That is just room dependent. Positioning, like with all planers is important. I can tell you in my listening room, I can feel the impact and hear 26hz— and I’ve got the one-sized-down from the Auditorium version.Excellent interview. I still sense a lack of bass with Clarisys.
That is just room dependent. Positioning, like with all planers is important. I can tell you in my listening room, I can feel the impact and hear 26hz— and I’ve got the one-sized-down from the Auditorium version.
I can move them in my room and lose the bass at my listening position.
Mine are spec’d at -3db at 25. I have no reason to doubt that.
Excellent interview. I still sense a lack of bass with Clarisys.
The vid did sound a bit 'solid state' to me, with all due respect to the limitations of the media and intervening transmitters.
It’s very true that every speaker must be set up correctly for one to get the best sound. That’s a given. However, can the Clarisys be set up correctly in every room? Your room and equipment is most likely different than what I heard them on. I’ve heard other speakers that I’ve enjoyed more. I’ll trek towards them.
Excellent interview. I still sense a lack of bass with Clarisys.
How do you like the Hegel amplifiers on them?I’ve got the one-sized-down from the Auditorium version.
Not really sure why this question is "Clarysis" dependent? It can be implied to literally every speaker and manufacturer and their correlation with the room they are being or indented to be used in.However, can the Clarisys be set up correctly in every room?
Not really sure why this question is "Clarysis" dependent? It can be implied to literally every speaker and manufacturer and their correlation with the room they are being or indented to be used in.
this is not my experience"Room filling", which is why I also like planars. It's like every air molecule in the room is being deployed, rather than fired at you ballistically from a radiating cone.
I think a classical music lover should go straight to horns, but for the wider musical palettes, dipole planars are great. Plus, I don't know if it's a good idea chronically to listen at the intensities and volumes that horns demand. Need to keep some of the hearing for the twilight.
During the 'loud' passages (I presume from the vid) I couldn't see any movement of the ribbons, which means they are unstressed with lots of reserve.
Brass, piano, violin, cello, tympani, and drums.
Excellent interview. I still sense a lack of bass with Clarisys.
Also jazz and rock, albeit dual FLH for rock.I think a classical music lover should go straight to horns, but for the wider musical palettes, dipole planars are great. Plus, I don't know if it's a good idea chronically to listen at the intensities and volumes that horns demand. Need to keep some of the hearing for the twilight.
Is that last comment a lift from The Untouchables?Also jazz and rock, albeit dual FLH for rock.
And horns are by far the best speakers at low volumes, because of the integration and straight flat impedance allows you to uniformly drive all frequencies equally well, not having to adjust volume for one driver.
And if you and Ron wanted to keep this thread devoted to Clarisys and panels, you should not have mentioned nukes in a snowball match report
Is that last comment a lift from The Untouchables?
I actually watched this excellent interview entirely by chance last night , @Ron Resnick. Congrats on a great review. What a room and what a system! Have you heard ANY system with and without the Ideon Absolute Time? And where in the chain would one deploy it? Would it drop in between the player/streamer and the DAC? I have an Antipodes K41 and K22 and also wonder how much a device like this might improve SQ when Antipodes does such a superb job in re- clocking as it is.Please enjoy my interview with Cyrus, a What's Best Forum member in Spokane, WA, who recently installed one of the first pairs of Clarisys Auditorium loudspeakers in the USA, with CH Precision L10 and M10 electronics and Ideon DAC: