Vandersteen 5A vs Meridian DSP8000


Anyone own both, or at least compared the two against each other. I know they are differnt prices and differnt approaches, so you may say its not a direct comparison.
axle

Showing 2 responses by vicdamone

Since you have space issues and you realize the Vandy's may need some room to do their magic it would seem you've answered your question.

There is a lot to be said for Meridian gear but as sensible as they may be Vandersteens simply make music. The attention to time and phase that goes into all Vandersteens blows away many other fashionable designs. You may notice that real audio improvements are rare which is why some designers can maintain a customer base without evolving a new model every year or two.

My suggestion is to get the Vandy 5's or the Quatros, empty your room, dial in the speaker/room relationship, then backfill with your stuff. Otherwise why waste your money on high end speakers then set them up in a mid-fi environment?
Joe, Not at all. Listening to speakers at this level one should experience their potential with the boundary space needed for their optimum performance within that particular room. After restocking the room and relocating the speakers he would then know the sacrifice made.

In many cases room furnishings can be beneficial. Speaker placement can be one of the most enlightening aspects of this hobby. Reading a recent review of the Model 7, I believe Richard Vandersteen has a specific method for setting up his speakers by which the reviewer experiences and incredible degree of accuracy.

While I don't own Vandersteen systems I'm a big fan of their core goals of time and phase. Now, if only the recording industry paid closer attention to polarity, playback would take on an increased level of realism.