about them. Is the HTS MTM's a serious downgrade compared to say HT2's?