CnoEvil
New member
wilro15 said:@Cno what amp are you using with the LS50s?
I'm driving them with an Arcam AVR600, mostly in Stereo Direct, but can bring in the Sub if necessary.
wilro15 said:@Cno what amp are you using with the LS50s?
npoguy said:First of all, I like it better than my Parasound equipment. BTW, I've got a friend who uses Van Alstine amps and he's trying to make the switch to digital. He was so impressed with the NAD, that he's thinking about buying one to run his Rogers speakers--that I'd like to hear!
I know we all struggle with terms and what they mean, but I would describe the NAD as a bit more forward and quicker than the Parasound. What I was referring to about the shortcomings are mostly ancillary sorts of things for me: first, the volume control is very basic, the display sort of fades in/out from one level to another so you don't have the precision of a more expensive amp. Second, it looks great, but it's not going to fool anyone that it's more than a $400 or $500 amp. And finally, it struggles at very loud volumes--but only at the kind of volumes that I wouldn't listen to for long periods. Example, every now and then my young daughter and her friends come up and want to dance to Spotify tunes. They turn it up way beyond what I would and I can hear the clipping, but it doesn't bother them in the least and I can live with the limitations. That may change down the road, but for now I'm using the savings to buy music and pay the arm & leg it costs for Qobuz!
jcbrum said:
raian said:i am sure you have heard this before.. but seriously change your amp.. av amps are not quite as good as a proper stereo amp.. unless you are using your speakers for a 5.1 home theater system.. get a stereo amp with atleast 75 watts..
the record spot said:Let's see if I understand this correctly. You're telling me that your stereo amp, with its 75 watts all in, is going up against my Onkyo, with seven discrete amp channels, each putting out about 135w and the stereo amp's the better one? It's Christmas, not April mate.
AV amps are comfortably as good as their stone age integrated ilk. I gave up on stereo amps when I found the performance of amps like my current one was more than capable of doing it all. So, one Onkyo TX-NR818 later, I'm a happy bunny. Had it for six months now and it's been a terrific buy. Havne't missed any of my former stereo amps at all. I do rather just wonder when the rest of the hifi crowd will "get it". Going by the above, that's some way off yet...
Hi David. As you probably remember i came for a demo with you a couple of weeks ago and preferred the sound of these to the Tannoy DCT6. Having had a very quick listen to the Audiolab CDQ and power amp with you i have decided that it is either that or the Naim 5 combo i will get. Which in your opinion will drive the LS50's better and although subjective would they be more suited to? We liked the sound of the Naim but am concerned that the placement of the speakers in my house, close to a wall, 1.5 metres apart, will not suit them. Are there any other speakers that you would recommend for these two systems? I cant really go much bigger than i have now which is B&W 685's. I'll be back over shortly to listen again.David@FrankHarvey said:Wow, this thread really seems to be steam rollering along!
I've not read the last 40 odd posts as I want to get down to some movie watching, but all I'm going to say is that much of the disappointment/negativity towards the LS50 (or for any other product for that matter) is down to dealers. I appreciate that KEF wanted the LS50 available to all of their dealers so that everyone has access to them, but if it were my decision they'd be in limited stores just like the R Series. A product like this - which has been produced to show the company's ability to design and produce a very high quality loudspeaker at an affordable price is being undermined by dealers who can't demonstrate them properly.
The R Series has been very successful, and very well written about by the press and by buyers/owners alike. I put this down to them only being available through a select number of dealers (between 40-50, as far as I know). Very good dealers know how to get the best out of the products they sell.
I appreciate there are other variables at work here (personal preference), and people buying them blind to use with their existing amplification, but on the whole, many people who have not liked them have heard them with amplification that doesn't do them justice, and are left wondering what all the fuss is about.
plastic penguin said:Surely one size doesn't fit all. Understand these LS50s have a reputation (mostly positive), but does that mean any speaker below £1500, by comparison, is pants?
CnoEvil said:plastic penguin said:Surely one size doesn't fit all. Understand these LS50s have a reputation (mostly positive), but does that mean any speaker below £1500, by comparison, is pants?
Agreed......but the point I believe David is trying to make, is that in order to hear how they can sound, the LS50s need properly set up and driven, or they can sound pants.
The problem as I see it, is that the good reviews stem from a knowledgeable reviewer who has ensured optimum conditions....then when people read all the adulation, they are bought blind on the sure knowledge that they will be brilliant.....and then often stuck on the end of an inappropriate system, in far from ideal conditions.
plastic penguin said:Isn't that the same with all speakers?
CnoEvil said:plastic penguin said:Isn't that the same with all speakers?
To a degree.
Some speakers are a lot fussier than others with regard to the stands they are placed on, and how much they reveal about the upstream equipment. I see the LS50s as mini-reference monitors. I know how good they are, as I can directly compare them with Kef Reference.
Like Gregvet, at times I am staggered at how "big" they can sound, and how large a soundstage they can conjure up......the fact that there are diametrically opposite descriptions of them, tells me how sensitive and neurotic they can be.
plastic penguin said:Don't doubt the competence of the LS50s. The only thing that puzzles me is that a £650 50 watt amp as the ideal partner. :? But then you are powering yours either thru a six grand amp or a high end receiver. No doubt my TB2s would sound a whole lot better a Leema Tucana.
If the LS50s are that tricky then the Leema Pulse, Naim XS, Roksan Caspian is a much better choice than a £650er.
CnoEvil said:plastic penguin said:Don't doubt the competence of the LS50s. The only thing that puzzles me is that a £650 50 watt amp as the ideal partner. :? But then you are powering yours either thru a six grand amp or a high end receiver. No doubt my TB2s would sound a whole lot better a Leema Tucana.
If the LS50s are that tricky then the Leema Pulse, Naim XS, Roksan Caspian is a much better choice than a £650er.
I totally agree.
They can sound "acceptable" with the right budget amp, but need something much more substantial to hear what they can really do.
davedotco said:This strikes me as a perfect description of most of the modern systems I hear, particularly at the budget level. People discuss the virtues of different speakers but have never heard how capable they can be due to their choice of amplifier.
I find that odd.