#21
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Accuphase E-470, Accuphase DP-510, Usher CP-8571 Diamond |
#22
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I have not demo'd The Olympica 3 vs The Elipsa SE next to each other however I did demo the Olympica 3 vs The Cremona M side by side on the same equipment.
My friend and I listened to 8 songs of various artist between The Olympica 3 & Cremona M and we both preferred The Cremona M's each time. Very surprising! At a later date I demo'd The Elipsa SE's and they were far superior to The Cremona M. A bigger sound with a wider and deeper soundstage, more detail and a much better bottom end. For the difference in price they should be superior. The Olympica is a beautiful speaker however I feel The Elipsa SE is a much better speaker in both sound and looks. |
#23
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Elipsa, all day long.
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Indeed, if facts were available, then faith is not required, so in a sense, faith can be based on the absence of evidence-a fiction. |
#24
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My primary concern was the physical presence. They are 22" wide, if you leave 2 feet to the side walls and 5 feet between the speakers. You get about 13' Move them out two feet from the wall and place your chair 2' from the rear wall, assuming 120% distance between the chair and speakers as is between the speakers (I get 6') so the minimum length of the room would be around 12'. So, I would think the minimum room size would be 13' * 12'... bigger would be better. I would guess that is a small room, not a tiny one. Tiny, I would guess is 10' by 12'? 10' by 9'? Admittedly the Elipsa are better speakers. Hopefully we'll learn what tiny means to
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George Main: Aurender W20SE music streamer, ARC REF 9SE DAC / CD, Linn LP 12, Koetsu Rosewood SignCartrige, ARC REF 3 Phono Stage, ARC REF 6SE Preamp, ARC 160s amp, Sonus Faber Amati Traditional Speakers,Transparent Ultra IC & SC Library:Aurender N100, Ayre QB9 2020 DAC, Woo WA5-LE amp upgraded tubes, Focal Utopia HP, Sennheiser 800s HP, LCD HP. Last edited by George Prentice; 02-19-2014 at 06:43 PM. |
#25
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First of all, thank's for your answers.
Actually, distance between both speakers are 63 inches. Both are separated from rear wall by 9 inches. Distance between speakers and my ears are 94.5 inches. Distance between speakers and side walls it's bigger. My current speakers are Dynaudio Contour 1.8. (37.7*8*10.8) (H*W*D). I own an integrated tube amp, Unison Research P70, wich I would like to change for a McIntosh C2500 + Mc 275 combo in a future. P70 – Unison Research I only listen to jazz, and of course I have volume restrictions. One last question, when you talk about Elipsa SE, What do you mean? Browsing SF web, I can´t see the "SE" specification. Well, that´s all. I hope this information could help you in your advices. Thank´s again. |
#26
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Marmarosa,
I was trying to guess the size of your room. I wasn't too far off on guessing your setup... although going from 8" wide to 22" is going to consume some space. What is the size of your room? Sounds like it is bigger that what I would call tiny, but small sounds right. his is on the Sonus site: ww.sonusfaber.com/ContentsFiles%5CSF_ELIPSA_SE_TONE_8_12.pdf The P70 looks nice.
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George Main: Aurender W20SE music streamer, ARC REF 9SE DAC / CD, Linn LP 12, Koetsu Rosewood SignCartrige, ARC REF 3 Phono Stage, ARC REF 6SE Preamp, ARC 160s amp, Sonus Faber Amati Traditional Speakers,Transparent Ultra IC & SC Library:Aurender N100, Ayre QB9 2020 DAC, Woo WA5-LE amp upgraded tubes, Focal Utopia HP, Sennheiser 800s HP, LCD HP. |
#27
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Experiences with McIntosh
Quote:
I own a C 50 & Mc 302, and i'd like to listen it with Elipsa Red. What your experiences? Please if you could tell me more Thanks , Roberto from Italy |
#28
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I have my Elipsa's playing with a Mcintosh c2300 and a pair of MC501's and have not felt the need to change the combination in years
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#29
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The Red
I exhaustively investigated speakers before I bought and had a completely open mind when I started the process. I purchased them after auditioning several brands. They go well with my c2300 and MC275 mono'd. They handle any type of music but If you like punk or heavy metal with a room chilling bass it might not be the first choice. The bass is "musical" and meant to be listened to as opposed to creating an adrenalin response. The mids and highs are smooth and real. For what its worth my wife loves them not only for their beauty but for their sophisticated way of handling music. I listen to a lot of classical, jazz, and classical rock on them. I have no intentions to move on or up.
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#30
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I respect your opinion about this matter, but I wonder if something was wrong about the set up. Were the Olympicas properly broken in? I'v also heard upgrades to better speaker reveal shortcomings of other equipment that the more simple speaker did not show. The acoustic can also do this trick. It's very important to position them in the right way. I'v heard them sound extremely well. But for sure there has been a very dedicated work to get them there, as with al speakers and systems. Maybe, Olympica III is SF's best speaker at it's price range and further, I think. In my world there is not even a race between them. Olympica III is a so much better speaker, I think.
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It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing |
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