OK. Been reading various threads on the ADM9.1 active speakers on this forum and am surprised by all the emotive comments, either for or against the loudspeakers. It seems that people either love them or hate them (but some of the haters apparently haven't auditioned them!). So here goes - I've actually purchased a pair recently, replacing a Meridian 588CD, 502 pre, 557 power amp with B&W Nautilus 805 speakers using balanced Van Den Hul interconnects through the chain. My main motivation after years of satisfied listening with the above kit was simple and twofold: 1) reduce the clutter - my wife loves music but hates boxes and wires and 2) my vast CD collection has been scattered all over the place as my kids have grown up, ending up in cars, bedrooms, flats - resulting in me not being able to easily find the music I'm looking for and switching the TV on instead of listening to music after work as it became too difficult to keep finding and organising a library of CDs in smashed cases. I still possess a good set of ears for critical listening even after 40 years pursuing my hifi passion. I've used everything from original Quad amps and speakers, Stax electrostatic headphones, Linn and Ariston turntables, Dynavector Diamond and Ruby cartridges (partly through testing products for manufacturers back in the 70s and 80s). So I took the plunge, sold my Meridian/Nautilus gear (with some sadness I must confess) and bought the ADM9.1s (plus a NAS and a Sonos system). Only had the speakers for a short time - but first impressions are very positive indeed. Huge dynamic range. They go extremely loud without distorting (your ears 'crack' before the speakers show any breakup). The imaging on these is absolutely rock solid - actually better than the Nautilus ones I had (which were excellent). The speakers are much easier to place as well without much variation in sound. My room is 'awkward' as it has a suspended wooden floor and plasterboard walls which make the sound (and bass in particular) bounce around and boom a little bit. To my surprise the bass on the ADM9.1s is very well controlled and I can hear bass lines very clearly. Some people would call the speakers a bit 'light' in the bass. In reality they are 'fast' here - and as a consequence don't have the 'warm bloom' of some passive speakers which in turn is mistaken for deeper bass. They do sound ' exciting' and make you want to listen - and not as laid
back as some other gear I've listened to in the past. They actually sound much closer to my electrostatic headphones than
most speakers I've heard (these can also sound light for the same
reasons - but if you really listen, the bass notes are there - deep and
clean and very easy to follow). The midband and
treble is fabulous - but can seem bright and punchy - but I believe that is quite
accurate and compares well to my headphones (in terms of handling
sibilance etc...). So are there any downsides? Well - first of all, they are so revealing that badly recorded music sounds... well... bad. That's most pop that's compressed at the recording or production stages. But that's not the speakers' fault, is it? With well-recorded music (jazz, blues, classical) they really do excel - huge dynamics and good control. Secondly, I have to say that I did prefer the looks of my old rounded Nautilus speakers with external tweeter (not to say that the 9.1s look bad). The 9.1s can benefit from a sub - as they do roll off below 50 or 60Hz quite quickly - but most speakers of this size do. I have tried a small sub with these (not AVIs own one) and have achieved a reasonably balanced and more extended sound (on some music that does produce much deeper bass - eg electronic, organ etc... ). But not strictly necessary.
Lastly, the gentleman who runs the AVI company (Ashley) has come under some flak in these forums (I'm not going to go into why and don't even care quite frankly) - and yes, maybe he can seem a little 'over-passionate' about his product. But (impartially) in my case, he has been courteous, very helpful (not just re his products, but also in other areas such as computerised audio, wireless streaming etc...) and very professional in his dealings.
Oh yes, and the most important bit of all ... I now come home from work, the TV does NOT get switched on, I use the Sonos remote to access some (lossless) music from the NAS upstairs - all played back beautifully through the ADM9.1s. And the room seems much bigger now. Result!
back as some other gear I've listened to in the past. They actually sound much closer to my electrostatic headphones than
most speakers I've heard (these can also sound light for the same
reasons - but if you really listen, the bass notes are there - deep and
clean and very easy to follow). The midband and
treble is fabulous - but can seem bright and punchy - but I believe that is quite
accurate and compares well to my headphones (in terms of handling
sibilance etc...). So are there any downsides? Well - first of all, they are so revealing that badly recorded music sounds... well... bad. That's most pop that's compressed at the recording or production stages. But that's not the speakers' fault, is it? With well-recorded music (jazz, blues, classical) they really do excel - huge dynamics and good control. Secondly, I have to say that I did prefer the looks of my old rounded Nautilus speakers with external tweeter (not to say that the 9.1s look bad). The 9.1s can benefit from a sub - as they do roll off below 50 or 60Hz quite quickly - but most speakers of this size do. I have tried a small sub with these (not AVIs own one) and have achieved a reasonably balanced and more extended sound (on some music that does produce much deeper bass - eg electronic, organ etc... ). But not strictly necessary.
Lastly, the gentleman who runs the AVI company (Ashley) has come under some flak in these forums (I'm not going to go into why and don't even care quite frankly) - and yes, maybe he can seem a little 'over-passionate' about his product. But (impartially) in my case, he has been courteous, very helpful (not just re his products, but also in other areas such as computerised audio, wireless streaming etc...) and very professional in his dealings.
Oh yes, and the most important bit of all ... I now come home from work, the TV does NOT get switched on, I use the Sonos remote to access some (lossless) music from the NAS upstairs - all played back beautifully through the ADM9.1s. And the room seems much bigger now. Result!