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[FONT="]This weekend I drove down to New Orleans to visit a client and got my first opportunity to hear these speakers. I've been wanting to hear them and was excited when this opportunity presented itself. First off, these are BIG. They are physically imposing and definitely need some space to work with. The finish is nice given its a big box, but the real pudding is in the sound. I was impressed, and I wasn't expecting to be given the tweeter arrangement.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The truth is, they do a lot right and not too much wrong. They have great frequency response and act as a true chameleon - their presentation changes greatly depending on any changes upstream. I've never heard a speaker at $6,500 have this quality. With the gear we had to play with, they were really doing well in a minimally treated room.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The bad I experienced was that on a few songs the speakers got a little 'phasey'. The soundstage would begin to wrap around instead of extend and it was surreal. It was limited to only a handful of songs but it was apparent. The second complaint is that the speakers are lacking 'something' that apparently the regular DI have - the LIVE aspect of the music. There is no doubt that its a recording with everything we played. It didn't sound bad, just not as organic as what I've come to expect out of my current system.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Realistically, I'd have a hard time not recommending these speakers for those in that price range with a larger space. The one caveat is that it MIGHT require you to spend MUCH more than anticipated on the gear upstream, so in the end it might not be the best solution for many.[/FONT]
[FONT="]During my time there, I also got to hear the Denafrips Pontus DAC, a Chinese built R2R DAC and compare it to the top of the line North Star Design Venti. The client was most impressed by the Venti and the fact that NSD was able to implement the ES9038 chipset in such a way that it was competing directly with the sound from his Denafrips. While the Denafrips had better detail extraction, the Venti had more organic sound. The differences were subtle but there. I also got to experience the Schiit Yggdrasil and it didn't fare well against these two DAC's.[/FONT]
[FONT="]I also got to experience the T+A PA 3100 HV integrated amplifier. This might be the best solid state sound I've heard to date. The tone, detail, and overall presentation was superb. I really only had one complaint about the unit but the complaint falls in line with my own tube preference - the T+A lacked some of that LIVE aspect that the Tekton's lacked. It sounded like it was the complete package but there was just something about it that kept me from getting completely engaged. For those who find solid state to be their huckleberry, this is an amp that is definitely end game.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We compared the T+A directly with the MastersounD Evolution 845. Our best results were when we ran the Pass Labs XP-20 preamp into the amp via the direct XLR inputs. In this mode, we bypassed the internal preamp section of the Evolution 845. The result was spectacular. While it lacked some of the full detail extraction of the T+A, there was a LIVE aspect brought to the picture and in my opinion a more realistic scale to the music. I know many prefer a tubed preamp with solid state power, but I've found recently that I prefer the opposite. I think this has much to do with the single-ended design of the MastersounD amplifiers as SE amps just have a certain naturalness to them that I still haven't experienced in other designs.
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[FONT="]The truth is, they do a lot right and not too much wrong. They have great frequency response and act as a true chameleon - their presentation changes greatly depending on any changes upstream. I've never heard a speaker at $6,500 have this quality. With the gear we had to play with, they were really doing well in a minimally treated room.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The bad I experienced was that on a few songs the speakers got a little 'phasey'. The soundstage would begin to wrap around instead of extend and it was surreal. It was limited to only a handful of songs but it was apparent. The second complaint is that the speakers are lacking 'something' that apparently the regular DI have - the LIVE aspect of the music. There is no doubt that its a recording with everything we played. It didn't sound bad, just not as organic as what I've come to expect out of my current system.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Realistically, I'd have a hard time not recommending these speakers for those in that price range with a larger space. The one caveat is that it MIGHT require you to spend MUCH more than anticipated on the gear upstream, so in the end it might not be the best solution for many.[/FONT]
[FONT="]During my time there, I also got to hear the Denafrips Pontus DAC, a Chinese built R2R DAC and compare it to the top of the line North Star Design Venti. The client was most impressed by the Venti and the fact that NSD was able to implement the ES9038 chipset in such a way that it was competing directly with the sound from his Denafrips. While the Denafrips had better detail extraction, the Venti had more organic sound. The differences were subtle but there. I also got to experience the Schiit Yggdrasil and it didn't fare well against these two DAC's.[/FONT]
[FONT="]I also got to experience the T+A PA 3100 HV integrated amplifier. This might be the best solid state sound I've heard to date. The tone, detail, and overall presentation was superb. I really only had one complaint about the unit but the complaint falls in line with my own tube preference - the T+A lacked some of that LIVE aspect that the Tekton's lacked. It sounded like it was the complete package but there was just something about it that kept me from getting completely engaged. For those who find solid state to be their huckleberry, this is an amp that is definitely end game.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We compared the T+A directly with the MastersounD Evolution 845. Our best results were when we ran the Pass Labs XP-20 preamp into the amp via the direct XLR inputs. In this mode, we bypassed the internal preamp section of the Evolution 845. The result was spectacular. While it lacked some of the full detail extraction of the T+A, there was a LIVE aspect brought to the picture and in my opinion a more realistic scale to the music. I know many prefer a tubed preamp with solid state power, but I've found recently that I prefer the opposite. I think this has much to do with the single-ended design of the MastersounD amplifiers as SE amps just have a certain naturalness to them that I still haven't experienced in other designs.
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