Review: Totem Acoustics Hawk Speaker


Category: Speakers


During the christmas season of 2002 I was in the market to upgrade my home theatre system and I wanted to get some good stuff, so I decided to go very slowly in picking the components. I live in Southern California and I went to Honolulu on a business trip just before Christmas. While I was there I went into an audio store called "Audio Lab" to look around (not ready to buy anything).

I started talking to the owner and I explained what I was after. He allowed me to listen to several speakers, but none sounded much better than what I have at home. Before I left he said " there is another speaker that you must listen to before you go, called Hawk from a Canadian company called Totem Acoustic".

I had never of Totem Acoustics before, much less the "Hawk". He brought in these small things with a 5" driver and a tweeter, without any grill but the finish was beautiful and is Mahagony. My thaughts were blank. He hooked up the speakers and throw FourPlay 4 in the CD player. The rest is history.

I have never thought I could hear such clean, smoothe, and dynamic sound coming from these small things. The bass was smoothe (not boomy), and beep. The mid ferquencies were clear and smoothe, with the vocal sharp and crisk, and the tweerers were also soft and clear. I listened at a reasonable volume, not too loud, and there was no specific sweet spot. Every where I sat on the couch I could hear the speakers clearly. I listen to a lot of Smoothe Jazz and Reggae, so I know how to evaluate the base response because those music have a lot of bass. The Hawk's performance prove to me that you don't really need a big box with large woofers and dozens of full rang and tweeters to get great sound, that's only a myth.

Upon my return to California I located a Totem dealer "Top Audio" in Orange County and listened to the Hawk once more, to make sure that I could hear what I had heard in Hawaii. The same thing happened: Four Play, Paul Hardcastle, Ray Charles, Aswad, Bob James and a bunch of others sounded great. I could not leave the store without them, so I bought myself a $2000 Christmas present. Up until now the Hawk is worth every penny.

I have even shipped them to Honolu, Hawaii where I will be on a temporary assignment. And they have teamed up with Rotel's 1075 amplifier, and 1066 preamplifier. I have just purchased the Totem Mite-T for the rear channel, haven't heard them yet (review to follow).

The "Hawk" speakers are worth the full list price, JUST BUY THEM, you will be very happy. I have even purchased a set of Beak for them but so far, I can't tell the difference in sound image as Totem Acoustics claim, still experimenting with them.

This is an honest review coming from a owner/user of these speakers, and I have no AXE TO GRIND. The folks at Totem Acoustic are very helpful because I called them several times to ask all kinds of questions about the Hawk and their other products, and they were very patient with me.

PS. Remember to buy some decent speaker cables and inter connect cables, don't have to be too expensive, as the Hawk has proven.

Almandog....

Associated gear
Rotel 1075 120 Watts/channel amplifier, Rotel 1066 Pre amplifier, Audio Quest Type 4 speaker cable, Audio Quest Copper Head inter connect, NAD T572 DVD changer. Totem Acoustic Beak (sits on top of the Hawk for sound inageing).
almandog
I've heard Totem Mani 2s and been impressed, but never "The One".

How are these two models different?

Thanks.
Hey, 2021 and I still have the totem hawks... Are there still some owners left?
Mines were manufactured in 12/2012.
I bought mine in 2003 and I still have it. It is located in my bedroom with my second McIntosh system along with a Pioneer RT909 reel to reel tape recorder. I have no plans to sell them.