Carrying my Musical Fidelity kW SACD player to UPS for shipping to the buyer . . . (...)
Fortunately the local UPS collects from home when I ship and I have a few wheeled platforms laying around ...
Carrying my Musical Fidelity kW SACD player to UPS for shipping to the buyer . . . (...)
Good oneI hear it floats on air...how heavy can it be?
I hear it floats on air...how heavy can it be?
Ron, please explain further, I’m not sure I get you?Finally, I believe that the manufacturers of dynamic driver loudspeakers have not stood still in the last four years. The Wilson Audio XVX is the first dynamic driver loudspeaker I have heard that puts me on the same indifference curve with the planars I have always preferred. As someone who has owned only planar loudspeakers since 1988 this is, for me, a pretty dramatic development.
Ron, please explain further, I’m not sure I get you?
Ron you can send the Pendragons to me. I will provide a good home.
Not having heard the Pendragons, this is what comes to mind:No loudspeaker is perfect. Every design is a compromise on one or more sonic parameters.
Two different points on the same indifference curve means that while each point has a different set of positives and negatives each point nets out to the same utilitarian or economic -- or in this case sonic -- value.
I can't think of many people who would have a 2die4 set of spkrs in crates, unaffordable to most, maximum effort expended to acquire...and be thinking of replacing them, or that they're not what's really wanted, before uncrating and having an extended listen.
I would say Lol...but this is no laughing matter...lol.
Agree no loudspeakers are perfect. I have a very high sensitivity horn system for rock,pop and demanding music and a low sensitivity system for vocal and acoustic audiophile music.owning a single pair of speakers will always be a compromise,that’s why I have two very different systems for different types of music.Saturday morning musing:
I ordered the Gryphon Pendragon loudspeakers almost four years ago. Since then I have developed a greater appreciation for, and listened to more, jazz music and classical music. Jazz music and classical music definitely were not focuses of mine when we listened to the Pendragons in Denmark.
In the last four years I have developed a greater appreciation for the importance of the tone and body of acoustic instruments in audio reproduction. My friends with vintage or horn or concentric driver-type systems which reproduce particularly realistically the tone of acoustic instruments has allowed me to better understand and to better appreciate the importance of this sonic attribute to the suspension of disbelief. in the last four years I have had the opportunity to learn about, and to hear, many horn loudspeakers which I was unfamiliar with four years ago.
I have developed a greater appreciation of the benefit of driver-to-driver coherency in a loudspeaker. I like the coherence and holistic organicness I hear from Tannoy and Fyne concentric drivers, and from the wide-band driver of the PBN M2!M Jeff Tyo Special Edition. The biggest weakness of a two-way, four column system like the Pendragon with radically different driver topologies is the coherence of the drivers -- and the columns -- into a unified, organic, sonic whole.
In addition, during the last four years, I have crystallized upon the personal view that low sensitivity loudspeaker designs sacrifice more in dynamics and jump factor than I recognized previously. This is why I feel like I am "over and done with" many low-sensitivity/multi-way driver/complex cross-over/traditional box speakers. The Magnepan MG-IIIA was my first loudspeaker. I would not buy a 86dB sensitivity loudspeaker today. The Pendragon is a relatively low-sensitivity planar design.
Finally, I believe that the manufacturers of dynamic driver loudspeakers have not stood still in the last four years. The Wilson Audio XVX is the first dynamic driver loudspeaker I have heard that puts me on the same indifference curve with the planars I have always preferred. As someone who has owned only planar loudspeakers since 1988 this is, for me, a pretty dramatic development.
No loudspeaker is perfect. Every design is a compromise on one or more sonic parameters. I believe that some loudspeakers make easier the suspension of disbelief with certain types of music than with other types of music.
It will be very interesting to see how I feel about the Pendragon in light of these personal developments and evolving preferences and competing speaker manufacturer innovations. I remain absolutely confident of the Pendragon’s ability on vocals. But will it be able to perform as creditably on other genres of music? Time will tell . . .
As was said once, there's only two kinds of music...good and bad.Agree no loudspeakers are perfect. I have a very high sensitivity horn system for rock,pop and demanding music and a low sensitivity system for vocal and acoustic audiophile music.owning a single pair of speakers will always be a compromise,that’s why I have two very different systems for different types of music.