Vandersteen Model 7 in large room with power music


I will be listening to the Model 7s tomorrow at Audio Connections in NJ. My room is 32 x 18x 10 and I listen to a lot of power type classical music. These speakers have been criticized by TAS (Harley) for not being good at loud levels in large rooms. Anyone have any experience with this speaker in that situation? I now use RS1Bs which are very dynamic and are great in a large room but have no where near the transparency of even the Model 5As. Still I do not want not can I afford to spend big bucks on the large Nolas which I heard at Lyric and really liked although $45,000 would still be a large financial stretch for me. Comments. I would be using VTL 300s with the speaker and a Spectral 20 preamp.
ruxtonvet
Is there anywhere in South Florida to hear the Vandersteen 7.

Either an owner or dealer?

Thanks.
So what's the verdict? Did you hear the 7s? I agree with tdaudio. My room is very nearly the same dimensions as yours and I notice no problem with "image height" or dynamics with my 5As. Maybe my electronics play a role but, if anything, I find myself turning it down to keep levels comfortable. (tube front end with Ayre MX-Rs driving the speakers as Platinumplus aluded to) The 7s should be even more dynamic. Surely I'm
no genious at set up. I'd say try the 5A and save yourself $35,000. If you 're not happy, list the 5As on audiogon. I have several friends who
would like a pair.
I have the 5A's and am in serious lust with the 7's. If my finances allowed the step up to the 7's, I surely would have taken it rather than opting for the 5A's, which are still awfully nice. But the earlier posters are right: the 7's are in a whole 'nother league.

One thing you might want to keep in mind is that the powered subs in the upper end Vandy's mean less strain on your amp, meaning that you may get more bang for your amplifier buck than you would with other "statement" speakers. In other words, a step up to the 7's might not require you to trade up in amplification, while a step up to other top-notch speakers might. Not definitely, but might.

Just something to keep in mind.

Happy listening.
Personally after listening to Vandersteen Model 7 Speakers, I can not think of any other speaker to own even at 5 times their retail price! It is a whole new direction in dynamic loudspeaker design. Yes they build off what Richard learned designing the Model 5 Speakers, but they are taken to such a level above that its a whole new game now. All the main drivers are designed and made from the same material. This and the Perfect-Piston drivers has a huge affect on eliminating driver artifacts. The Model 2, 3, and Quatro Speakers have a 'Sound' to them that becomes less and less as one moves up the product line. By the time one reached the Model 5A this is almost completely gone and only shows itself under stress (I have not yet heard the Model 5A Carbon). The Model 7 on the other hand has no 'Sound' as it just completely disappears leaving only a huge natural soundstage with unbelievable depth. They sound great at low, medium, and loud volumes. They are the first speakers I have heard that don't start showing their weaknesses are higher volume levels. I attend 2 to 3 ASO Concerts a month and the Model 7 is the first speaker to make me think I am in the hall where the recording was made. VTL 300's would be fine for the way I listen though you should probably speak to Richard about how loud you want to listen to them for his input on power. And while speaking of higher levels of listening, I noticed I didn't need to play the Model 7 as loud as I listen to the Quatro Wood or Model 5A Speakers. So I would say go listen to them for a few hours in a large demo room. I like the Model 7 with a tube front end being driven by Ayre MX-R Mono-blocks.
I run 5As in a 17x27x10 foot room with some absorption room treatment. Amps are ARC Ref110 and Ref 210 monos. The Ref 110 is enough as were Pass Aleph 2 monos (100W class A) but the extra head room of the Ref 210s is nice to have.

I remember reading that the 7s work fine with a 100 watt amp. But the reported sensitivity number of the 7 is lower than the 5A and the impedence is also a tad lower. I would want more than 100 watts for the 7s in a large room.

Maybe I have gotten use to the 5As, but I don't find the image height significantly lacking with analog playback. In fact, if the image seems kinda "short" I find it to be evidence that I need to tweek the VTF and or VTA on my arm.
But no doubt there are other speaker designs that make a taller sound stage.
Terry
I am sure a demo will tell you most of what you wonder, John will give you all the time you need with them. When I heard the 5A at Audio Connection it played pretty damn loud to me, They should be able to capture dynamic Classical at louder levels, if you were to say you wanted to play power metal at concert levels that may be a completely different story but for Classical my gut tells me you will be very happy.
One speaker that you should probably consider for classical music is the Nola Metro. I heard this at RMAF and was blown away with how well it did on classical music, but you need a large room for it in my opinion. It is also cheaper than the Vandy 7s.
I also think they sounded great at RMAF 2010, but they also showed a problem that Robert Harley (I think) reported in his review. They don't reproduce soundstage height. This problem I have also found with Vandersteen 5s and 5As. Robert Harley said it was probably due to their small size. This is baloney. The original EgglestonWorks Andras were even shorter and threw a huge soundstage up to the ceiling. At RMAF 2010, I listened to Esoteric MG20s, a short speaker, and they had no problem floating a soundstage well above their tops.
I heard the 7's at RMAF in a rather large room and they sounded awesome. Powered by ARC Ref210 amps they filled a suite with no problem.