Jump to content
IGNORED

Article: Jay-Z & Kanye West v. Magico Q7


Recommended Posts

I feel sorry for the elephant!

 

Sorry I was somewhere else for a moment...

Eloise

---

...in my opinion / experience...

While I agree "Everything may matter" working out what actually affects the sound is a trickier thing.

And I agree "Trust your ears" but equally don't allow them to fool you - trust them with a bit of skepticism.

keep your mind open... But mind your brain doesn't fall out.

Link to comment

While the steel engineering is beautiful and heavy, I can't help but think that there must be smarter ways than to stiffen a square box.

Pressure cast aluminium (aluminum in the US) in double curved surfaces with stiffening ribbes could offer same stiffness at lower cost and weight.

Then I'm probably just being your usual technology strategies, product development specialist and engineer nerd.

 

Genelec may offer some inspiration:

 

 

8260 inside.jpeg

 

 

PS. The Q7 picture is mirrored, probably to fit some marketing material. Sloppy!

Promise Pegasus2 R6 12TB -> Thunderbolt2 ->
MacBook Pro M1 Pro -> Motu 8D -> AES/EBU ->
Main: Genelec 5 x 8260A + 2 x 8250 + 2 x 8330 + 7271A sub
Boat: Genelec 8010 + 5040 sub

Hifiman Sundara, Sennheiser PXC 550 II
Blog: “Confessions of a DigiPhile”

Link to comment
Pressure cast aluminium (aluminum in the US) in double curved surfaces with stiffening ribbes could offer same stiffness at lower cost and weight.

 

Genelec may offer some inspiration:

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]1944[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

Hi Pete - I'm willing to bet if Magico could make this speaker with equal performance using lighter and cheaper materials it would. Shipping costs of the aluminum and steel have to be outrageous.

 

Do you have any measurements of the cabinet resonance on the Genelec speakers? I am really interested in the whole Genelec approach. I wish some high end dealers carried them so I could hear them other than at the AES show flow.

Founder of Audiophile Style | My Audio Systems AudiophileStyleStickerWhite2.0.png AudiophileStyleStickerWhite7.1.4.png

Link to comment

Chris,

There are lighter and stiffer materials than steel, or aluminum alloys, such as carbon fibre. However very few speaker cabinets use that technology presumably because of complexity and cost. The only manufacturer that I'm aware of that uses carbon fibre cabinets is Wilson-Benesch, whose latest speakers don't have internal bracing as the case is so stiff. This is a link to their description of their latest speaker, the Cardinal, http://wilson-benesch.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cardinal-white-paper-1.pdf. See pages 7 & 8 re relative stiffness.

 

I agree with your comments about shipping costs, however this is a $165,000 speaker so everything is relative.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

Link to comment
Chris,

There are lighter and stiffer materials than steel, or aluminum alloys, such as carbon fibre. However very few speaker cabinets use that technology presumably because of complexity and cost. The only manufacturer that I'm aware of that uses carbon fibre cabinets is Wilson-Benesch, whose latest speakers don't have internal bracing as the case is so stiff. This is a link to their description of their latest speaker, the Cardinal, http://wilson-benesch.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cardinal-white-paper-1.pdf. See pages 7 & 8 re relative stiffness.

 

I agree with your comments about shipping costs, however this is a $165,000 speaker so everything is relative.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

 

Hi Nigel - Thanks for the link. Very interesting stuff. I understand the stiffness and lightness of carbon fiber. I've just never seen a loudspeaker have virtually no visible vibration when playing a bass heavy track at 100+ dB. Do you know if the WB speakers resonate at such high volumes?

I always feel speakers at audio shows and I can't remember a speaker other than a Magico that hasn't vibrated.

Founder of Audiophile Style | My Audio Systems AudiophileStyleStickerWhite2.0.png AudiophileStyleStickerWhite7.1.4.png

Link to comment
Hi Pete - I'm willing to bet if Magico could make this speaker with equal performance using lighter and cheaper materials it would.

Shipping costs of the aluminum and steel have to be outrageous.

 

I think the numbers of Q7's sold is probably way too low to warrant a professional industrial design for mass production.

The weight is a hassle for practical reasons, I'm sure the shipping costs does not matter in that price range.

 

 

Do you have any measurements of the cabinet resonance on the Genelec speakers? I am really interested in the whole Genelec approach.

I wish some high end dealers carried them so I could hear them other than at the AES show flow.

 

I have no measurements, and Genelec keep quiet about a lot of details in their design.

And while a set of 8260 can deliver 123dB SPL @ 1m, I will refrain from putting a glass on top and doing that.

Plus the top is curved and not suited for leaving your whiskey on ;-)

 

The Genelec 8200 series are so different from what most audiophiles ask for, so I have little hope that we will a lot of them at high end dealers.

There are also no expensive upgrades, so Genelcs are completely against the normal thinking of dealers.

 

Also, you need something that supplies well clocked AES/EBU and the GLM speaker calibration kit just to audition.

That's USD 14.000,- just to audition (Vintage King).

I bought a Weiss AFI1 and the GLM kit to be able to audition a set of 8260's at home, most people would probably hesitate.

 

The 8260's are not the best speakers/system in the world, but in my book they score very high on value for money, predictability, size and weight.

 

The Q7's are a work of art, like a hand build swiss mechanical clock. Some will be proud of owning that.

The 8260's are a genius industrial topology, mass produced, but no more sexy than an 80' Casio digital watch.

So: sexy and flashy - or - value for money and more consistent quality?

Promise Pegasus2 R6 12TB -> Thunderbolt2 ->
MacBook Pro M1 Pro -> Motu 8D -> AES/EBU ->
Main: Genelec 5 x 8260A + 2 x 8250 + 2 x 8330 + 7271A sub
Boat: Genelec 8010 + 5040 sub

Hifiman Sundara, Sennheiser PXC 550 II
Blog: “Confessions of a DigiPhile”

Link to comment

Chris,

I have the Discoveries which are an earlier version. The simple answer is I don't play my music that loud, so I don't know. Plus WB speakers have angled tops, so I couldn't balance a glass there anyway. Based on my non-technical knuckle knock they are completely dead cabinets, unlike anything I've encountered constructed using MDF.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

Link to comment
Chris,

I have the Discoveries which are an earlier version. The simple answer is I don't play my music that loud, so I don't know. Plus WB speakers have angled tops, so I couldn't balance a glass there anyway. Based on my non-technical knuckle knock they are completely dead cabinets, unlike anything I've encountered constructed using MDF.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

Very cool Nigel.

Founder of Audiophile Style | My Audio Systems AudiophileStyleStickerWhite2.0.png AudiophileStyleStickerWhite7.1.4.png

Link to comment

I'll be hearing this pair (they are in NorCal) later this week. However, I'll have the owner play his Ampex ATR-102 and some of his 1/2 inch 15 ips Tape Project and other hirez classical. Don't think I can take JayZ etc. Larry

Analog-VPIClas3,3DArm,LyraSkala+MiyajimaZeromono,Herron VTPH2APhono,2AmpexATR-102+MerrillTridentMaster TapePreamp

Dig Rip-Pyramix,IzotopeRX3Adv,MykerinosCard,PacificMicrosonicsModel2; Dig Play-Lampi Horizon, mch NADAC, Roon-HQPlayer,Oppo105

Electronics-DoshiPre,CJ MET1mchPre,Cary2A3monoamps; Speakers-AvantgardeDuosLR,3SolosC,LR,RR

Other-2x512EngineerMarutaniSymmetrical Power+Cables Music-1.8KR2Rtapes,1.5KCD's,500SACDs,50+TBripped files

Link to comment
While the steel engineering is beautiful and heavy, I can't help but think that there must be smarter ways than to stiffen a square box.

Pressure cast aluminium (aluminum in the US) in double curved surfaces with stiffening ribbes could offer same stiffness at lower cost and weight.

Then I'm probably just being your usual technology strategies, product development specialist and engineer nerd.

 

 

Hi,

Besides the Q serie, the S serie of Magico speakers uses pressure cast aluminium, with simple braces. But the Q serie and the Q7 in particular remains the top of Magico range, nothing can beats its stiffness and inertia - this translates into superior sound. If Alon Wolf decided to stick to such an expensive construction, it is because for the Q7, it is because it is the best enclosure he could build, without consideration for cost. I have never heard a better speaker than the Q7 - and I have heard many as or more expensive one!

PS: but who would buy a pair of Q7 to listen to Jay-Z? ;-)

Link to comment
Chris,

There are lighter and stiffer materials than steel, or aluminum alloys, such as carbon fibre. However very few speaker cabinets use that technology presumably because of complexity and cost. The only manufacturer that I'm aware of that uses carbon fibre cabinets is Wilson-Benesch, whose latest speakers don't have internal bracing as the case is so stiff. This is a link to their description of their latest speaker, the Cardinal, http://wilson-benesch.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cardinal-white-paper-1.pdf. See pages 7 & 8 re relative stiffness.

 

I agree with your comments about shipping costs, however this is a $165,000 speaker so everything is relative.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

Yes, carbon fiber is an interesting material for speaker design. Stiffness matters, but don't you need also some weight for total absence of vibration? Every time a woofer moves, there is an opposite force on the cabinet... and that's where mass helps to keep cabinet completely still. Or I am missing something?

Link to comment
Chris,

There are lighter and stiffer materials than steel, or aluminum alloys, such as carbon fibre. However very few speaker cabinets use that technology presumably because of complexity and cost. The only manufacturer that I'm aware of that uses carbon fibre cabinets is Wilson-Benesch, whose latest speakers don't have internal bracing as the case is so stiff. This is a link to their description of their latest speaker, the Cardinal, http://wilson-benesch.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cardinal-white-paper-1.pdf. See pages 7 & 8 re relative stiffness.

 

I agree with your comments about shipping costs, however this is a $165,000 speaker so everything is relative.

 

Regards,

 

Nigel

Yes, carbon fiber is an interesting material for speaker design. Stiffness matters, but don't you need also some weight for total absence of vibration? Every time a woofer moves, there is an opposite force on the cabinet... and that's where mass helps to keep cabinet completely still. Or am I missing something?

Agree that shipment cost is not much of an issue these days... I paid a bit more than 2k to ship my MM3 to Japan (6 crates with nearly 2000lbs)

Link to comment

Nice and relevant to see mention of the Genelec in the thread given their amazing physical construction.

 

I have heard the full Genelec 8260A set up running and it was absolutely mind numbingly awesome and all for about £10,000 ( a big number until you consider what you get 3 way + sub, fully digitally active with DSP).

 

Coming, as they do from the wrong side of the tracks, the studio world, they simply fail to tick the right audiophile boxes, until I heard them and then all my prejudices set in!

 

1) They have DSP 2) They don't have Class A amplification 3) The DACs oversample unlike my hairshirt NOS Audio Note 4)I can't feed them I2S instead it's legacy SPDIF

 

Furthermore aside from the DSP they are untweakable, they just get on with the job. They are still messing with my mind, after 30 years of audiofoolery (and they have made me realise that) the best speakers I have ever heard by a mile within sensible price parameters.........

Trying to make sense of all the bits...MacMini/Amarra -> WavIO USB to I2S -> DDDAC 1794 NOS DAC -> Active XO ->Bass Amp Avondale NCC200s, Mid/Treble Amp Sugden Masterclass -> My Own Speakers

Link to comment
Nice and relevant to see mention of the Genelec in the thread given their amazing physical construction.

 

I have heard the full Genelec 8260A set up running and it was absolutely mind numbingly awesome and all for about £10,000 ( a big number until you consider what you get 3 way + sub, fully digitally active with DSP) . . . . . . . .

 

Furthermore aside from the DSP they are untweakable, they just get on with the job. They are still messing with my mind, after 30 years of audiofoolery (and they have made me realise that) the best speakers I have ever heard by a mile within sensible price parameters.........

 

Good to hear blueixus, so I'm not going mad here ;-)

 

I had Encore over the other day for a listen.

His current rig: Meitner MA1 -> Nagra PL-L -> Parasound A21 -> Verity Fidelio Encore.

Note his Parasound is a temp stand-in for some tube gear.

Still, it's easily twice the price of my Genelec 8260 (stereo part).

 

His comments to my rig were mixed!

a) He thought that the sound was a little too much in his face somehow.

b) He noted that he heard details he had newer heard before - on material he brought with him.

c) I played him some surround stuff from 2L + Pink Floyd, and he had to admit he finally understood why surround makes sense.

 

All in all an interestig evening with good discussions.

Hope the quotes are precise enough for you, Jens!

Promise Pegasus2 R6 12TB -> Thunderbolt2 ->
MacBook Pro M1 Pro -> Motu 8D -> AES/EBU ->
Main: Genelec 5 x 8260A + 2 x 8250 + 2 x 8330 + 7271A sub
Boat: Genelec 8010 + 5040 sub

Hifiman Sundara, Sennheiser PXC 550 II
Blog: “Confessions of a DigiPhile”

Link to comment

I have no Jay-Z and Kayne West, but i used "Bass Head" by Bassnectar on Genelec 8260s on brackets bolted to a concrete wall.

It is a ground shaking album, and I wore ear protection during the test.

 

There was a little shaking visible in the glass once I got north of -15dB ;-)

Speaker is rated to 113dB SPL @ 1m equal to 0dB, weight 27,5kg / 60,5 lbs

 

I suppose those additional USD 150.000,- does buy less shaking :-)

 

I'm not really a bass head, but I do enjoy well recorded acoustic bass.

I am however fascinated how great this distorted album sounds.

Promise Pegasus2 R6 12TB -> Thunderbolt2 ->
MacBook Pro M1 Pro -> Motu 8D -> AES/EBU ->
Main: Genelec 5 x 8260A + 2 x 8250 + 2 x 8330 + 7271A sub
Boat: Genelec 8010 + 5040 sub

Hifiman Sundara, Sennheiser PXC 550 II
Blog: “Confessions of a DigiPhile”

Link to comment
If I could afford the Q7 speakers I'd be listening to Jay-Z on them. Instead I'm listening to Jay-Z on my TAD CR-1 / Spectral system as I type this :~)

 

Well if I had these speakers I for sure would not waste them on listening to Jay Z and some rap. Some nice Classical, jazz or soft blues would fit nicely but I would actually just pay off my lake house and say heck with some over priced status symbol.

The Truth Is Out There

Link to comment
Well if I had these speakers I for sure would not waste them on listening to Jay Z and some rap. Some nice Classical, jazz or soft blues would fit nicely but I would actually just pay off my lake house and say heck with some over priced status symbol.

Hi Mav - Music is music to me. I don't care if it's classical, jazz, or gangsta rap. Also, I don't believe a loudspeaker that usually sits in a listening room out of site of most people is the best status symbol a person could purchase. I'm thinking most people would never know if you owned the Q7s. On the other hand a second home ...

Founder of Audiophile Style | My Audio Systems AudiophileStyleStickerWhite2.0.png AudiophileStyleStickerWhite7.1.4.png

Link to comment
Well if I had these speakers I for sure would not waste them on listening to Jay Z and some rap. Some nice Classical, jazz or soft blues would fit nicely but I would actually just pay off my lake house and say heck with some over priced status symbol.

I'm sure there's some status in the "only classical, jazz and blues" are worthwhile music...

 

Eloise

Eloise

---

...in my opinion / experience...

While I agree "Everything may matter" working out what actually affects the sound is a trickier thing.

And I agree "Trust your ears" but equally don't allow them to fool you - trust them with a bit of skepticism.

keep your mind open... But mind your brain doesn't fall out.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...