This is a really great question and super complicated. At first glance it seems reasonably easy to answer. If you are happy with your system then maybe you will say yes. But, are you sure another speaker might not be much better for you? or your room? Or your electronics? Are you sure you are even getting everything you can out of your speakers? Would they do more for you with different amps or positioning?
Also, if you go to a dealer or a show and hear something you really fall in love with, it's possible that it won't do the same for you at home. Or, it might even do better.
Unless we have the ability to try many different products in our room, it's hard to know. And because our listening ability and preferences evolve, it's an ever changing target.
Suddenly an easy question becomes really difficult to answer.
IMHO the best we can do is hear as many different brands and products in different environments, and if one brand tends to catch our attention or tick all the boxes, we can move in that direction and buy the best model in that brand's line we can afford. If funds allow in the future, we can continue to invest in that brand and move up the line if it is still doing a lot for us musically. At the same time, we must always be open to the possibility that our tastes and listening abilities have moved us in a slightly different direction and we may begin seeing another brand we appreciate for other reasons.
It never ends, unfortunately. Or fortunately.
Not everyone would agree on ATC speakers being a bad fit in a domestic setting. I've heard ATC's in different iterations, rooms and systems - active, passive and different sizes/models - and it goes without saying they're not only very revealing of the source material, but as well the source components (digital or analogue) and preamp implementation (and power amps, if passive).
I find them best actively, but that way they're even more transparent, dynamically astute, resolved and composed, which gives them a further edge into laying bare what's fed to them. As such one has to be careful not to pair them with dry, lean or bright sounding components, not because ATC speakers are that, but rather because they're quite "accurate." Maybe you experienced a less than ideal pairing here?
Passively configured speakers with less powerful drivers that distort more and that are "voiced" differently (i.e.: often more tipped up in the frequency extremes, leaner in the upper bass/lower mids and/or more recessed in the central/upper mids) can come across a bit "fuzzier" sounding, more laid-back, less meaty in the power region and subjectively more pleasing to the ear with an addition of upper end airiness.
Being used to that I can imagine ATC speakers, not least fitted with their crazy good 3" midrange dome, as coming across perhaps a bit monochromatic and mids oriented in their presentation.
Myself I tend to find them more "right" and honest sounding compared to most "hifi" speakers, and not least actively they're very smooth, resolved and easy on the ears. Some feel they're lacking in bass volume, but to me they have a very tuneful, balanced low end. I've tuned my own outboardly configured active setup in a similar fashion to the ATC's: tuneful, balanced lows; a present, textured and tonally accurate midrange, and a resolved top end that's a natural extension of the mids and doesn't call attention to itself. Overall a full, dense, sphere-like and coherent presentation.
Hi,Do you consider your loudspeaker perfect for your personal sonic preferences and perfect for your ears?
Do you believe that loudspeakers are the most difficult or "problematic" category of components?
Do you believe there is such a thing as the "perfect" loudspeaker for you personally? Or is some compromise, large or small, inevitably part of the equation of every loudspeaker. (A "compromise" could be in size of loudspeaker or drive requirements or frequency balance or dynamics or transparency or any of the sonic characteristics we ever talk about.)
How would you apply these questions to your current loudspeaker?
Very impressive. Congratulations.I can't say that I've ever heard a "perfect" speaker but... yes, I can say that my speakers are perfect for me. That is; balanced, sufficiently dynamic, and spooky-real clarity. And the fact that I designed and built them myself is pretty rewarding too.
I've been a music lover and wanna-be audiophile for as long as I can remember but I never had the financial freedom to indulge my lust so I had to innovate, spend wisely, and build whatever I could.
My fully-dipolar hybrid speakers evolved over 15 years researching and building many iterations of electrostatic drivers. The wire stators are 90-wire arrays, electrically segmented in 15 discrete wire groups to function as a line source projecting a cylindrical wavefront. This arrangement gives wider, smoother-trending dispersion than a curved-panel ESL, and the DIY Ripol subs are the perfect match to complete the package.
A full description with build photos are given on my website here:
Jazzman's DIY Electrostatic Loudspeaker Page
DIY electrostatic loudspeakersjazzman-esl-page.blogspot.com
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Well, I suppose we all like new things..This is a really great question and super complicated. At first glance it seems reasonably easy to answer. If you are happy with your system then maybe you will say yes. But, are you sure another speaker might not be much better for you? or your room? Or your electronics? Are you sure you are even getting everything you can out of your speakers? Would they do more for you with different amps or positioning?
It never ends, unfortunately. Or fortunately.
Very impressive. Reminds me a bit of a speaker built in Holland that I plan to visit some time.My fully-dipolar hybrid speakers evolved over 15 years researching and building many iterations of electrostatic drivers. The wire stators are 90-wire arrays, electrically segmented in 15 discrete wire groups to function as a line source projecting a cylindrical wavefront. This arrangement gives wider, smoother-trending dispersion than a curved-panel ESL, and the DIY Ripol subs are the perfect match to complete the package.
Very impressive. Reminds me a bit of a speaker built in Holland that I plan to visit some time.
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The Blanco Nu is a commercial product but I guess probably from a one-man-band.I'm wondering if that's a commercially marketed speaker or a one-off that some very talented person built. I'm guessing it's electrically segmented (otherwise it's flat panel would be very beamy). It's a beautiful speaker, driven with a valve amp and it probably sounds as good as it looks!
It's pretty common to segment wire-stator ESLs to widen the dispersion pattern but most commercial ones (Audiostatic comes to mind) add a separate/narrow tweeter segment or [at most] separate midrange and tweeter segments. Three segments are sufficient to eliminate the "head-in-a-vice" beaming effect, and it's less labor and cost than adding multiple additional segments.
My panel is symmetrically segmented about it's centerline, using 15 six-wire groups--- consisting of a single 6-wire center segment for the top octave, and seven left/right paired segments on either side, in 7+1+7 symmetry. This arrangement produces a cylindrical wavefront with smoother trending dispersion than would be achievable using fewer segments.
You can see what the website looked like using the internet archive (archive.org) -The Blanco Nu is a commercial product but I guess probably from a one-man-band.
I've found this brief review and description, but the website quoted no longer exists. However the builder has a Facebook presence
Your description is far too technical for me. I've only owned 2 ESLs. I didn't like the Martin Logan Expression 13A (more accurately, it didn't like my room), but for some strange reason, the QUAD 2905 (with 2912 mods) sounded pretty amazing in exactly the same position.
Blanko speaker NU loudspeakers – M & S | Ultimate High-Fidelity
www.monoandstereo.com
Peter
Indeed, most any speaker can come across sounding "off" if only heard once - not least at a show. I've heard several ATC models in different contexts sounding anything but "lean and bright" - that's not at all their inherent imprinting from what I've heard.I have heard ATC speakers only once, at a show, which often means suboptimal conditions. They were passive, and did sound lean and bright. I was under no illusion that this sound was what I should hear from the brand, but it was funny that the ATC representatives in that room couldn't get it right.
It's not a trait of passive speakers per se, but being most hifi-speakers are passively configured - by a mile - and that a large segment of them are voiced with a focus on details as described earlier, it is - to my ears - how a lot of passive speakers are actually biased sonically.I have passive speakers, but what you describe is exactly the sound that I do *not* want.
I've never heard of PranaFidelity speakers, but have done a bit of reading up on them. Some of the takeaways on their sound is Jason's Stereophile show coverage and your own elaborate take on this site, none of which really point me in a conclusive direction as to their sonic M.O.The kind of midrange and highs that you describe here is what I get from my speakers in.my room.
As I understand ATC, their smaller ones (40 and below) are designed primarily as domestic speakers. 50 and up are designed for pro studio use and less good in the home, unless you want to have the warts and all shouted at you. This is what the engineer needs to do his job of fixing as many problems as he can before the master tapes are produced and sent to the pressing and streaming houses.Indeed, most any speaker can come across sounding "off" if only heard once - not least at a show. I've heard several ATC models in different contexts sounding anything but "lean and bright" - that's not at all their inherent imprinting from what I've heard.
My point is that not least actively configured they're different animals compared to many if not most passively configured hifi-speakers. Actively you have better driver control with dedicated amp channels connected directly (i.e.: sans intervening passive crossovers) to each driver segment, that's undisputable, and coupled with the very low distortion ATC drive units it translates sonically into something other than typical, passive speakers. My guess is some may feel that difference to be rather striking and are overwhelmed even by the blunt clarity, resolving capabilities and dynamic prowess, which may at first be considered too much of a deal and perhaps stand in the way of "musical relaxation."
From my chair though (and this is my second point), being habitually exposed to the sound of my own, also actively configured setup, properly implemented ATC speakers don't come across as a substantially different sonic meal, but rather as delivering a very balanced, coherent and honest presentation. This is why I feel singling them out as the "odd duck" out of the pro sector must be made relative to one's vantage point.
It's not a trait of passive speakers per se, but being most hifi-speakers are passively configured - by a mile - and that a large segment of them are voiced with a focus on details as described earlier, it is - to my ears - how a lot of passive speakers are actually biased sonically.
I've never heard of PranaFidelity speakers, but have done a bit of reading up on them. Some of the takeaways on their sound is Jason's Stereophile show coverage and your own elaborate take on this site, none of which really point me in a conclusive direction as to their sonic M.O.
I can say though that the midrange presentation as heard from ATC's massive-magnet 3" midrange dome (380 - 3.8kHz) and the also behemoth, landmine sized and 23.5 pound EV compression driver coupled to a large format horn of my own speakers (~600Hz on up, with central to lower mids from dual 15" woofers as well) - each of them actively coupled and still with their individual characteristics - will as well differ to the midrange presented by a passively configured 6" coned woofer/midrange (coupled to a dome tweeter). Some of the traits described can be shared in some form over a variety of driver platforms, but that's where the similarities end.