Do any of these interest you at all? (If you had the money)(Which I don't)


mijostyn

Showing 4 responses by mijostyn

mantaman, if I follow in my father's footsteps I will wind up the same way,
Fairly wealthy and deaf as a door knob. My plan is to use my system like giant hearing aids. Room control will become head control and I already have the power and soon the speaker to put out an easy 110 dB so I can destroy whatever hearing I have left:) You have to have a really good sense of humor to grow old gracefully. 
You young guys out there, don't forget to warm up your ears before you crank it up!
glupson, not according to the town facebook page. Smiley (the yellow car) goes down side streets at "80 mph, passes cars on the "sidewalk", and "passes school buses." The police respond that they can't pull a guy over for doing 5 over. The reality is somewhere in the middle:)
Lak, If you keep your eyes closed not all that much better. 
Gadios, I have a yellow 911 and in a way you are right. In my case it is because I am tired of getting rear ended. 
Anyway most of this is just one more derivation of the 3 or 4 way dynamic loudspeaker in a fancy enclosure. I have listened to the Lyngdorf speakers and was not impressed. Just in comparing different floor to ceiling line source speakers there is a magic in ESLs that you do not hear in all the others probably due to multiple factors such as no crossover, lowest distortion of all driver types, best impedance match to air, best transient response, and total control of the diaphragm down to molecular levels. There are several line sources in this group but no ESLs. I wonder why. I can only hypothesize. To my mind why would anyone fork up that kind of money for a devices so compromised by their very own design. You can spend $10K building the best crossover ever but no crossover is still better and a lot cheaper. In reality very few of these speakers are sold and I would gander that most of those that are are not sold to people who are discerning audiophiles. I would actually bet that most are sold through interior designers who are trying to fill a space with something.....interesting. I saw that plenty of times when I lived in Miami, Fl. I myself installed a pair of Beveridge ESLs because the designer wanted them. The client had no idea what was going on and could care less how they sounded and I know for a fact the designer was getting a kick back. These people are so rich they just hire a designer to build or remodel a house and never look at the bottom line. 
For those of us that are not filthy rich you can take comfort in the fact that there is more reasonably priced gear that sounds just as good if not better..... as long as you keep your eyes closed.
They are big and ugly for the most part and as Elizabeth noted they missed a few. bdp24 Those wonderful speakers are just not expensive enough which begs the question are any of these worth the money. The horn systems interest me a little in that I would like to hear them. But I would never buy any of them, not when I can get a pair of Sound Labs 845's for around $40K. I suppose I have become a died in the wool ESL guy maybe not so much because they sound better (which they do) but because after 30 years I know exactly what to do with them to get them to perform the way I like and it was not always smooth going. I guess I have had enough learning and care only about listening.