| The
Audes
111 Mini
Monitor
Loudspeaker |
| Champagne
Taste?
Beer
Budget! |
| Clement
Perry |
| 5
January
2000 |
Specifications
Nominal
Impedance: 8
Ohm
Max. Long Term
Power: 100
Watts
Frequency
Range : 52-200
Crossover
Frequency:
2200 Hz
Sensitivity
/2.83v, 1m//
87
Drivers:
Woofer/
Midrange
160 mm
(6.5")
cone type
Tweeter
25mm (1")
soft dome
Dimensions
80×234×340
mm
Weight
10 Kg
Address
(marketing
office):
58 Winding
Brook Drive
Matawan, NJ
07747
www.audes.ee
(factory)
website: www.audesusa.com
email: info@audesusa.com
"The
look and
feel of the
111's would
make one
think that
two times
the asking
price is an
excellent
value. At
$599, it's
hi-fi
robbery!"
Estonia,
formally a
Soviet
Republic, is
the place from
which Naum
Dorkhman,
president of
Audes USA
INC., imports
an exciting
loudspeaker,
the Audes 111,
the newest
addition to
his long line
of affordable
Hi-End and
Home Theatre
loudspeakers.
Naum is
gearing up to
make a big
impression on
the US market,
and I think
he'll succeed.
His new Audes
111
mini-monitors
appear an
all-out
success, and
certainly a
sure winner in
the under-$500
range. They've
serenaded a StereoTimes
listening
panel
consisting of
Lew "Left
Channel"
Lanese, Bill
"The
Brass
Ear"
Brassington
and me, your
ringside
announcer.
It's an
understatement
to say that we
were all
pleasantly
surprised by
these
"little
engines that
could"
linked to an
expensive
front end.
Here's
the Skinny
Overseas
manufacture
and in-house
parts has kept
the price of
Audes 111 low.
It's a
relatively
small (stands
come as
standard),
handsomely
built,
well-designed
2-way, bass
reflex
mini-monitor
(2nd
order
crossover for
bottom, 3rd
order high
pass) in an
impressive
grey metallic
finish that
offers a
superlative
sound. The
design
features a
one-inch domed
proprietary
tweeter
supported by a
five-inch
midrange/woofer.
Now read this
carefully,
it's not a
typo: the
Audes 111
retails for
$599. When
considering
the bread one
usually has to
lay out for
this level of
performance,
that's quite
some bargain!
I had guessed
them to retail
in the
$1000-$1500
range. The
look and feel
of the 111's
would make one
think that two
times the
asking price
is an
excellent
value. At
$599, it's
hi-fi robbery!
With a nominal
impedance of 8
ohm, and
sensitivity of
85dBs, the
111's are
rated to
handle 100
watts
comfortably,
with short
peak bursts to
120 watts.
Decent enough
specs, but
it's the
listening
session that
does it. I
strapped these
little giants
up to both the
Sim Audio W10
mono's as well
as the Sunfire
Cinema Grand,
with
alarmingly
good results
in either
configuration.
First,
since SACD is
basically the
talk of the
town these
days, it
didn't hurt to
see whether
the 111's were
up to the
exemplary
resolution of
the new DSD
release of
Billy Holiday
Lady In
Satin
(Columbia CS
65144) played
through the
Sony SCD-1.
This
hauntingly
vivid
portrayal by
one of jazz's
finest women
of song is one
for the ages.
The quality of
this recording
is markedly
enhanced by
DSD
technology:
quieter,
cleaner, and
sweeter.
Billy's voice
is startlingly
real and the
111's prove a
lot better
than merely
than
competent.
Track
one,"I'm
a Fool to Love
you,"
sends memories
flashing
through my
mind of a
period when
music was so
much more
involving.
Those old
numbers do
that to me.
The 111's
never impeded
communication.
Nary a
slow-down or
stutter. All
right, the
111's won't
give you the
exquisite low
level detail
and dynamic of
big
floor-standers,
most notably
my reference
Von Schweikert
VR6's.
However, they
won't allow
much of the
music to get
away either.
Moreover, what
they omit I'll
take any time
over speakers
that want to
intrude into
what you're
playing. Know
what I'm sayin'?
If
you like
blues, then
look no
further than
the new SACD
compilation
from
Audioquest
aptly named Bluesquest.
It features
songs that'll
make your
mouth water,
they're so
damn good.
Another nice
thing about
this disc is
that it's a
hybrid,
playable on
SACD along
with regular
CD players.
Wanna cry?
Play track
six, "The
Prowler,"
by the Bruce
Katz Band and
tell me if
this isn't the
pick of the
litter. A do
or die
must-buy. Not
to lose track
of what we're
about here,
once you
settle in and
listen, you
forget that
it's a little
$599
loudspeaker
sounding so
damn good.
Another
favorite is
John
Coletrane's
"My
Favorite
Things"
from the John
Coletrane
Live Newport
'63
(Impulse
GRD-128).
Here's a
standard
16/44.1
recording that
still manages
to show how a
very good
speaker gets
out of the way
of the
performance.
The 111's do a
wonderful job
at extracting
the emotion of
a great
recording. The
Coltrane disc
features Eric
Dolphy, Reggie
Workman, and
Roy Haynes
doing a
version of
this Rogers
and
Hammerstein
song. Simply 'Trane
at his very
best.
Great
performance at
this price
level is a
difficult
trick to pull
off. Very few
manufacturers
can boast the
performance-at-price
offered by
Audes. The
brand has an
long line of
interesting
products
coming aboard
and I hope to
review more of
them. One
thing's
certain. The
price of
admission into
the halls of
Audiophila has
taken a
significant
downturn
thanks to
these Audes
111's.

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