An evening with XVX/Gryphon/DCS/Air force 1

JiminGa

Well-Known Member
May 16, 2023
184
217
48
65
I finally had the chance to listen to my friends set up which has been in the works for almost 2 years now. He built a 22 X 35 foot room on to his house specifically for this setup. As you can imagine a fully custom construction can run way over time and in this case it definitely did. All I can say is man it was worth it. I don't want to get onto any direct comparisons which might start a fight so I'm going to concentrate on other aspects of system design which come into play here. His set up includes: Wison XVX and dual Subsonic subwoofers. Gryphon Apex monos on the XVX and Gryphon Mephisto monos on the subs. Gryphon Commander preamp. DAgostino phono stage. Full DCS Vivaldi Apex stack. Tech Das Airfare One with Graham Phantom Elite 3 and Lyra Etna. Transparent Magnum Opus cables throughout. 3 Transparent power conditioners. Gryphon power zone. 5 top of the line HRS racks. The room uses RPG Bad panels, Modex plate and Vicoustic DC3 diffusers. I calculated about 2.1 million in equipment alone!
My first take away is that if you are going to choose to purchase XVX please don't shoe horn them into an undersized room. What these speakers do best is to produce an unparalleled scale of music reproduction which will fill the space all the way to the front wall behind them, to the ceiling and all the way to the sidewalls. Why constrict it if that is design intent of the manufacturer? In this case the soundstage was a good 10 feet deep and 20 feet wide. It is amazing for full orchestra or any reproduction of an event which covers that much ground. The soundstage is also quite tall so music comes at you as if from a stage above your head. This is awesome if that is the venue you are reproducing. Listening to Hugh Masekela " Coal Train" was a revelation. Now, unfortunately, you can't undo the scale. When listening to Sarah Vaughn "The very thought of you" and Shirley Horn "Beautiful Love" its a little strange when they are 8 feet tall. I also did not particularly care for Neil Young Live at Massey Hall which is a small venue solo acoustic show. The tonality, however, was excellent. Whether you love these speakers or not will depend upon the kind of music you listen to, the room they are in and the setup.
Subs vs no subs? If you want the full scale of an orchestra or you want to pound out some metal get the subs. Two of them. If you listen exclusively to acoustic jazz, vocalists or mostly lo fi music don't. You lose a little bit of the midrange purity. This set up was done by Peter and then tweaked by experts by the "Sumiko" method. Its an awesome dial. Mind blowing. We went back and forth with and without subs on multiple tracks. For my money I'd buy them and use them when called for. Scale and concussive force is what this is all about. If that's not your thing probably look elsewhere. If it is you've come to the right place. While on the subject of set up my feeling is that there are only a handful of people capable of getting the most out something like this. Spend the money and get someone like Stirling to dial it in. If you don't you'll never know what you're leaving on the table.
The importance of electronics. Wow. Just holy ____! Ive heard XVX with D'Agostino and to say the Gryphon Apex monos crush them is an understatement.. You will set your speakers on fire before you begin to touch the limits of these things. Just endless, pure, refined liquid power. Absolute resolution. Amazing.The Commander preamp is excellent. I'm sure Dartzeel or other fine preamps would work but there is a great synergy with the Gryphon combo. If you haven't heard the Apex do yourself a favor and seek out a listen. You will not be disappointed.
Analog vs digital. This was fun. The most important determination of which I liked better had more to do with the quality of the digital file and the Lp pressing. When fed excellent source material both are amazing. On balance the Air force one felt more relaxed and natural. This was evident especially on Dean Martin "If you were the only girl" where we had excellent recordings both ways. If you have one or the other I wouldn't sweat the differences. Done well they are both great.
Gryphons new power zone vs. Transparent Opus power conditioners. I couldn't switch them in and out. I can only tell you that he likes some things about each that he likes.He's still deciding.
Cables. Oh boy. 250k in cables. at least. I'm very familiar with transparent having owned XL and Magnum Opus. They are important and they do make a difference. I wouldn't necessarily go in this direction but they give a very controlled relaxed presentation. If you like this they may be for you. If not there are a lot of other great cables out there. Some far less costly.
Isolation. I used to be a real skeptic until I sat for several hours while one piece at a time was added. Now i couldn't do without it. HRS is expensive but they make a huge difference. The rack. The isolation platform. The feet. The dampeners. To me these are essential to getting the absolute most out of a system like this.
I had a great time listening to music for hours. Most of our time was spent exchanging musical choices occasionally punctuated by technical questions. I loved it. I'm going back in a few months to listen to some new things coming. Summarizing my thoughts about what I felt and learned: 1) match your speakers to your room. No square pegs in round holes. 2) pay to get the very best to nail the set up. It should take several days to do right. 3) Subs are awesome-sometimes 3) great digital and great analog are both great. It's about the recordings. Not everything has a great digital file. 4) All choices come with compromises. Choose the speakers which fit your listening preferences. Reproducing the scale of a full orchestra will not necessarily be optimal for small format recordings. 4) Not all amps are the same. Period. I don't care what ASR says. Go listen to Apex and let me know what you think. 5) Yes. Everything matters. The only question is how much and for how much. 6) isolation is not a tweek. Its important.
We all spend too much time trying to say what's best under all circumstances for all people. If you don't agree you are uninformed. That simply is not possible given that we all have our own path to happiness. All the gear choices we make are just tools to achieve that happiness. That said if you are a full orchestra fan or love bombastic concussive music I don't know how you'd top this though Its not for everyone. Its not about the XVX per se its about the system the room and the set up. Ive heard them sound distinctly average in other set ups but give them the room the set up and the electronics and its like opening a fire hose which previously was just trickling along. It is absolutely mind blowing. I think very few people actually know what the XVX is actually capable of. That includes 99% of owners. All of this is just my opinion. No offense intended. No hidden agenda. I just wanted to share my experience.
 
I heard Martys system. Similar and excellent. Gryphon/Wilson play well together.

A well set up room is so important. It confounds me how so many people have such strong opinions, yet their personal system is in a living room stuffed in a corner?????? Sure, I'm one too.

I'm being a party pooper. I scratch my head over Transparent power conditioners. Heard them. Garbage. Makes me wonder about Gryphon Power Zone if owner can't decide.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Alrainbow
I heard Martys system. Similar and excellent. Gryphon/Wilson play well together.

A well set up room is so important. It confounds me how so many people have such strong opinions, yet their personal system is in a living room stuffed in a corner?????? Sure, I'm one too.

I'm being a party pooper. I scratch my head over Transparent power conditioners. Heard them. Garbage. Makes me wonder about Gryphon Power Zone if owner can't decide.
The room issue is a real thing. Looking at members rooms (and most reviewers) they really have no way to know what their system could/should sound like. The problem is if you can’t listen to your system in a top room with a top set up you don’t have any frame of reference to judge anything by. Power conditioners are a mixed bag and I’ll leave it at that.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Young Skywalker
The room issue is a real thing. Looking at members rooms (and most reviewers) they really have no way to know what their system could/should sound like. The problem is if you can’t listen to your system in a top room with a top set up you don’t have any frame of reference to judge anything by. Power conditioners are a mixed bag and I’ll leave it at that.
I dont get the scale and size thing. This is a major negative for me. I don't know who did the set up nor why they have voices that are way to large, this should not happen . There are of course some recording that will sound like that but most should not. I have said many times that room/system/setup are all equally important to get a great result so that is no surprise and have a large enough room to set up a large speaker system is for the most part very important as huge speakers in a small room is very difficult to make work.
Many times at shows one sees speakers 20 plus feet apart with voices that are as large as the Holland tunnel and people love it, not me as that is as far from real sounding as one can get. Size and scale are incredibly import for reality IMO and 10 foot wide violins and female voices dont do that for me. I dont know if this is a characteristic of the speakers but each time I have heard them I have noticed this.
 
I dont get the scale and size thing. This is a major negative for me. I don't know who did the set up nor why they have voices that are way to large, this should not happen . There are of course some recording that will sound like that but most should not. I have said many times that room/system/setup are all equally important to get a great result so that is no surprise and have a large enough room to set up a large speaker system is for the most part very important as huge speakers in a small room is very difficult to make work.
Many times at shows one sees speakers 20 plus feet apart with voices that are as large as the Holland tunnel and people love it, not me as that is as far from real sounding as one can get. Size and scale are incredibly import for reality IMO and 10 foot wide violins and female voices dont do that for me. I dont know if this is a characteristic of the speakers but each time I have heard them I have noticed this.
Totally agree. I saw that too and wanted to aay something but I had already let loose one pile. I have heard that over sized imaging. Its not natural and real. After a while it seems unnatural and offputting. My stereo actually did something different but as problematic at one time. The horn was too low and every song sounded like you were sitting in a balcony looking down on the performance. I put a 9" tall 70lb block of wood under the speaker and OMG. So much better. I bring it up to Ze'ev once in a while. I ask to see them offer a elevating frame accessory that would bolt to the bottom of the existing frame. Crickets. A miss on PAP part.
 
This system did size very well, both large (extraordinarily convincing on orchestra) and small:

 
The room issue is a real thing. Looking at members rooms (and most reviewers) they really have no way to know what their system could/should sound like. The problem is if you can’t listen to your system in a top room with a top set up you don’t have any frame of reference to judge anything by. Power conditioners are a mixed bag and I’ll leave it at that.
I still have a major reviewer that has stalled on letting me rebuild his power. His room sucks. His power is even worse. Yet he told me he had to finish 2 speaker reviews before he did anything????????

I have said it on other threads. When I heard the Estelon in Fremers room, Ed and I talked over dinner and though, yea, Ok. After his power was correct it was OMG, what a fabulous speaker.

Reviewers like to claim their baseline gives a consistent representstion of what they hear over the years. But I'm calling Bull$i11 on that. They don't know what they don't know. Another reason to take what reviewers say with a dose of skepticism.

I find more value in a report from fellow forum members like this one. I agree the Grypon/Wilson combo is excellent. I agree the room is critical as well as setup. I agree good digital is right there with good vinyl when the source material is premium. And I recognize the issues with said system that can be worked out over time. All great systems evolve. Especially when outside ears are willing to give critical feedback instead of shying away and just saying it sounds great. I don't think the OP meant to highlight issues, but he did. And its a positive thing as the owner of the system may digest it and use it in a position way. Or he might feel he's done and likes where he's at. Personal preference is just that. We all have our own.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Al M.
I still have a major reviewer that has stalled on letting me rebuild his power. His room sucks. His power is even worse. Yet he told me he had to finish 2 speaker reviews before he did anything????????

I have said it on other threads. When I heard the Estelon in Fremers room, Ed and I talked over dinner and though, yea, Ok. After his power was correct it was OMG, what a fabulous speaker.

Reviewers like to claim their baseline gives a consistent representstion of what they hear over the years. But I'm calling Bull$i11 on that. They don't know what they don't know. Another reason to take what reviewers say with a dose of skepticism.

I find more value in a report from fellow forum members like this one. I agree the Grypon/Wilson combo is excellent. I agree the room is critical as well as setup. I agree good digital is right there with good vinyl when the source material is premium. And I recognize the issues with said system that can be worked out over time. All great systems evolve. Especially when outside ears are willing to give critical feedback instead of shying away and just saying it sounds great. I don't think the OP meant to highlight issues, but he did. And its a positive thing as the owner of the system may digest it and use it in a position way. Or he might feel he's done and likes where he's at. Personal preference is just that. We all have our own.

I don’t think these blanket statements are helpful. It really depends on the reviewer. I have found that, with some exception, reviewers have more experience than the rest of the community.
 
A good reviewer has his reference , dont knock it totally , anything can be a reference if you understand the task at hand , better than or less than, more so or less so !

It only really becomes an issue when you think your reference is” the” reference...

To completely change the setup in the middle of reviews is the real issue..
 
  • Like
Reactions: Lee
I dont get the scale and size thing. This is a major negative for me. I don't know who did the set up nor why they have voices that are way to large, this should not happen . There are of course some recording that will sound like that but most should not. I have said many times that room/system/setup are all equally important to get a great result so that is no surprise and have a large enough room to set up a large speaker system is for the most part very important as huge speakers in a small room is very difficult to make work.
Many times at shows one sees speakers 20 plus feet apart with voices that are as large as the Holland tunnel and people love it, not me as that is as far from real sounding as one can get. Size and scale are incredibly import for reality IMO and 10 foot wide violins and female voices dont do that for me. I dont know if this is a characteristic of the speakers but each time I have heard them I have noticed this.
Elliot Peter did the set up himself and was tweaked slightly over 6 months using the Sumiko method to attain sound way better than any other XVX I’ve heard. Peter’s original set up actually had the soundstage even larger. These guys take Stirlings ( and John’s) approach a couple steps further. These speakers/ subs do not present intimate recordings as well
I dont get the scale and size thing. This is a major negative for me. I don't know who did the set up nor why they have voices that are way to large, this should not happen . There are of course some recording that will sound like that but most should not. I have said many times that room/system/setup are all equally important to get a great result so that is no surprise and have a large enough room to set up a large speaker system is for the most part very important as huge speakers in a small room is very difficult to make work.
Many times at shows one sees speakers 20 plus feet apart with voices that are as large as the Holland tunnel and people love it, not me as that is as far from real sounding as one can get. Size and scale are incredibly import for reality IMO and 10 foot wide violins and female voices dont do that for me. I dont know if this is a characteristic of the speakers but each time I have heard them I have noticed this.
Peter did the set up which was then tweaked slightly using the Sumiko method over 6 months to absolutely nail the dial. Maybe I’m not expressing myself correctly These speakers are not as good on intimate recordings IMHO. It’s definitely not the set up. Maybe it’s the tweeter height that I’m personally sensitive to. I don’t know. With dual subs they are absolutely otherworldly for large scale recordings. No speaker is perfect for all purposes under all circumstances. You might actually know the owner. You could PM me if your interested. Even a multi decade veteran like you would appreciate hearing these just for the set up/dial if nothing else.
 
Ok, Fair enough on reviewers. Maybe, if anyrhing, they have rooms and power that reflects what most consumers have. And will therefore have a perception that will be similar to their audience.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Lee
Ok, Fair enough on reviewers. Maybe, if anyrhing, they have rooms and power that reflects what most consumers have. And will therefore have a perception that will be similar to their audience.
Plus they have heard a ton of gear and the impact on their system's sound.
 
Elliot Peter did the set up himself and was tweaked slightly over 6 months using the Sumiko method to attain sound way better than any other XVX I’ve heard. Peter’s original set up actually had the soundstage even larger. These guys take Stirlings ( and John’s) approach a couple steps further. These speakers/ subs do not present intimate recordings as well

Peter did the set up which was then tweaked slightly using the Sumiko method over 6 months to absolutely nail the dial. Maybe I’m not expressing myself correctly These speakers are not as good on intimate recordings IMHO. It’s definitely not the set up. Maybe it’s the tweeter height that I’m personally sensitive to. I don’t know. With dual subs they are absolutely otherworldly for large scale recordings. No speaker is perfect for all purposes under all circumstances. You might actually know the owner. You could PM me if your interested. Even a multi decade veteran like you would appreciate hearing these just for the set up/dial if nothing else.
Seating position impacts this too. I sit very close like I'm on the stage. Other systems seat further back and give the sense your at the Symphony in a nice seat in the audience. Or even a balcony.
 
Plus they have heard a ton of gear and the impact on their system's sound.
I was somewhat agreeing to that in their reference take into account a lot of gear. What I take issues with is say your power is bad. It plays a 100 watt amp ok. But put a high power amp on the line and it compresses unnaturally. Or the room has modes and a speaker with solid bass reacts poorly in the space. The reviewer no matter how much equipment they have heard can't imagine his/her way around what that speaker would sound like in a well proportioned room.

Hence, I put more weight in what a forum member reports as noted in this thread than what a reviewer says. I guess I could spend more time understanding what each and every reviewers space is. But I don't want to spend my time doing that.

Maybe a good thread.
A list of all published reviewers and what their space and expertise is.
 
Ok, Fair enough on reviewers. Maybe, if anyrhing, they have rooms and power that reflects what most consumers have. And will therefore have a perception that will be similar to their audience.

What's the point if they do not hear components under review at their most optimal? Isn't optimal reproduction what the High End should be all about? What's Best etc.?

Edit: I see you just posted another reply (which I agree with).
 
That is a similar system to what a friend of mine has in Poland. XVX + AirForce 1 + dCS Vivaldi APEX. I bet it sounds incredible.

At some point he tried the Apex/Commander combo, makiking it virtually identuical, but settled on the Ypsilon Hyperion monoblocks eventually. His dCS Vivaldi APEX has been later replaced by Lampizator Horizon + Taiko Extreme.
 
What's the point if they do not hear components under review at their most optimal? Isn't optimal reproduction what the High End should be all about? What's Best etc.?

Edit: I see you just posted another reply (which I agree with).
Yea, It took a moment to circle back around in my head. This thread and the comments by the OP are probably one of the better reviews on Gryphon/Wilson and digital/vinyl capabilities. Gryphon should send him a integrated amp to use at home for as long as he wants for more online content.:):)
 

About us

  • What’s Best Forum is THE forum for high end audio, product reviews, advice and sharing experiences on the best of everything else. This is THE place where audiophiles and audio companies discuss vintage, contemporary and new audio products, music servers, music streamers, computer audio, digital-to-analog converters, turntables, phono stages, cartridges, reel-to-reel tape machines, speakers, headphones and tube and solid-state amplification. Founded in 2010 What’s Best Forum invites intelligent and courteous people of all interests and backgrounds to describe and discuss the best of everything. From beginners to life-long hobbyists to industry professionals, we enjoy learning about new things and meeting new people, and participating in spirited debates.

Quick Navigation

User Menu