Tannoy or Volti


I have a friend who has the Tannoy Prestige GRF 90 for sale he is moving out of the country for half price, he paid $29000 in around 2020 not made in China. I am upgrading my Forte IVs, I am also considering the Volti audio Lucera…anyone that has heard the Tannoy and any other suggestions which will be better would be appreciated….I have a few first watt amps and several tube amps…plus Jeff Rowland and Pass Labs amps..

charles007100

@charles007100 As a Forte-4 owner, let me tell you my experience. Shortly after purchase, I decided to open the binding post assembly to check for tightness, etc..

@dweller I think you describe a far more common problem than people realize, across brands and components: either mis-wiring, bad connections, a wrong part used in a critical slot, or outright bad design leading to bad or sub-optimal results. Usually the knee-jerk prescription is: "it needs more burn-in in time" or "fix your room acoustics" or "synergy!" lol. When those inevitably fail, the owner either just learns to live with it, or moves it along. 

As I mentioned before, I bought a set of Tannoy Glenair 10’s from TMR that I later discovered were VERY badly mis-wired at the binding posts. They sounded AWFUL. The note from the prior owner, posted by TMR was to the effect "these speakers require very careful room positioning and amp matching to sound their best!" LOL what a joke. When I discovered the problem and fixed it, I was very happy to have them, as they’ve sounded truly wonderful ever since!

In another case, longer ago, I got hit by a double screw-up: an OTL tube headphone amp had been shipped by the builder with output coupling caps that were rated far too low (voltage) for the application - this is a VERY dangerous situation (for your ears, and the headphones). I had one local tech "fix" the issue; well he did that by putting a very small capacity, very high voltage cap in SERIES with the existing output cap - which fixed the danger but resulted in midrange and bass roll-off below 1000 Hz (one-thousand Hz, not one-hundred). Of course it sounded awful and the prescription then was "those new caps need 400 hours burn-in". This hobby is a joke at times, with not the brightest minds doing the tech work. I had it properly fixed with output caps of the right capacitance AND voltage ratrings - it sounded great AND didn't blow headphones after that. 

I’ve had components, from large makers, reversed at the L/R outputs. Lots of other stories too if I search my memory banks.

When my Kensington GR (UK) were sounding bad in original form, I tried every possible combination of tweeter and woofer wiring just "to see", and the one where tweeters were wired out of phase relative to woofer actually wasn’t too awful - it could easily have shipped like that and many owners would be none the wiser.

One component with ample horror stories that I’ve NOT personally experienced yet: MC phono cartridges. I must have owned 40+ of these by now, and I have my favorites but they’ve all been pretty darn good! Maybe that’s were I have above average luck.

Anyways in short - if you’re gonna be playing with a lot of gear in this hobby, you should learn to not trust nor assume anything, and to do basic diagnostics on your own. OR get a good local tech you can trust.

Sorry to derail, OP @charles007100 
Glad you liked the Volti, and that looks like a very nice choice!

I am going to a deep dive into the Forte today, I don’t know why I haven’t done this. I had a pair of Fortes from 1986 that I did the crossover upgrades from Crites Speakers….I still want to leave Klipsch in my rear view mirror no matter what the deal is with them…probably donate them to a charity in this time of shortages in food banks..in my area…

P.S. Regarding Klipsch Forte-4

For a good speaker cable connection (to binding post), use ONLY banana plugs. Spades can be used but anything more than "finger tight" will cause the inner nut to go loose. I think this is why I open the binding post plate in the first place, 

@charles007100 My Luceras are the only Volti's I've heard in person. It is my understanding that each model up the scale sounds a bit more awesome than the one below it. Good thing I've never heard the Rivals, I can't afford 'em, lol.

I've always been a Klipsch fan. But the Volti's have superior construction and components. 1" birch ply vs 3/4" MDF for example. The metal horns are damped. Custom veneer...they're end-game speakers.