Rockport Ankaa and Anquila


Anyone auditioned these new offerings from Rockport?

http://rockporttechnologies.com/

Ankaa:

http://blog.stereophile.com/ces2008/010908rock/

Anquila:

http://www.soundstage2.com/lasvegas2008/showstoppers_01.html

Not sure if they've hit dealers yet, but let's get a thread going...
hce4
The pricing structure from what I can find:

Mira Monitor $5,800
Mira $15,000
Ankaa $26,500
Mira Grand $34,500 (NEW VERSION with new midrange - old was $29,500)
Anquila: $44,500
Altair: $89,500
Hyperion: $91,500 (not sure of latest price)
Arrakis: $165,000

The Mira Grand has been updated, but the Mira and Mira Monitor will remain the same. The new offerings have midrange drivers that are made by Rockport which are claimed to improve on the audiotechnology drivers found in Mira Monitor, Mira, and old Mira Grand.

Having listened to the Mira Grand, best word to describe is seductive. Midrange is natural, unlike anything else really. Sidefiring woofers disjointed the sound somewhat, not quite as seamless and "cut from the same cloth" sound I was hoping for. But again, mids unlike anything else, seductive. Best suited for acoustic and voice, you appreciate the sound coming from Rockport more than anything...

These are just my experiences, your mileage may vary!
I heard the Mira at THE show in LA about two years ago. The room was one of the three best in the show for me (alongside the ESP/Wavestreatm room and the MBL room). I agree that Rockport doesn't seem to get the respect and attention deserved. At the show, they were used with Gryphon electronics which seem to be their preferred match
Just curious if anybody feels like updating this thread.

I've listened to the Grand Miras and the Ankaa at Audio Vision in San Francisco a few times. In both cases I felt like the sound was extremely "clean" and well defined, but the partnered electronics may have not been the best match (it was higher end Naim gear powering the Rockports).

Dont get me wrong, I love Naim gear (I've owned both the Nait 5i and the Aro tonearm), but I would really like to hear Rockport speakers with super high-powered amps (like Gryphon, Boulder, or even Parasound JC-1).

To my knowledge, Andy has been working with side-firing woofers since the Merak / Sheritans and the Hyperion (the mid / late 90s) so having almost all of his speakers now utilize the side-firing woofer configuration does not seem surprising. For a while he went down the route of separating the low end cabinets from the midrange and tweeters (ala the Watt / Puppy methodology), but now it seems like he is focused more on single cabinets, except in cases like the Mira Grand or Arrakis where you have to break up the cabinet size.

What I heard was incredible imaging and great tonal balance, but again, my next step is to hear them with huge amps behind them (300 watts or more). From what I understand, that is the best way to hear Rockport speakers.
amazingly enough to me, there seems to be very little interest in this speaker line. both by the media and the public. it is a shame. oh well their loss!
Great to see a thread about Rockport. After being on the audiophile upgrade path for 30 years, I got off after buying Antares in early 2001. I still love them. I guess I didn't really get off the path, because I did upgrade other components. The Antares made that process much easier than ever, though, and I have been off "the path" for several years now.