Do You Buy Speakers Without Hearing Them?


In the 'good old days' there were a lot of hifi stores around so there was plenty of opportunity to go in and listen to various brands and models of speakers.  With the continuing disappearance of audio shops, I'm wondering if more people are making the leap to buy speakers they've never heard in person, or just limiting their purchase options to the brands they can hear locally?  If you are buying a speaker that you haven't heard, how do you get comfortable with that?  Magazine reviews?  YouTube demos?  

I've mostly heard any speaker I ended up buying, but in two cases I bought speakers that weren't available in my area.  I made my decision based on reviews.  In one case the speaker was really nice, but in the second case, the speaker was well-reviewed but ended up being disappointing.

Appreciate your thoughts.

 

Ag insider logo xs@2xazkeith

Last two bought without audition.More than pleased but took some upstream changes to get them to sing.

For consideration: If a person were to be a more complete audio hobbyist and make their own speakers - they wouldn't have heard them before buying components (drivers, wood, wire, crossover-parts, etc.). So, if they were to buy pre-manufactured speakers, it stands to reason that buying before listening would be perfectly legitimate.

Other considerations: Room plays a critical role. Reflecting and reverberating with the speaker output, producing a combined result that travels through the air medium to impart pressure differentials in our ears. Few among us have listened to what will be the audio room prior-to and as the primary consideration of home purchase. Try telling your real estate agent to filter by non-reverberant home and see how that works out.

Common-sense says listen if you can. If you can't, then research opinions of those you tend to agree with regarding sound like/dislikes. Also, buy from reputable sources offering a return policy - if you end-up hating them.

Purchases of pre-mfg/pre-designed speakers have been a mix of demo'd vs not-demo'd for me.
Demo'd beforehand examples: GoldenEar Triton series (still use Triton One and 3+  a bargain especially for HT), Martin Logan electrostats (got me hooked on dipole/open-baffle, replaced with LXmini + ob-subs).
Not-demo'd beforehand and liked examples: Tekton DI w/factory upgrade, Buchart, Elac, MartinLogan SLM-XL (for HT side-surround), MartinLogan CI (for HT ceiling Atmos), DIY Linkwitz LXmini and Phoenix(alt) OB-subs (for 2-ch system).

Finally, regardless of what you get, spend plenty of time listening in your room before making decisions. Human biology adjusts itself, adapting the interpretation of sounds - the more you listen to a set of speakers, the more you're inclined to like it, unless there are blatant issues.

Examples of 'blatant' issues I've experienced as inconsolable:
- Aluminum or "diamond" dome tweeters (like B&W) highs are bright/painful.
- MTM (D'Appolito) configurations (many examples) narrow vertical sweet-spot.
- Dipole panels (ML, Magnepan, etc.) produce narrow horizontal sweet-spot.
- Box: resonance, large front baffle (reflections), sharp edge (diffracting) corners.
- Inarticulate bass (many examples) slow, muddy, bloated sound foundation.
- Physical size too big or too ugly for common/size rooms = cohabitant denied.
Some of the above can be corrected (DSP/EQ), 'lived-with' (head in vice - only one good seat in the room) or compromised due to other advantages (spaciousness of dipoles) and some can't - each individaul and situation is a unique balance.

Yes.  I bought my KEF Reference 1 speakers without hearing them.  I did however have the opportunity to return them if I didn't like them and had heard other KEF models prior.  I still have them and don't see them going anywhere anytime soon.  

Speakers I always listen to before purchase. In many ways that is your stereo system and at least for me, build my components around the sound those speakers generate. I live in the LA area so still have a number of quality hi fi stores in which to audition numerous brands of speakers. A suggestion, when on vacation look to see if there are any stereo stores in the vicinity that carry speakers you are interested in hearing. Even let’s say you purchase years later, at least you have some idea of the sound quality, and more importantly how that brand sounds to your ears if you do buy sight unheard in the future.

Having owned a pair of Legacy Focus SE it was an easy leap of faith to go to the Legacy Aeris without an audition. In fairness, I was so enamored with my Focus speakers that I just kept them also. The Aeris was an easy upgrade with no regrets