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we sat around talking for an hour or two. dealers like to size you up and figure out what you’re interested in, what you can afford, and what your goals are. in other words, why are you here?
at that point in our hi-fi journey, we didn’t have all of the answers yet. in fact, it was quite shocking to them that we didn’t even bring CDs to the demo. apparently this was common practice.
luckily, though, I have a pretty strong command of hi-fi lingo and know most of the popular brands/products off-hand. so, we passed the initial test and stayed for the rest of the day to listen.
the system we listened to in that smaller room consisted of Wilson Watt Puppy 2024 loudspeakers, a Spectral DMA-300SV stereo amp, and a Spectral SDR-4000SV CD player (not shown). on the center racks you can also see Spectral DMA-500SV monoblock amps and a D’Agostino Momentum S250 stereo amp.
at the end of our day, Larry asked: “So… you want to come back tomorrow? Everything is set up anyway, might as well.” 0 reply
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Wilson Audio is an american speaker company that was founded by David and Sheryl Lee Wilson in novato, california in 1974. since 1991, they’ve been building their speakers in provo, utah.
the speakers you see here are Wilson Chronosonic XVX, the largest floorstanding speaker they make. a pair weighs ~ 1370lb (622kg) and will run you ~ $370-400k USD depending on the paint finish.
the Chronosonics are the dark, Ridley Scott inspired fantasy of an obsessive engineer trying to extract an unnatural amount of performance from a cone-based ported loudspeaker. it’s a speaker that shouldn’t exist, but does.
one of Wilson’s core design philosophies is minimizing cabinet resonances, so the XVX has a dedicated cabinet for nearly every individual speaker driver to ensure that one does not interact with the other.
the drivers are as follows: 1x 12.5” (woofer), 1x 10.5” (woofer), 2x 7” (lower midrange), 1x 4” (upper midrange), 1x 1” (front-firing tweeter), and 1x 1” (rear/up-firing tweeter). 0 reply
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all in all, between the loudspeakers ($370-400k), amps ($195k), preamp ($150k), streamer/DAC ($142k), and cables ($130k), this system adds up to around $1M USD. if you include power conditioning, racks, and other details, even a little more.
so, after all of that, how did it sound?
hyper-detailed. gobs and gobs of detail flying at you from every direction. every little minuscule sound in the recording: a singer’s lips, fingers on a fretboard, piano pedals. Chronosonics are known as some of the best loudspeakers in the world for detail retrieval and I would concur with that assessment.
the other uncanny characteristic of this system is its ability to portray the ambience of the original recording. so, rather than hearing a mixed track like a flat painted mural, you can hear the space around the performers and your mind/ear understands the spatial relationships between them. 0 reply
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