Review: Lahave Audio Khara Speaker


Category: Speakers

I purchased these Lahave Khara speakers used here on AudiogoN. I had not heard of the company before, but the speaker design caught my interest. I have always been attracted to smaller audio companies making outstanding gear with passion and care.

I spoke with Jim the owner and decided to buy them unheard.....ya took a risk for sure. I am open to risk however!

The speaker is about 44 inches tall and weights 125 pounds. It is a two way speaker using an OEM Raal tweeter that is outstanding! The 8 inch mid woofer is the excellent Seas Excel Magnesium model. This is a very high quality mid woofer. 90db efficient and 8 ohm.

The crossover has no resistors and very high quality. I would describe it as follows. First order high pass on the tweeter. The Raal ribbon tweeter is transformer coupled, thus the inductance of the transformer may make it second order.

The woofer network is a first order low pass but with a very deep trap in parallel, which makes it act like a much higher order filter.

The speaker cabinet is an absolute work of art and unequalled in my experience. No right angles, 2 inches thick in many places, and not a hint of cabinet resonance to be heard or felt folks. Stunning build quality that easily places it as the finest speaker I have owned over the years.

I did upgrade the crossover parts to Jupiter caps and North Creek 10 gauge inductors. This brought with it some real and enjoyable improvements. Lahave will use SOTA parts on a new build, simply ask for parts such as Duelund, Jupiter etc....

This speaker sings with one voice and is utterly seamless top to bottom. This combined with the complete absence of cabinet resonance makes for a very musical and live experience. This speaker sounds nothing like many of today's Hifi sounding speakers. The best way I can say it is this. Please hear what I am saying now as it is the difference maker. It is as if I don't own speakers. I hear individual instruments performing in precise locations before me and all within their own space. Sure, I have thought past speakers disappeared, but this my audio friends is a completely new and awakening experience.

Oh my, you should hear a piano on these. What a revelation to my ears. The resolution is stunning in it's impact and the tone striking. I hear the same energy, fast strike impact, and natural resonance of a live performance.

This is the same for all instruments. It is so much fun to hear all my music over again. Most times it's as if I really never heard the recording or instruments before. Over and over I am taken back on how darn real and un-stereo like my music has become. These speakers play music....music....not a facsimile of it.

The bass is very deep and powerful making this a true full range speaker. They have a side firing port which I have not seen before. My previous speaker had 4 - 10 inch woofers per cabinet and the bass on the
Khara is deeper, tighter, and far more articulate. The bass goes down to 30 htz in my room.

I am not familiar with the other models in the Lahave line as I have not heard them. These retail for some $15,000 or so I understand.

I could not be more pleased with a speaker. These will stay for a long while as they just do it for me in a way no other speaker has. I loved my Soundlab speakers, but prefer these in the end. They just sound more like the real instrument. It is an uncanny listening experience.

What speakers? Lahave should trademark that line!

Take care

Associated gear
TRL Dude tube preamp
Aesthetix Romulus dac/CD player
TRL Samson amps
Dennis Had Inspire KT 150 SET amp
Sistrum racks under the speakers and Aesthetix
Amadi Silver cables throughout
Acoustic treated listening space

Similar products
Coincident Total Victory III
Soundlab M1
Dali Grand
Silverline Bolero
Merlin VSM - several iterations
128x128grannyring

Showing 5 responses by roxy54

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.
Thanks Bill. It looked familiar even though I have only seen Jordan drivers in pictures. Your new speakers are real stunners to look at.
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.
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