Start with speakers straight ahead,allow speakers to break-in,then toe-in slightly. The stat panel should be at least 3 to 4 ft from wall. The further the better but I understand the constraints.
Sip a nice beverage and enjoy!
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I have never used the crazy flashlight setup recommended by the manufacturer. I have had 6 different pairs of martin-logans and I always have them about 8ft apart and BARELY toed in===about an inch or two. The center-fill snaps into place and music spreads from side-wall to side-wall. Imaging is pinpoint ridiculous. There is NO,REPEAT ==NO==loss of high frequencies. Actually, if you toe these speakers in too much there is just too much information to process. Start with speakers straight ahead,allow speakers to break-in,then toe-in slightly. The stat panel should be at least 3 to 4 ft from wall. The further the better but I understand the constraints. Sip a nice beverage and enjoy! |
I don't believe there is a problem yet. Just let the Neolith's break in first before playing with placement. Those speakers weigh a ton, so playing with placement before break in is a waste of energy. My Monolith III speakers are 3 feet from the back wall in a 19 foot room and my chair is 9 feet from the speakers. after a long period of time playing with speaker placement and chair placement, this produced the best sound in my room. I did have to put bass traps in the corners behind the speakers to help tame the room a little. What is the power output of the Momentum integrated at 4 ohms? enjoy |
WC, Yes, the Momentum has better bass, and also better HF according to you and your wife. (By the way, women have better hearing than men according to biology, and also she has less noise-induced hearing loss than you because she probably doesn't listen loudly as much as you do. You are still young and probably still have excellent hearing, but the damage slowly accumulates.) So the Momentum has plenty of oomph in the entire musical frequency range. Both mrdecibel, techno_dude and bigddesign3 agree with me that room placement is the dominant problem, because there is nothing wrong with the Momentum. While bigddesign3 and others have noted that straight ahead or less toe-in may create more space, the problem in this case is the Neo is already warm in its tonal balance, and less toe-in will roll off the HF and create too much warmth and congestion. To answer the coming howls of grey9hound, I use the word, warmth to mean muddy and congested, rather than the desirable musical sweetness with detail. The optimum placement of the Neo is with the toe-in that I and Martin Logan recommend, plus plenty of distance behind them. Do your best. Maybe your wife will appreciate the sound enough so that you can use the largest room in the house to get the most out of the Neo. Won't cost a penny. You both will be happy about that. |
Here is something to try...... Your room is what it is, and I suggest you start with no toe-in at all. I found that more 3D space came to my setup with less toe-in than the flashlight test that Martin Logan recommended. And I noticed that most of the pictures that I have seen of the Neolith was without any toe-in or just a little. Listening at 8 to 9 feet should work, but every inch is going to count from the back wall. So if you can spare even just a few inches more, the situation will get better. And take a look at having the Neolith with no toe-in. It was a good move to go into the back of the speaker and go with -8db with that giant 15" driver so near the back wall. You will need some serious power to realize the potential of this speaker. I not sure the Block Audio is even going to be enough. The ratings with that amp is 500w/ch at 4 ohms. The great thing about the Block Audio Monoblocks is the amount of build inside to throw some serious current to the speakers. Looking at the specs, it is very similar to my Krell KSA-200s in transformer size and capacitance. My Krell puts out 560w/ch at 1% distortion. The Block Audio may put out just a hair more than that. The Neolith panels are so freakin' big, that it's possible that they could use an even bigger amplifier with a power rating of 800w/ch to 1000w/ch at 4 ohms and stable all the way down to 1 ohm. The Block Audio may be just right for the occasion and room size. Only testing will tell. Martin Logan rates the Neolith up to 1,300 watts can be put thru each speaker. |
Viber has a very valid point about power. We really don’t need that much. Think about it, as you said your integrateds are making the best bass your ever eard...Then why would they have enough power to produce best bass ever on a huge Neolith pair ....but not enough power to make the sound 3D ?... 3D is more about room and placement. And like he said, resolution and I could add noise floor. Take for example the new powercord on my amp, it’s a crazy thing it is making soundstage more 3D . Yes a darn powercord is doing that ! Years ago I would not have believe this at all, yet it is obviously doing it on my system right now as I am typing. So cables are important for 3D, along with the room. Power, not as much as we tend to believe. |
New mono blocks are coming, so wc shall see. I think the room is too small to allow what the Neos are capable of. Might be improved by the greater power, but not enough to allow them to open up and breath. I wanted to say this before wc ordered them, but, he was on a mission. However, I always stated the room, the room, the room. Enjoy ! MrD. |
WC, I just read your post. The 3D effect can be heard at low volume levels where your Momentum has plenty of power. 3D is about resolution, which the Momentum has plenty of, at low and high power. No, the real problem is speaker placement with insufficient distance. Don't listen to advisors with an agenda to sell you even more expensive and powerful amps. I want to save you the heartache of spending all that money on powerhouse amps, only to realize that no amp will really solve the dominant problem of speaker placement you are facing now. With your other speakers, you were extremely pleased with the Momentum's qualities, so there is no reason the Momentum wouldn't make the Neo happy, especially since it gives very high power into very low impedances, something few amps can do. |
WC, It's unfortunate that you can't do 6 feet, but do the most you can. 2 feet may be the minimum, but the Neo or any electrostatic will benefit hugely from much more distance in the back of them. Toe-in will increase the distance for some of the panel area. I found that the midrange of my stats was soggy/warmed over/congested with insufficient distance, so I feel that a big reason the Neo is warmer than the Magico is because of insufficient distance. I wish I could tell you to make a dedicated listening room to optimize performance, but you have your family to deal with. |
No because I’ve been very busy with so many things. My room is what it is for now until I can hopefully build a dedicated room next year Unless something else comes up. For now, I’ll play with them and toe them in or out etc and possibly bring them out a few more inches. The bass is WOW WOW WOW. The best bass I’ve heard from any speaker in my room. My biggest disappointment is that I feel I’m lacking that 3D effect and what I was told is that the panels need far greater juice to do this on the Neolith. My integrateds are great with them but they are not going to show me what this speaker can do. I was hoping to consolidate to an integrated if I could convince myself it was good enough but I can’t lie to myself. The Neoliths are demanding a 10. Litter twin turbo viper engine or else I’ll still feel like I’m driving a naturally aspirated Dodge Charger. |
techno_dude, Interesting question about break-in of the panels. Although the low mass membrane has low excursion between the stators, the large surface area still produces high volume levels. High volumes are equivalent to moving lots of air, so perhaps the situation is still equivalent to break-in of dynamic drivers, although your point is valid. If so, then maybe the real break-in process for the panel involves the transformer, which is a piece of electronics. Let’s see what technically informed people like bill_k think. WC, So the manual indicates that initially the Neo is bass shy. Since you already have found generous bass, this might mean that after break-in, the bass might be excessive, relative to the stat mid/HF. Since the manual mentions less change in the sound of the stat panels (mid/HF), then the increase in bass after break-in might make the sound even warmer, which means less HF. The most likely reason for your findings is that the Neo is too close to the front wall, as I suspect. I found with my stats that inches matter, and the more space behind the stat, the more HF/life/airiness but somewhat less bass. You might need even more than 6 feet, since the Neo panel and the woofer section are large. Keep experimenting with placement. Amps and cables are less critical than stat panel placement. I did, and fortunately my speakers are very light. |
Thanks techno. The manual says: Break-In When you first begin to play your Neolith speakers, they will sound a bit bass shy. This is due to the high quality, long-life components used in our woofer. Our custom made woofer requires approximately 72 hours of break-in at 90 dB (moder- ate listening levels) before any critical listening. The break-in requirements of the crossover components (and, to a lesser degree, the stator) are equivalent. |
WC, congrats for the sota Martin Logan now in your living room. I admit I was a bit disappointed that it was not Wilson or Magico, so I forgot politness basics. My fault. Question for electrostatics pros, how does the very light and tin moving film between stators gets break in ? The electronics caps, coils and the big lower woofers I know how. |
WC, don’t sweat the cables or amps at this time. Let the Neo break in, and try the different positions as I posted recently. Be sure to have 6 feet behind it to the front wall, which will increase the airiness and life. HF will be more extended and the midrange more crisp. The Magico S5 was a smaller presentation, so it could sound tighter and cooler just for that reason. I would definitely sit significantly further away from the Neo than you did for the Magico. Sitting higher is better so you will get more of the mids/HF from the high panel compared to the dominant bass on the floor. PATIENCE. |
Viber, I’ m no pro reviewer, but I can try to explain. I meant more laid back than a non filtered powercord, like my older Zitron Cobra. Surely, like the Venom HC, the Cobra is a more upfront pc. The noise filter Shunyata uses makes the sound a bit less in your face, I’ m sure this isnhe effect of the noise tech they use. Delta more laid back. Alpha less laid back than Delta. Like you said, leaner and quicker than Delta = less laid back than Delta. But still more laidback than Zitron Cobra. Everything with the Alpha is 3D, more air, sometimes instruments or voices jump at you. I know this can be interpreted as more upfront, mais my brain seems to find the whole presentation still a bit laidback or ´´ controlled’´. |
techno_dude, No, with or without the Denali, the Venom HC was brighter and more upfront and exciting than the Sigma HC. Still, not a big difference and much smaller than the effect of the Denali for focus and excitement. Eventually, the salesman at Music Direct admitted that these were also his observations about the Venom vs Sigma, when he stopped the usual disgusting sales talk that more expensive means better. There is also some inconsistency in your descriptions--when something like the alpha NR has more speed, leaner lower midrange, it is NOT more laid back. More speed implies more HF, the opposite of laid back. Too bad you can't go back and forth to verify this, and the alpha may be breaking in. Keep listening, and pick up a used Venom HC to compare. This is one area where used is better than new--what can go wrong with a used cable? |
If someone said these have a small sweet spot then they are probably listening to them in the bathroom of the room where they were being displayed. I have 3 chairs next to each other and I’m here sitting all the way to the right and I can hear the left speaker sparkle and sing to me. I don’t feel like I can only hear the speaker I’m sitting in front of. Again, I’m going to little by little kill any bs spoken before. In short, no the Neolith do not have a narrow sweet spot. |
Just started to get them to sing better. -8db in the bass jumpers and dialed in the second cross over for the right woofer distance. Swapped out the silver power cords to the big power cords they come with and connected them to my p20. Great improvement. The gryphon is pushing them with ease.. Volume is at 25 out of 40. This is equivalent to about 95 db from my listening chair. Right now they are starting to hit a stride. The Momentum will enter the arena shortly and try again. |
WC, it could take many hours to dial in the Monoliths. I would not jump to conclusions yet on needing more power ( although I never doubt your passion or needing for higher power ). They also need time to break in, a topic that you and I seem to differ. Give it time, and play with positioning. I, myself, have other thoughts as to other things that might be missing, but will not discuss it at this time. Enjoy ! MrD. |
whitecamaross.. Obviously they need break-in if brand new. All my new Logans over the years needed break-in otherwise they sounded "shallow". Not "warm" to start. But my top end electronics were a few tiers below yours... lol........ I do not recall a long break-in period ,though. They started rounding to form fairly quickly. And the NEO is a whole different animal. But,like you said, explosive HP might be the ticket! |
Viber, I believe you prefered the non filtered Venom HC to the filtered Sigma because you are using a Denali wich already has heavy filtering. So that would make the system sound too laid back with double the noise filtration. In my case there is no power conditioning, so the filtered Alpha NR does the job of cleaning that sin waves. Sound is cleaner, soundstage deaper, highs and bass more nuanced. Sure, it makes the amp a little more laid back sounding, I think the compromise is worth it...at least on my system it is. Delta NR vs Alpha NR... here is what I ear ( hoping it is not placebo effect). Delta NR is a slower pc, has fatter midrange. Alpha NR has more speed, leaner lower midrange, but is more 3D....deeper sound stage is obvious. Noise floor seems identical for both of the pcs. Please note that the Alpha NR is still not fully burned in, only been plugged since yesterday. So maybe the lower midrange will get richer with use. For now, I would recommend the Delta NR if someone has a leaner sounding system. And the Alpha NR for slower, richer midrange system. Synergy. |
Looking forward to it WC! By the way, I agree that the Audioquest Hurricane is a special power cord - I have one for my amp. I had the NRG1000 at one time and was not impressed. I'm about to get another Hurricane for my HT processor. I previously had WW Silver Electra's, including the upgraded ones with the all silver plugs. They seemed to be complimentary with the McIntosh amp I used to have, but now that I have moved on from the McIntosh, the Hurricane is the one I am keeping. Dave |
techno_dude, Eagerly awaiting your assessment of the Shunyata Alpha NR vs Delta NR. Too bad you exchanged the Delta, because the differences between cables are relatively subtle. Most importantly, it is not about how much money you spend. When I A/B'ed the Sigma HC with the Venom HC, I was TRYING to prefer the Sigma because it has more technology and was 10X the cost. Honestly, the differences were subtle, but in the end I preferred the characteristics of the Venom. My early comparisons yielded the same findings as later after 200 hours of break in. |
WC, I understand your methodology in comparing amps on different speakers, but speakers are the most variable factor in the chain, so it is difficult to do full assessments unless you do the A/B with the same speaker. I have the feeling that the Rowland 925 has a similar character to your Momentum, probably with subtle differences, so using the same speaker will be a must. Please realize that the Neo as an electrostatic will demolish any dynamic speaker for neutrality/clarity in the mids/HF at least. It is not really about loud power and big images. You can get a horn speaker system like the Avantgarde Trio with their humongous bass horns for that. I also believe that the relatively distorted sound of dynamic speakers leads many people to seek refuge in sweet, tubey (forgive the expression) electronics. I can understand that. But the electrostatic neutrality, naturalness and clarity may let you appreciate more neutral electronics. The Neo needs to be lived with for a long time, and then I think you will appreciate my points, and then you won't want to go back to dynamic speakers. I am looking forward to seeing your video of their arrival. Include yourself standing tall next to them, and showing your muscles doing the heavy lifting! |
mikepaul - our Meridian pieces came in, Marc Koval did the repairs/upgrades. Marc has become our "go to guy" of all things Meridian since our local retailer no longer carries the line. Marc is EXCEPTIONAL! Work and supporting our neighbor (who's 21 year old son OD'd) has kept me from setting up and configuring our system. I apologize for the negative in such a positive thread. I will most certainly post once our system gets up and breaks in. Have to admit, I'm really eager to what whitecamaross experiences with the Block amplifiers, a quick inquiry from the provided links seems very promising. We have a great group and an special leader in this thread! |
I Hey Ron, i may be taking some yg hailey 1.2 as well besides the Neoliths... i was offered an awesome deal on the Sonja 2.2 but I saw them in person and they are just massive. I feel they are just as overwhelming in sheer size as the Neolith. Lastly, a speaker that big can be difficult to move just like the Neolith but the reason why I wasn’t so concerned with the Neolith is that I know I will like them. I don’t have a doubt in my mind that the Neolith will surprise me but I can’t speak about the Sonja 2.2. I can’t invest on a speaker that huge without ever trying any of their offerings. Having vast experience with the Logans, I feel good about it. Remember, I have owned more Martin Logan speakers than any other speaker brand. I have a very good idea of what I can expect, but the unknown factor will be owning Martin Logan’s best speaker ever and seeing what they are capable of. |
@ WCSS I went from a Proac D30r to a YG Carmel 2. I felt I was getting too much speaker/room interaction from the floor ported Proac design. After reading your review of your Magico's I started looking at sealed cabinet designs. Magico and YG became my short list. The Carmel 2's are a little lean where my room produces too much bass (36-42hz). For me in my room with my electronics and musical tastes they are a perfect fit. Very detailed, highly refined and a massive soundstage. I think speaker/room interaction shot to the top of my list of importance for hi-end 2 channel listening. The Carmel 2's would be too small for you but the Hailey or the Sonja might work....for a few months.....lol. |