@vitussl101 Will do. There’s some discussion about them in the GR Research circle on Audio Circle. How do you know I’m not a moron? Relatively speaking, this is cheeeep to try. The thing about what Danny is doing... he shows the measurements. Look very closely at the spectral decay plots. The one for this Sony speaker is exceptional. Maybe you have already, but there is a video on YouTube where he goes thru what was done, and you see the plots.
I have sent Danny a speaker that he measured and did a video on. The speaker formed the top half of the "Speaker of the Year" in Stereophile. I can tell you this... the speaker sounded like junk. Completely out of phase... yet "reviewed" as "Speaker of the Year". It’s like Tommy Boy.... "I can take a dump in a box and mark it guaranteed". 😁. More often than not, I suspect reviews are useful for advertising dollars, maybe not so much for reality.
As for the tube connectors... I have not used them yet, but I’m sure they won’t hurt. Among other things, he’s going after stuff with magnetism. On that note, on my Ayre VX-5 Twenty and KX-5 Twenty (all Ayre equipment of late I think) they eliminated the push tabs on the balanced inputs for the same reason...it was ferrous metal. So, others are of similar thinking...🤷♂️
Glad you reached out!
And while I'm asking, has anyone modified Sony ss-cs5 speakers with a GR Research kit?
I've seen these rather pedestrian looking speakers reviewed by countless YouTubers. GR claims to be able to turn them into great speakers. I just looked on the GR website and see that the kit costs $480.00, plus shipping and tax, not to mention the work involved in building them, making it a rather expensive proposition for a speaker that I can by on CL for sixty-five bucks, doesn't have much more than 85dB peaks and bass that takes a dive at 90hz. The kit for the ATC 19's costs less but I guess the Sony's really need a lot of parts.
7 responses Add your response