Bearing Isolation "Arms Race" Begins


Well soundstage.com has new review of Aurios new products: the Aurios 1.2, the Aurios Pro, and the optional tungsten balls(which everyone will get that upgrades since it is "only" another $50 for set of three balls).

The good news, according to author, is sound has improved over original Aurios MIB and set-up is now somewhat easier as bearings self center easier. The bad news is this improvement in sound will cost much more, set of three 1.2
version MIBs $399(+$50 for tungsten balls of course) and three Pro MIBs $599(+$50).

Author spends long time in general praising new MIBs and how they improve sound in general, but he did not go into detail how they sound used with any given component, wish he would have talked about his results when used under speakers. His idea of just using some MIBs to float entire rack is interesting, wish he would have gone into more detail here. I have a feeling we will be seeing a few sets of original MIBs go up for sale here, as upgrade fever takes hold.

Anyone using any of the new Aurious products and care to share your experience? RedKiwi should soon be giving us
his impressions of Aurios.
megasam

Showing 2 responses by megasam

Eric, sorry my mistake I meant stereotimes.com, here is link

http://www.stereotimes.com/Aurios_Pro_and_1_2_Media_Isolation_Bearings.htm

Must have spaced out there.
Onhwy61 very good idea "floating" entire rack, did you see/read about this somewhere else? When floating rack
did you get by just using 3 Pro MIBs under BDR shelf and where you aware of the tungsten ball tweak?

I guess the question most budget minded audiophiles have is does floating the rack get you close to the amount of improvement of using Pro MIBs under every component in your rack? If you can acheive 75% of the gain by floating rack vs floating each component seperately many will opt for this route as the savings are quite substantial.....any insight here?

Did you try MIBs under speakers?