After Quad ESL's?


I am enjoying listening to Quad esl-63's and to the 57's (which I prefer). And though my wife has enjoyed them also, she informs me that her heretofore acceptance of the visual impact on our living room has been "only out of love." Her valiant endurance of my Quad-love has come to an end, period.

It has been six years.

So, now the time has come:
Speak, Quad owners (and former Quad owners), about what else has worked for you.

I would like a smaller, (than the quad) used speaker that images better than the Quad's. These are some of the directions I am thinking about:
The Vandersteen 2c Signatures are on the large side.
Perhaps a Dynaudio monitor, B&W 802 Matrix Series III, Proac (are there any that aren't excessively bright?). Are Lowthers a possibility, or too hopelessly colored?

I am attracted to ATC and Merlin, My taste runs expensive, but my pocket book (I work as a concert piano technician) runs shallow.

$1500 a pair or less would work best.

I also welcome your synergistic amplification suggestions. So far, I have prefered the sound of tubed equipmnet in the under $1500 per component range. I have recently been captivated by the idea of TVC (transformer volume control) Bent Audio NOH, etc. with a SET. But, the TacT M2150 (integrated without room correction) also intrigues me. Does anyone know how it sounds?

Acutal experience prefered to conjecture. Let it rip, and I thank you in advance for your thoughts and replies.
earthpulse

Showing 1 response by audiokinesis

Disclaimer - I'm going to suggest stuff that I peddle. I'm a Quad fan, and have tried hard to find more "conventional" speakers that do some of the same things right.

You might want to consider the Gradient Revolutions. The designer, Jorma Salmi, used Quad 63's as his reference speaker, and the Revolutions are among the few conventional-looking speakers this planarhead could live with. They are a dipole up to 200 Hz, and then have a cardioid-approximating response above that point. A new pair retails for $4995, but I saw a used pair for sale at this site for $1795. This is an absolute steal for these speakers. I have no connection with the seller.

I'm a previous Quad 57 and 63 owner, an ATC dealer, and have friends who own Merlins.

In my experience the Revolutions prefer a fairly lively-sounding high-current amplifier, so a tube amp might not be the best match.

One other possible follow-up is the Omega line. These high efficiency single-driver speakers are also reminiscent of the Quads, especially the "R" versions. They tend to be somewhat rolled off in the bass region, so a subwoofer might well be needed if you can't get adequate bass lift from boundary reinforcement. Single-ended triode, OTL, and low powered push-pull tube amps work well with the Omegas.

Gradient's website: www.gradient.fi

Omega's website: www.omegaloudspeakers.com

Best of luck to you,

Duke