The
Audiophiliac is shaken and blended by the Martin Logan Neolith speakers.
Last Friday
I went to a press review for the new Martin Logan Neolith electrostatic speaker
at the Stereo Exchange store in New York City. It's a statuesque magnificence,
standing 74.8 inches tall (190cm), and weighing a noteworthy 385 pounds
(174kg), the Neolith is an energy to be figured with! Decked out in splendid
Rosso Fuoco shine red paint, with a vast straightforward electrostatic board,
the Neolith positively resembles a colorful ultra-top of the line speaker.
Listening to
a couple of these wonders unleashing the full compel of Igor Stravinsky's
"Custom of Spring," with the volume topping at 107 decibels left most
likely about the speakers capacities. That is truly uproarious, yet it didn't
feel that boisterous, presumably on the grounds that the Neoliths were just
cruising at that volume, so contortion stayed low. I don't normally like
listening that noisy, yet the Neoliths were so natural on the ears I wouldn't
fret. Determination is eminent; on the off chance that you desire most extreme
detail, the Neoliths merit a genuine tryout. Huge speakers like this improve
substantial scale music and significantly more practically than littler
speakers.
The
Neoliths' tremendous sound field anticipated forward into the room and well out
to the sides of the speakers, so with my eyes shut I couldn't tell where the
sound was originating from. Delicate to-boisterous motion were gigantic, and
the bass force from the Neoliths' front 12-crawl (30.4cm) carbon fiber woofer,
and back mounted 15-creep (38.1cm) aluminum woofer were positively instinctive
in their effect. The two woofers took care of frequencies from 250 Hertz down,
frequencies from 250 Hz up to 22,000 Hz were created by the Neolith's bended
22x48-inch (122x56cm) electrostatic board. That engineering has been utilized
as a part of each Martin Logan electrostatic speaker since 1983, however the
Neolith's board is the most developed and biggest ever created by Martin Logan.
The whole,
front and back, surface of the enormous electrostatic board emanates sound.
Which is a piece of the reason the board produces lower contortion than cone
and vault drivers. The Martin Logan site has an itemized clarification of how
electrostatics work.
The
verification is in the tuning in, and even a quick trial of the Neolith
uncovers its phenomenal execution capacities. The Neolith is an announcement
item, intended to development the condition of the craft of sound multiplication;
the US cost is $80,000 every pair and creation will initiate right on time one
year from now. Martin Logan speakers are accessible through merchants in the UK
and Australia, yet despite the fact that the Neolith's cost has not yet been
set for those districts, an immediate change would be about £51,100 or
Au$96,400. Also, Martin Logan offers a complete line of much all the more
moderately estimated electrostatic and ordinary speakers
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