I forgot to mention how open and involving these are at low to moderate volume levels. I find I don't need or care to turn it up loud with these speakers. At 70-80db levels I hear well into the music and am very satisfied and "into" the music.
If you like to listen at lower volumes and still want the full musical experience, then these speakers deliver. |
Hi Gary, Glad to read about your new toys. I am happy you took such a risk without hearing the Khara’s but have being rewarded faithfully. You are one of very few A’gon members whose views I trust and respect. I recently stumbled on ad on A’gon on the same Lahave speakers you own (may be the ones you purchased), and started researching the brand. Although there are not a lot of information online, the very few I found were all positive. I have exchanged few emails with Jim MacCleave (Lahave) and I could tell the designer is very knowledgeable and a nice guy too. I found out through our exchanges that Lhave has several new designs that are not on his website (but will be in the near future). His new flagship is a three-way (no name yet) but nicknamed the Wildebeast. Following the Wildebeast is the Avaza R, the Avaza, the Khara, and then the Thermopylae. He said that the Khara’s are as good as the Avaza R’s but different. The Avaza R has piqued my interest, and hope I can hear it someday. Enjoy your new toys!! |
4orreal, yes I found out the same thing from Jim. He is a great guy for sure. I think they will be expanding their website, but the quality of a website has never been a prioiry of mine when considering a builder. Quite frankly, the best gear I've heard is often linked with a bare bones, antiquated website!
I think I purchased the pair you were considering. They are the only gloss black set Jim has made over the years.
Thanks for the note. |
Gary, Great review. I've never heard of this company and wouldn't have even read this review, but I also trust your views.
One question, who is this speaker similar/different to the Coincident TV III?
Thanks, Ernie |
Gary, Great review. I've never heard of this company and wouldn't have even read this review, but I also trust your views.
One question, how is this speaker similar/different to the Coincident TV III?
Thanks, Ernie |
Just an FYI, I am Bill, not to be confused with Gary although he is a great guy :) |
Oops, sorry. I just copied the name the first poster used and assumed it was yours.
Any thoughts about the question I posed? |
Oh ya, I forgot Ernie. The Coincident speaker is very different. The Lahave is better in most every aspect including;
Far better resolution More articulate bass Far better imaging Disappears in a way the Total Victory cannot Just a more refined speaker overall
The Coincident speaker has cabinet resonance and is not nearly as fast or clear sounding.
The Coincident speaker throws a bigger stage and can play music louder. It is a better rock speaker perhaps.
One must turn up the volume more to hear the Total Victory open up and come alive. The Lahave sounds great at lower volume levels.
Instruments sound more homogenous with nowhere near the micro detail retrieval of the Lahave speakers.
The Total Victory speaker is a comfortable sounding speaker that tows the middle ground if you will. It has nice warmth, but ultimately falls short of sounding as real as the Lahave. Lahave sounds like music and the Coincident sounds more like a speaker. Relative to each other these statements sum it up pretty well.
Keep in mind the Total Victory speaker is no slouch. It is a very good speaker and my comments are in relation to the Lahave speaker only.
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Bill, They must be amazing, as I also respect your views on these matters. I remember last year and maybe this year seeing a pair of larger LeHave standmounts for sale that had a curved waterfall front baffle and the finish was drool-worthy. It looked like it used a Jordan driver and maybe a ribbon...can't quite remember. I was really curious about those speakers, and the brand. Now I guess I know. Enjoy them. |
Bill, I just went back to their website. I had it all wrong. It was the tweeter that has the appearance of a small Jordan driver. I wonder what that driver is. |
Roxy54
Lahave does in fact use a Jordan tweeter on several designs. At least they have in the past. |
Thanks Bill. It looked familiar even though I have only seen Jordan drivers in pictures. Your new speakers are real stunners to look at. |
Congratulations Bill, nice review, I bet they're smokin' good.
I'd need to hear these, they remind me of my Intuitive Summits in so many ways. |
Bill, Congratulations! These speakers seem ideal for you and I'm glad you found them. They must be a fairly easy load to drive as you're using a KT 150 SET amplifier with sucess(I thought you had a Thor amplifier). I've no doubt that your music sounds devine. The Lahave should keep you happy for many years. Charles, |
Nice summary Bill, I feel your love and you're not the first to convey this about this brand. Having owned Soundlabs you "know" what music is supposed to sound like. I did a lot of research on this brand a while back, was interested in a monitor design called the Mela which was a 2-way with side mounted passive radiator and the Jordan tweeter. Unfortunately I didn't come across a pair used but it seems the Khara might be more appealing, a 2-way floorstander that replays music with in room bass response to 30hz. What are the physical dimensions if I may ask? |
Charles, I had to sell the Thor amps to pay for a brand new set Of TRL Samson amps! They play well with my Dude and are keepers. Paul made me a very nice set indeed.
They are pretty easy to drive and since they sound so good at low volumes the 10 watts worked fine. The 300 watt Samson amps, however bring them to another level. |
Tubegroover
The speakers are about 43 inches tall and 16 inches deep. The front of the speaker is 13 inches wide and tapers to the back which is 9 inches wide. They weigh 125 pounds each.
They come stock with Stillpoints Ultra SS footers. I sold them and use Sistrum Apprentice stands instead. The Sistrum stands just worked better on my carpet over concrete floor. |
Bill, I believe you owned a pair of Dale Pitcher Intutive Design speakers can you tell me how the two compared? |
Well hi Bob. I never owned Dale's speakers, but have heard that model on several occasions and for extended periods of time. One time with Dale's uber expensive SS monoblock amps.
They are both cut from the same sonic cloth in many ways. Fast, resolving, dynamic and no hint of a speaker box at all. They are both boxless in presentation.
The biggest difference is the Lahave, after my crossover upgrades, have slighter better natural tone and a more present midrange. They have more meat on the bones also......better mid bass and fullness. |
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Hi Bill,could you give an updated opinion on the Lahave speakers since your purchase and review. I am looking for feedback on several speakers I am considering and the Khara really has peaked my interest. Thanks |
I still love the speaker. I have done a pretty involved mod however. I placed the internal crossover outside the speaker and upgraded all the parts substantially. As it now stands it is the best speaker I have owned to date.
My last upgrade was using Path Audio resistors. |
Nice! I'd love to see some picture/s of the outboard crossover. I have a stand mount speaker that I'd love to experiment with in the same manner. Other's ideas and the execution of those ideas are a necessary part of this hobby. Can you respond to any concerns or things you've learned with regards in taking on such a project? |
Lahave was showing a single driver speaker, Avaza($11k), at AXPONA. This was one of the speakers that caught my eyes (ears), because they were so musical, and also above average efficiency. Also I went around the speaker to make sure that there was no other bass drivers. Amazing bass for a single driver speaker. Unfortunately the personal finance minister does not approve the budget. |
I would love to add some pictures, but don't think it is possible? Seems there is now way to upload more or new pics on this review? |
The Avaza did sound very good indeed. The build quality was outstanding also. Just beautiful cab work! |
Grannyring: How about sharing your journey in this regard and/or tips that I and others could use? Thanks. |
Hi, It does look like you've separated the crossover quite a bit from the speaker. It seems that there was no attempt to isolate the crossover or construct an isolating shield around the crossover or raise the speaker wire off of the floor.
Although the crossover is out of harms way of the internal goings on, it seems to be kind of vulnerable to other issues such as isolation/EMI.RFI. These were my concerns. |
I have not posted most recent pics. I will tell you what was done, that is, the most current mod. I have removed the crossover from the cab completely. A must in this speaker as the crossover was located right behind the woofer!
I then ran Jupiter pure copper 14 gauge solid core copper wire from the drivers out the back of the speaker. Two runs on the woofer and one on the Raal tweeter. No, the wires never touch the ground. The crossover is now placed on a board with the board placed on four layers of thick cork board. The entire five layer board is then placed on cork footers and placed in a metal outboard chassis. The board is floated or placed on several inches of Repti-sand (the Quartz type only). I then completely cover the crossover and parts in the Quartz Repti-sand. Each chassis contains 40 pounds of Reptisand. Yes, they are completely isolated from vibration and Emi, RFI etc...
The parts include 10 gauge Noth Creek inductors, Duelund CAST and Jupiter copper foil caps. I also included a Path Audio resistor of .5 ohms to offset the lower DCR of the heavy guage Noth Creek inductor. I also felt the speaker needed more mid bass bloom.
I soldered my speaker cable from the amp directly to the outboard crossover. In additon, I did not use binding posts to connect the wires coming out of the speaker to the crossover as they degrade the sound no matter how good. I simply used the binding posts to clamp the tinned copper wires from the speaker and crossover together. Best connection possible!
I also placed the speakers on Star Sound Sistrum stands as they sounded better then the stock Stillpoints footers with A/B testing.
The speakers are wonderful sounding and an involved project. |
These speakers really love tubes. The best sound I have heard from them came from pairing them with an 845 SET amp. Just wonderful. |
Bill, When I read the general description of these speakers(simple crossover and easy load) I thought a high quality tube amp should mate well. Especially a SET with adequate power. I'm glad this worked out so sucessfully. Charles, |
Grannyring, I was gong to ask how you like them with your low power 845 SET and your review sounds very positive. Do you feel like you lose anything with 10 watts? Wondering how a 300b SET would drive them. Also great to read about your DIY crossover. I've toyed with the idea of doing my own DIY crossovers for the AN'Es -Regards Jet. |
10 watts is plenty and I have not heard any sign of distress or compression. I sit only 8 feet away and listen at 75 to 85db weighed average most of the time.
These glorious 10 watts are absolutely perfect for me. I do think my amp's 10 watts are a powerful 10 watts. Not every 8 watt 300b would be a good match, but your amp and the Frank amps would be great. Not all 8 watt amps are created equal as you both know so well. I had a 12 watt Dennis Had amp on them that did show signs of stress and never loaded my room with the sound and bass this Larry Moore amp achieves. The 10 watts of my 845 amp delivers all of the scale, dynamics, speed, bass response etc... that I was used to with my other amps cranking out 30-300 watts. Again, I don't listen at 95db!
The difference is my music sounds more real and live with the 845 amp. |
Forgot to mention that I have some Psvane WE845 tubes coming based on comments on the net and Jeff here on the Gon. |
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Bill, As you may know Jeff and I are old friends of more than 20 years and we live only 10 minutes apart. He used the Pavane W.E. Replica 845 for a couple of years and I know them very well. It is an excellent 845 and out performed NOS RCAs. The only better 845 I've heard in his system is the Elrog(far more costly). Other than that the Pavane beat all others(Shuguang varients). Adding this tube to your terrific amplifier is a wise move and you won't regret it. Charles, |
I looked into Elrog, but they seem to have reliability issues? I did not know Jeff used them? I assume he has had no issues. I bet they are wonderful sounding tubes. |
Bill, Early production Elrog 845s had reliability problems. The Problem is said to be solved with the current tubes (so time will tell). I use the Elrog ER 300b and so far no issues for me or Jeff. The Elrog is the best sounding tube I've heard in mine or Jeff's amplifiers. Charles, |
I still have my La Have Mela monitors after about 5 years and I can relate to your comments. There is just something about La Have sonics that is very real and forceful but totally unfatiguing. |
Rgs92
They are great speakers indeed. I am going to try SET amps and 100db efficient speakers for a change and will be selling my speakers soon. If you know anyone interested in a great set of floor standers for a great price, then please let me know. I really had fun with these!
I am glad to have enjoyed Lahave Audio speakers! |
Bill, You are full of surprises! What do you seek differently with this change of direction? Charles, |
It is funny when you reflect on it. We all have personal journey with speakers and electronics. I have often had to buy without listening first, just on the strength of reviews and intuition, which was sometimes badly flawed. I was also motivated by a desire to own a certain brand or type of speaker just to see what it was like and then be able to know that I had that experience. As time has gone by, the variety of speakers and electronics that I have used have given me a clearer profile of what my sonic priorities are, and so my frequent changes have become less frequent, also dictated by finances of course, and the desire to avoid costly mistakes. I find that in the last couple of years, I'm really enjoying refining the use of supports and cords etc. Still, I can understand that part of many of us that has restless curiosity about what may be better than what we already have. It's just that niggling little voice in your head, urging you to move on to the next thing. It's a little sad in one way. It reminds me of the old saying "Yesterday's peacock is tomorrows feather duster". Anyway, as long as you can afford it, and you're having fun every step of the way, it's an interesting journey. |
Hi guys. I love these speakers, but it is time to move on! Why? Because I have seen the light. Well, I heard the 8 watt SET amps we all love on true high efficiency speakers and I fell instantly in love. These Lahave speakers are 90db and somewhat easy to drive, but with 97-100db speakers these wonderful tube amps open up a new sonic world for me:)
The directness and intimacy are intoxicating with these types of speakers. I am looking at single driver speakers as well as some Audio Kinesis models. I have tasted of this with my entry level Cain & Cain Abby speakers which are a single driver Fostex design. I have to dive into this deeper and experience it! I just have to:) |
Bill, That makes sense to me and I can appreciate and understand your change of direction. Charles, |
Well Bill, I can't argue with that either, because that is the same place I landed after my long journey (and Charles) led me there. Those 8 watts can really be magic with the right speakers. Keep us posted! John |
Bill, I heard a wonderful sounding single driver speaker at RMAF 2011. It was the Fletcher-Haynes Heirloom using an 8" fostex driver, one of the very best sounds at the entire show. Single driver speakers can't do everything(what can? all designs have compromises). The sound was oh so natural and had superb presence, it made most other systems sound "electronic" by comparison. I've always been curious concerning the Audio Kinesis Jazz Module and also 12" Phy driver based speakers(Tonian Lab and Ocellia). These 3 are high impedance speakers with excellent reputations for high quality sound. If I weren't so happy with my current speakers,those 3 would be on my very short list of candidates. Many roads lead to Rome. Charles, |
Bill, I have a brand new never used pair of Lowther drivers I could sell you at a nice price. These are the PMA 5's. Quite incredible. Let me know if you are interested. |
Thanks Bob. I have decided to keep my speakers. I listened to several good high effeciency speakers, but the sound of my speakers was, in the end, more to my liking.
My SET amp really opened up after burn in and it drives my speakers very well now. I have settled into a finished system that is amazing and easy on my back! The Electra Fidelity EL34 SET amp is just so musical. Very special design. Real innovation in this design.
Luxman DA60 dac that is a pretty large leap forward in sound quality compared to the other days I have owned. I have always ignored Luxman for some reason. This dac has earned universal praise by reviewers and I now know why.
So the speakers are staying with me! They just play beautiful music with the Luxman dac and Electra Fidelity amp. |
Grannyring, How does the Luxman compare to the Yamamoto dac? Curious minds want to know. |
Bill my Intuitive Design Gammas sound better when I switched to a 2a3 tube based push pull mono blocks. Beautiful music. Enjoy your new amp. |