Zu Soul Supreme Recap -- Owners, what are your preferred system pairings with them?


I'll save a long backstory, but in short I've got the Zu Soul Supremes and I absolutely love them for what they do, at least in my relatively small (13x15x9) listening room.  I've had them a couple years as a follow-on to previous Zu speakers (Unions and Cubes, which I still own).  Those followed some vintage Altec horns (16 ohm Valencias and 19s)--which I love, but love the Zus more for daily listening.  Sean recommended the Supremes over the Druids at the time for the size of my listening room, although I suspect the Druids would have been as good or better regardless.

My interest is to hear from other Zu Soul Supreme owners...not may posts in this forum from owners that I can find.  I'd prefer to focus this discussion on the Soul Supremes, as there is a lot of great info already on the Druids and Definitions (which I assume are more prevalent in the wild), even though I'm sure have a ton of overlap in system synergy.

So...

What system components are you finding to be great/phenomenal matches to the Soul Supremes, what have you compared them to, and what hasn't worked as well?   Anyone running them with what you consider to be really high-end gear?  I'm super curious to see how far these speakers can go before a speaker upgrade makes way more sense.

Jay
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Since this thread is still going, I will throw out a couple of additional amps that are phenomenal pairings.

I got a hold of a custom 71a amp.  At 3/4 wpc it's sings way bigger and better than it should possibly be able to.  The tubes should be Cunninghams as I find them to sound the biggest and best.  I also found the 80 rectifier in my amp to make a giant difference in the sound...Cunningham was great there as well.

For an even bigger sound, and this is where I'm at in my main system now...a well designed PX4 amp.  The tubes are very hard to find, but I find them to be a little more neutral than top 300Bs, yet still giant sounding with all the benefits you want from tubes.  They are more nuanced and magical than 845s, all else equal.

The Decware SEPs and SETs are still quite good, but I would give the nod to the other tubes above with great iron and SET designs.
@parsons what was it that had you keep the Soul Supremes over the Druid V? My current room is a little bigger than yours 22x19x10avg but opens into other spaces so it feels bigger. I might move to a smaller more symmetric space that is easier to treat eventually. I’m planning to upgrade from the Omen DW during the 100% trade up period. I keep going back and forth between Omen Def, Soul Supreme, and I even saw some used Druid V listed, all at around the same price to make it more difficult.
Interested in what factored into your choice. I’m primarily using a Primaluna DPHP  
I’m glad to see that my first post on this forum resurrected the Soul Supreme thread. Not a lot of threads out there on these speakers. I’m a big fan of ZU Audio. Have had my Dirty Weekends for nearly 3 years and have powered them with everything for low powered SET amps to high powered SS Monoblock amps that I am presently using. And in my experience, the more power, as long as it’s also quality power, the more they have responded and the better they sound. Straight from the man himself, Sean said that his ZU’s love high power. 
So what brought me to this thread was my search for reviews and more info yon this speaker. I just ordered a pair and out down $2000 for them. I just want to know what I will be getting compared to what I’m already getting with the Dirty Weekends? Strictly two channel and no sub. Small room. 12x10 with 8!foot ceilings. Seems like a good fit for that room. 
I'll try to answer why I kept the Soul Supremes over the Druid 6's (not 5's, as stated in the question--I never owned the 5s, but heard them a couple times)...but my answer will be unashamedly subjective in nature.  As scientific as I tried to make my personal comparisons, a bunch of things changed (including my rooms, and my exposure to field coil drivers) and I ultimately relied on emotion.  And by the way, the Soul Supremes are for the moment in a 3rd system I own, and are going to be moved to a 5th system.  So while I kept them, they have moved into a specialized spot for me personally....they continued to get trickled down to lesser-used systems.  But I still love them...I think.  But let me be clear--for the $, they remain a phenomenal speaker, especially at used prices.

Before I go there, however, while I understand Sean's comments that Zu's love high-power (I'm quoting the post, I don't remember specifically reading that, but I don't doubt he said it), that by itself probably explains where I feel like some of the design choices made at Zu might differ from goals of my own.

I'll just state my own bias...building a speaker that is by nature quite high (very high?) in efficiency (98-101db or whatever range they end up) and then having the feeling that they really need "high-power" seems like something was ultimately traded off that does not match my own personal design goals for a high-efficiency speaker.  I am not suggesting that everyone should end with flea watt SET amps, but I certainly do not personally feel that moving to "high-power" amps is an end-game answer for any high-efficiency, full range driver'd speaker.  The trade offs in capabilities as you move into the 50 wpc or higher amp designs are, by nature, trade offs that are easy to hear in transparent high-efficiency speakers.  Heck, even 18 wpc on 845 SET amps or a solid state SIT3 is easy to hear the trade-offs over something like 300B or PX4 and then again over 45 or 71a (when those amps have top designs and top parts).  You lose some micro detail and nuance, minimally, even if there is a gain on slam and dynamics.  Once you've heard a particular set of traits in those ranges, for a near-end-game emotional level, you'll find you need it all, not a trade-off one way or the other.  I have owned (and still own) a very large number of amps in many topologies, solid state and tubed, and have spent countless hours with each in many combos.  I'm not saying I know better than everyone--but I'm saying I have owned (and still own) about 10 different sets of high-efficiency speakers of different brands and eras, and about 30 amps to pair them all with.  And yes, much of this is trial and error and subjective preference, so if this paragraph has offended anyone, please don't be.  You may love "high power amps matched with Zus" and I won't challenge that for your personal situation.  It's just not what I found in the end (and ultimately moved on from the Zu design, in spite of still respecting it).

The Druid 6 is a much more capable speaker than the Soul Supreme...don't misread my action of keeping one and selling the other as a comparison in that respect.  Both are great speakers that have sweet spots for their usage and price ranges.  The Druid 6 took a larger step away from the Soul Supreme vs. the Druid 5 did, which given the 5's parts similarity to the Supremes, the Druid 5 may sit closer to the Supreme than the 6.  The 6 retrieved more detail, gave slightly better imaging, seemed to go a little lower, seemed to go a little higher, seemed to have slightly more black backgrounds, and more slam over the Supremes, all else "equal."  None of that should surprise people.  It was in my opinion more "high performance."  Zu probably feels like they accomplished what they had hoped to do with the 6...make a new speaker that was largely based on their experience to date but with everything just a little refined, better, newer, tighter.  It was "better" by the subjective (and probably objective) measuring posts.  However, I can't prove my next comments, but I also think they were more difficult to nail in terms of positioning and gear to get the most out of them.  They relied on a higher level of associated equipment (they could sound spectacularly average with the wrong gear and wrong room).  If you didn't have the right room or the ability to pull them out into the room, they sunk a bit in terms of soundstage.  I could say the same exact things about the Soul Supremes, but the range of their performance was tighter in those scenarios...it didn't get as crazy good so it also didn't have as far to drop when positioned incorrectly or paired with gear that was not as good as a match.

However, as good of a level as the 6s reached, I sold the 6s because they were not ever going to be end-game for me.  That was a very personal and subjective decision and not a knock on Zu or anyone who finds them to be "end game."  They are great speakers, and an improvement, but as you move into $10K and above speakers, the goal posts change for how amazing they need to be.

I kept the Soul Supremes because I love the look of them, they are capable of producing some very emotional and musical sound and seem to be a nice middle-ground from Zu between superb entry-level high-efficiency speakers that can be easy dropped into an environment and produce "fun" and what I suspect they intended to be more an "audiophile" speaker that tries to compete with the best.  The Supremes retrieve enough detail to make your ears perk up and go "wow" enough of the time when paired with great amps and source, but they don't try to compete with $20K or higher speakers.  For that reason I will probably continue to try to make a system around them to listen to on occasion.  They could certainly be the cornerstone of a very top end system, and if you got them for $2K you stole them at that price...well done.