Anyone hear the Caravelle speaker and not like it?


I am very close to ordering a pair of the Harmonic Precision Carravelle speakers. I am looking in the below $5,000 range and these look interesting. There are only a couple of reveiws so I was wondering if anyone has heard them and been unimpressed? It is a lot of money but I may take a chance on it. Anyone think I can do better at my price point. I will be buying a new amp after I choose a speaker.
Ag insider logo xs@2xpal
You all are right about the drivers being only part
of the deal. This whole thread reminds me of the
GM Europa...inexpensive drivers but a smart mind behind
them! Great sound...$995.
Warrenh & I went several rounds awhile back on the two
until he got KO'ed!!!! :o)
Jusss kiddin Warren!, I would like to hear the Caravelles
one day, but now I am happy using a great sounding &
looking speaker that btw uses inexpensive drivers also. :o)

Has anyone ever heard the Europa & Caravelle??/thoughts??
Speakerdude, Nicely said. I've long thought that the problem with the Caravelle's was more probably a reaction to some of the folks promoting them than the actual speakers themselves. There are certainly as, or more, expensive speakers out there that these speakers claim to be competetive with (or better than). Sure would be interesting to be able to audition them some time.
Telescope trade,

"...inexpensive drivers but a smart mind behind
them! Great sound...$995"

Now we are talking and i agree with you that they are bargain.

But did you buy it for 5K? Did you fell it better than Wilson Maxx?

Reasonable is the key word!
Hi All,

In my opinion, the more ambitious the performance of a particular speaker system is intended to be by the designer, the more ambitious the construction of the cabinet must be.

Great drivers will be limited by the cabinet into which they are loaded. If the cabinet is not up to snuff the result will probably be good but not great. Conversely, moderately priced drivers can achieve very high performance if the cabinet is quite well executed.

When Bright Star was producing speaker systems (we actually started as a speaker manufacturer) the cabinet I designed was by far the major cost of the product. The drivers, crossover and hookup wire were also a significant portion of the cost but not equal to the cabinet.

Of course, the crossover must also be commensurate with the goals of the designer. A "series" style crossover is significantly more difficult and time consuming to design than a "parallel" style crossover but does have a number of potential advantages. The biggest drawback as far as designing is concerned is that altering any one aspect of the crossover slopes or driver level requires a change in most (if not all) of the values for the other constituent parts (capacitors, coils, resistors). Designing this type of crossover for a two-way system is also much less daunting than doing so for a three-way system.

The above is not a comment one way or the other on the Caravelle speaker or its performance but a general comment on the art of speaker design.

Best Regards,

Barry Kohan
Bob, lol...yeah I took a verbal thrashing on that thread. I shouldn't (like Gendut is doing, here) have commented about the Caravelles vs the Europas, without having heard the Europas. My (BIG) mistake. I was overly excited about the Caravelles and went a little nuts. I'm still wild about them, but a tad more composed. peace, warren