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    Reviews » Hardware » Speakers

    Audioengine N22 Amplifier

    Posted 11/23/2010 at 11:18am | by Michael Brown

    Yep, it’ll blow your hair back

    Many audio purists believe a speaker and its amplifier should never reside in the same enclosure. If you count yourself in that camp, you need to audition Audioengine’s new N22 Class AB amplifier. That goes double for anyone looking for a no-nonsense, reasonably priced headphone amp.

    » Read More on Maximum Tech

    Audioengine P4 Speakers

    Posted 11/15/2010 at 10:40am | by Michael Brown

    Love's Pretty When It's New

    We borrowed the line above from Merle Haggard to let you know our torrid love affair with B&W’s MM-1 multimedia speakers has cooled. A stunning two-channel temptress has lured us into a new and equally passionate relationship. Call us fickle, but the ears want what the ears want; and these ears are lusting after Audioengine’s Audioengine P4 passive speakers.

    » Read More on Maximum Tech

    Creative ZiiSound D5 Bluetooth Speaker Review

    Posted 10/28/2010 at 9:20am | by Michael Brown

    Who says Bluetooth is lousy for audio?

    Creative’s ZiiSound D5 promises to deliver the convenience of wireless audio without committing the sin of sonic compromise, and it comes pretty darned close. If that surprises you, you’ll be doubly amazed to learn that it accomplishes this feat using Bluetooth.

    » Read More on Maximum Tech

    Klipsch LightSpeaker Review

    Posted 10/25/2010 at 4:45pm | by Michael Brown

    Running wires through existing construction sucks, whether those wires are needed for telephones, PCs, cameras, or speakers. Clambering around the attic, basement, or crawlspace; drilling holes; fishing wire; installing junction boxes—it all adds up to misery.

    » Read More on Maximum Tech

    Rocketfish 2.4GHz Indoor/Outdoor Speaker

    Posted 10/22/2010 at 3:30pm | by Michael Brown

    Take it outside

    Wireless audio systems are great for streaming music from room to room, but they’re practically essential when it comes to playing your tunes outdoors. Best Buy’s private-label Rocketfish system delivers an innovative solution with a budget price tag of just $185.

    » Read More on Maximum Tech
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    Logitech Speaker System Z623 Review

    Posted 08/25/2010 at 4:50pm | by Michael Brown
    10
    Comments

     

    Logitech astounds us on a regular basis with their ability to produce dirt-cheap yet solid-sounding speakers. We can only imagine how thin their profit margins must be; heck, that’s probably why there are so few other players in this market. But the quality of their latest offering, the Speaker System Z623, barely passes muster. It also leaves us wondering what value THX certification really holds for the consumer. 

    The Z623 is a 2.1-channel system equipped with a 200-watt amplifier that delivers 35 watts to each of the satellite speakers and 130 watts to the sub. The satellites have a single driver each, 2.5-inch domes with aluminum phase plugs, while the subwoofer utilizes a seven-inch pressure driver with a bass port in its cabinet. As is typical in this category, the satellites have hard-wired cables that plug into the sub, where the amp is located.

    » Read More
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    Bowers & Wilkins MM-1 Computer Speakers Review

    Posted 06/23/2010 at 8:21am | by Michael Brown
    9
    Comments

    We’ve reviewed a number of great speakers, but we haven’t been this excited about a set of boom boxes since we laid hands on the eponymous Cambridge SoundsWorks MicroWorks in the very first issue of boot magazine—way back in September 1996.

    Listening to Peter Gabriel’s new album Scratch My Back on Bowers & Wilkins’ MM-1 computer speakers sent chills down our spines, a sensation rapidly followed by slack-jawed awe. We downloaded the album from B&W’s Society of Sound music club, which has the exclusive rights to distribute the album in studio-master quality: losslessly encoded in FLAC with 24-bit resolution at a 48Hz sampling rate. The MM-1 delivers audio quality that’s so exquisite, so pristine, that it makes the mighty AudioEngine A5—our previous favorite 2.0-channel speakers—sound almost muddy in comparison.

    Continue reading this review after the jump.

    » Read More
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    Sonos ZonePlayer S5

    Posted 04/19/2010 at 2:48pm | by Michael Brown
    0
    Comments

    The Sonos ZonePlayer S5 is a fabulous addition to the multi-room Sonos Digital Music System, even if the company’s engineers did make some sonic compromises in the name of delivering an all-in-one model at a friendlier price point.

    The passive ZonePlayer 90 sells for $350, and the ZonePlayer 120—which features an excellent integrated 55-watt-per-channel amplifier—goes for $500. The ZonePlayer S5 packs both an amplifier and speakers, and is priced at just $400. This low price, coupled with the company declining our query about the amp’s power and total harmonic distortion specs and the material used in speaker fabrication, leads us to believe that Sonos is looking for a bridge to a more proletarian market.

    Contine reading this review after the jump.

    » Read More
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    Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 Wireless Speakers

    Posted 02/22/2010 at 10:30am | by Michael Brown
    7
    Comments

    Every portable computer, from the brawniest desktop replacement to the tiniest netbook, has one thing in common: terrible speakers. There’s no shortage of powered speaker systems on the market—some of which are very good—but what’s the point of using a laptop if you have to tether it to a box to get good sound?

    Klipsch has a better solution: The ProMedia 2.1 Wireless uses a USB transmitter to send audio from the host PC to the speakers over the airwaves. The speakers themselves are all hardwired, with the amplifier tucked inside the subwoofer. And lordy, what a subwoofer it is. There’s a 6.5-inch long-throw, side-firing driver housed inside a bass-reflex enclosure with a front port. The sub cabinet also houses the wireless receiver and the 200-watt amplifier that powers all three channels. Klipsch claims line-of-sight range of 30 feet and our experience backs that up. If you’re looking for a wireless audio system that will send audio from a computer in one room to speakers in another, this isn’t the right solution.

    Continue reading this review after the jump.

    » Read More
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    Logitech Speaker System Z520

    Posted 11/03/2009 at 7:30pm | by Michael Brown
    10
    Comments

    We haven’t auditioned many cheap speaker systems lately. Why? Well, let’s just say we don’t enjoy subjecting our ears to the sonic equivalent of waterboarding. But Logitech has a knack for packing big sound into inexpensive boxes, so we agreed to review its new two-channel Z520 system.

    You’ll have to decide for yourself if the Z520 system’s $130 price tag really puts it in the “cheap” category, and we imagine the folks at Logitech will cringe to hear us describe them as such; but you can cut only so many corners before we begin to ask, “Why bother?” Judging by these speakers’ performance, Logitech’s engineers know just how low they can go.
     
    When we see small speakers, we usually pigeon-hole them as near-field monitors: short-throw speakers that produce a small stereo soundstage that collapses as soon as you move more than three feet away from the cabinets. There’s nothing inherently wrong with near-fields, especially in a PC environment, but they have their limitations. So we were surprised to hear Logitech boast that the Z520 could provide a “great listening experience throughout the room.” We decided to put that claim to the test as soon as we took the speakers out of the box.


    Continue reading this review after the jump.

    » Read More
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