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CES/T.H.E Show 2005
The High-End Audio
Circuit
Well
it’s been a long time since I’ve been to a CES.
The last CES I attended was the last summer
CES in Chicago. I really miss the Chicago
show. This CES was my first time in Vegas
thanks to my wife who surprised me with a
ticket. Bless her. I was hoping to escape the
Chicago cold for a few days and experience
blue skies and warmer weather. The only thing
I escaped was Chicago. Vegas was cold and
rainy, with snow mixed in on Friday. It was a
bummer from a weather standpoint, but
definitely not as far as the show was
concerned. There was a lot to see, hear, and
experience amongst the Alexis Park and San
Tropez resorts, homes to the 2005 Consumer
Electronics Show and T.H.E. Show respectively.
Here’s the scoop.

April Music
– If I were passing out awards, this room
would get my Exceptional Merit Award. This
would be an award that I would give to the
room that produces the best sound at the show
with reasonably priced hardware. I believe it
is important to recognize manufacturers and
companies who are innovative in their ability
to provide high quality high-end music
reproduction hardware at affordable prices.
This helps keep high-end audio alive. There
are many music lovers who do not have the
income to invest tens or hundreds of kilobucks
in a system, yet enjoy high quality music
reproduction just as much (if not more so) as
those who can afford to spend the big bucks.
The April Music system was comprised of the
Stello CDT200 CD transport, DP200 DAC/Preamp
($1,995), and M200 mono amps ($2,995/pr). The
loudspeakers were the Stelar-1 ($5,500/pr)
loudspeakers from Bill Eggleston’s new
company, WEGG3.
Atlas –
This UK company manufactures interconnects,
speaker cables, and connectors. The pricing is
very reasonable and the technology appears to
be sound. Their line includes the Equator
($70/1.0m) and the Elektra ($775/1.0m). I’m
really looking forward to reviewing these
products.
Audia
Flight – Nice styling, wide
bandwidth, and high slew rate circuitry, are
the crux of this company’s electronics. Their
product line consists of the Flight PRE
($6,995), Flight CD ONE CD player ($6,995
photo right), Flight ONE integrated amp
($7,995), Flight 3100 three channel power amp
($5,995), Flight 50 ($7,495) and Flight 100
($10,995) stereo power amps. They got great
sound from a system with their electronics and
the Elac FS607 X-Jet ($5,795/pr) and BS602
X-Jet ($7,990/pr) loudspeakers and a Thorens
TD850 turntable ($2,299).
Audia Sound Lab
– This company specializes in making speaker
systems that use planar magnetic and dynamic
drivers. The Evolution 1 loudspeaker
($8,000.00/pr) that I heard had a 60-inch
planar magnetic driver with four 10-inch
drivers in an infinite baffle design. This
system sounded really good. These guys make a
variety of products with a wide range of
finishes. They also do custom designs.

Cabasse –
This French company has a long history of
developing transducers and speaker systems for
high quality music reproduction. They have an
impressive line of speakers for home theatre
and serious stereo applications. An impressive
sound was coming from a system including the
Baltic II loudspeaker ($4,292/pair above
photo) and Saturn 55 subwoofer combination
with top electronics and sources from Art
Audio, Arcam and Clear Audio.
EMM Labs –
This is first-class digital processing
hardware designed by Ed Meitner. These units
can handle PCM and DSD formats. The CDSD SACD/CD
transport ($7,900) and DCC2 DAC/preamp
($11,500) were partnered with the Dartzeel amp
and Von Schweikert VR9SE.

Escalante Design
– This is a new speaker company started by
Matthew Waldron and brilliant veteran designer
Tierry Budge. Tierry has done design and
development work for Wilson and Talon Audio in
the past, and those experiences have paid off
in spades in the development of the excellent
sounding Pinyon monitors ($6,450/pr above
photo) and Uinta subwoofer ($3,490 right).
Keep your eyes and ears on this company.
Fried
Products – For those of you who
have been longing for new Fried loudspeakers,
which use updated drivers, new components, and
Bud Fried’s own design principles, your wait
is over. Fried Products now offers the Studio
7 (photo left), Monitor 7, and the Reference.
Grommes Hi Fi
– The Grommes company has been around for a
decades but just within the past few years
have they gotten back into hi-fi. Albert
Schippits, the product development manager and
Alan Kimmel, tube circuit designer
extraordinaire, have come up with some great
sounding products. They have two monoblock
power amps, the 260/260A and 360, a phono
preamp, and the Phi 26 ($995), a unit that can
be used as a line stage, headphone amp, or
integrated amp.
Herron
Audio – This room gets my vote for
“Best Sound at the Show.” Keith Herron really
pulled out all the stops with this system,
which included the VTSP-2 tube preamplifier
($5,000 above right), M1 mono power amplifier
($6,000/pair left), and VTPH-1MC tube phono
stage ($3250 right). The synergy between the
hardware and music played was awesome. I’ve
only heard Herron Audio electronics with Audio
Physic speakers and usually the sound is
great. But this time Keith was using a
prototype of his own speaker the ESP-1, a
large infinite baffle design (photo left). The
music reproduction capability of this system
was simply outstanding in terms of natural
dynamics, tonal accuracy, and resolution. I
hope to spend some time with this system this
year.
Hovland
– This room had very good sound.
For the first time, I finally heard the RADIA
solid-state stereo amplifier with the HP-200
preamplifier (photo right). All of the
interconnect, speaker, and power cable were
Hovland. The speakers used were the Avalon
Acoustics Eidolon Diamond.
McIntosh –
This legendary high-end company had one of
best exhibits in terms of complete product
line. They had a very impressive multi-channel
home theatre setup. They also had rooms to
display and demonstrate their stereo
electronics and speaker systems. I was really
impressed with the MC 2Kw 2,000 watt monoblock
power amplifier. The price of this beauty has
yet to be determined. It looks like McIntosh
is on a roll.
ON Semiconductor
– I was really pleased to see this
company exhibiting with the high-end crowd. ON
is the discrete semiconductor division of
Motorola that was spun off as an independent
company. Motorola historically has provided
transistors for audio amplifier applications.
Thankfully, ON is continuing that tradition
with new and innovative products. They were
showing their new ThermalTrak complimentary
bipolar power transistors, which are designed
to be used in the output stage of power
amplifiers. These transistors are unique in
that they have been designed to eliminate
thermal equilibrium lag time and bias trimming
in audio amplifier applications. To the lay,
person this translates to lower distortion and
higher low-level resolution designs. Audio
circuit designers check these devices out.
Overkill
Audio – Their flagship loudspeaker,
the Encore ($70,000/pair), is an innovative
2-way speaker system that uses the Manger
driver and a high performance 12” woofer. The
Manger driver is in an egg shaped enclosure,
which sits atop the bass module. The
enclosures are acoustically very inert and are
very expensive to manufacture. A digital
crossover is part of the system. The crossover
also provides full parametric equalization in
real time, room measurement and correction.
This speaker system has the potential to
provide outstanding music reproduction in
almost any listening environment.

Soundlab –
The Millennium-1 electrostatic loudspeakers
with the toroid transformer option ($18,170),
were driven by a pair of Parasound JC-1 power
amplifiers. The CTC Blow Torch preamplifier
was used to feed the JC-1’s and combined to
create another of the “Best Sounds at the
Show.”
H. Courtenay Osborne
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