Stereophile claims about Magico


Stereophile claims Magico has revolutionized loudspeaker design. All I see is standard design. Only 1 thing is slightly new, carbon nano tubes the carbon fiber cones already been done, aluminum cabinets been done. The driver array 1 tweeter 1 mid 2 woofers been done to death. The way magico attaches drivers old as the hills Ive got 50 year old loudspeakers that mount simlar. The way he designs crossovers is fairly standard. So whats the revolution the nano carbon tubes? Or just another bold claim on mag cover to sell issues.
johnk

Showing 1 response by flav

Very well said Wireless200.

It is quite obvious that whatever piece of gear Stereophile happens to be reviewing at the time is "the best sounding" “ground breaking” “must have” piece of gear available. Meanwhile some of the reviewers have 10 year-old pieces of gear in their systems. I recently listened to a friend’s rig consisting of nearly 10-year old Krell Class A Series Components and Wilson Audio W/P 6 Speakers, and it sounded awesome, and contrary to what Stereophile would have you believe, the new Systems, that I have recently heard (at this level), do not make it sound broken.

Stereophile Magazine is plainly and simply paid (through advertising dollars) to try to convince their readership that last year’s (or last issue’s) model is crap and that whatever you are listening to at Home is garbage, and that you are doing yourself a grave disservice unless you run-out and buy this newly-reviewed piece of gear. Nearly every review that I have read in this Magazine gives an absolutely glowing review, proclaiming “the best of the best” status on nearly everything they plug-in. This is not objective journalism, or consumer reporting, “it is advertising”.

I’m sure that Consumer Reports Magazine would find that at least half of Stereophile’s reviewed gear is over-priced garbage (most notably the equipment that frequently fails during the review, or shows up broken).

The Magazine does however have some interesting and well written show reviews, industry news and opinions, and strangely enough, their music reviews are actual reviews and not endorsements, but when they get their hands on a piece of electronic gear look-out, hear comes the not-so-subtle sales pitch