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Dynaudio
Contour S5.4 |
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A Speaker For Our Times |
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Dave Thomas |
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January 2004
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Specifications
Sensitivity (2.83 V/1 m): 89 dB
Recommended Power: Medium size room: >50 watts, Large
size room: >100 watts
IEC Long Term Power Handling: <350 watts
Impedance, Nominal: 4 ohms
Impedance, (20-200 Hz): 3.8 - 8.7 ohms
Impedance, (200-20 kHz): 4.5 - 7.5 ohms
Impedance, Phase Shift (20-200 Hz): -31.3° - +13.3°
Impedance, Phase Shift (200-20 kHz): -16.7° - +16.5°
Impedance, HF (200 kHz): 15.4 ohms
Frequency Response (+/- 3 dB): 30 Hz - 27 kHz
Resonance Frequency: 32 Hz
Internal Cabinet Volume: 69 litres
Bass Principle: Bass Reflex
Weight: 101.6 lbs
Dimensions (W x H x L): 8.4” x 57.5” x 16.1” (214 x
1460 x 410 mm)
Crossover: 3-way. The crossover is impedance corrected
Crossover Frequencies: 800, 2000Hz
Crossover Slope: 6dB/octave
Connection: WBT Gold plated binding posts (for spades
and 4mm plugs)
Driver Compliment: (2) 20cm woofers, 15cm midrange,
Esotar² tweeter
Price: $8,000/pair
Address:
Dynaudio North America
1144 Tower Lane
Bensenville, Illinois 60106, USA
Telephone: 630-238-4200
Fax: 630-238-0112
Email:
sales@dynaudiousa.com
Website:
http://www.dynaudiousa.com
It’s A Tower Sweety
There are many lessons to be learned about becoming an
audio reviewer. For me, one of the most painful came
on the day when the nearly five foot tall Dynaudio
Contour S5.4 loudspeakers arrived at my home. You see
I made the mistake of not being there when they
arrived and forgot to warn my fiancé Mittie that they
were coming (I’m sure that you can see where this is
going). What made matters worse was that I had argued
with her the night before about how her “collection”
of shoes from what seems like the Mesozoic Period were
unnecessarily taking up space in our storage closet.
As I was pulling up to the front of the house I saw
the delivery truck pulling away. “Oh shucks!” I said
to myself, except I didn’t exactly use the word
‘shucks’ if you catch my drift. I hadn’t had this
feeling of dread going into a house since the day my
dad figured out that those “F’s” on my report cards
didn’t really stand for Fantastic!
“What the Hell is this?!” is what I was greeted with
at the door. Trying to behave as though there was no
big deal I calmly looked at these two monolithic boxes
and said “These are just a couple of Danish-made tower
speakers from a company called Dynaudio Sweety” (As
though saying that they were Danish was going to make
a difference; it didn’t). “All I know is that I’d
better not find these big-ass boxes anywhere in the
house or you and me are going to go at it,” she
said as she hopped on her broom and … er, uh I mean
left.
After that run-in with my little Snuggle-bunny, I knew
the one thing that I had going for me was the fact
that the Dynaudio Contour S5.4s were gorgeously
finished in an elegant maple veneer and maple is one
of Mittie’s favorite wood finishes. I quickly unpacked
the speakers, stored the boxes in the garage and
connected the speakers up to my Electrocompaniet Nemos
for a quick listen. I also knew that Mittie’s favorite
CD was Kenny G’s “Breathless.” So I threw it on
real fast and invited her down for a listen and to
actually see the speakers. She grudgingly agreed and
came down into the entertainment room. “Wow!” she said
when she first got a look at the speakers. “These
really look nice. They’re kind of tall but they look
nice down here and go well with the furniture.”
Mission accomplished. I had won her over and she could
now go back to being her sweet, sweet self. Of course
she couldn’t resist getting in one last jab as she
went back up the stairs. “I can’t believe you still
listen to Kenny G.”
And Now Back To The Review
With that little shared lesson out of the way, let me
get on to the business at hand. The Dynaudio Contour
S5.4 is a speaker that is perfect for this time of
high-quality home audio and video entertainment. While
not necessarily designed to be a home theater speaker
it sure as heck performs well enough to handle many of
the bomb blasts and gun blazing car chase sequences of
some of my favorite DVDs. And when it comes to bomb
blasts and blazing guns no one does it better than
John Woo did in two of my favorite discs Mission
Impossible II and Face Off. Bear in mind that I wasn’t
using a full surround sound system here, just a simple
two channel set up with these beauties was enough for
me to get a good taste of what these speakers could do
for watching movies. But obviously their true calling
is as a transducer of music and to say that they do
that well would be like saying that Halle Berry would
make a nice prom date.
The Dynaudio name has always been synonymous with
high-quality, high-performance drivers just like those
used in the S5.4. According to the white paper on
these speakers, the neodymium magnets, formed
aluminium voice coils and stiff magnesium silicate
polymer (MSP) cone membranes of the S5.4’s two 20cm
woofers, demand a solid foundation to deliver maximum
dynamics and an ideal impulse response. Thus, a solid
metal plate, fused to the wooden cabinet by a
resonance-absorbing damping panel, reinforces the
front of the loudspeaker. This highly rigid
construction provides an ideal foundation for the
highly resolving 15cm MSP midrange driver, and the
incredible new Esotar² tweeter (which is also used in
the company’s more expensive Confidence line). The
tweeter also has a pure aluminum voice coil and a
neodymium magnet ring. The drivers are mounted onto a
material that offers exceptional cooling. The high
quality crossover components are also attached with a
special heat-dissipating adhesive onto an aluminum
plate, which is integrated into the cabinet’s
backside. As a result, all components operate at an
ideal and stable working temperature.
The cabinet is made from 20mm thick MDF with internal
MDF bracing and bituminous damping panels. There is a
large 100mm diameter vent which is trumpet shaped on
both ends built into the rear of the cabinet and foam
vent plugs are supplied to help control any bass
anomalies caused by room restrictions. Grills are
magnetically clamped on to an artistically contoured
(pun intended) metal baffle, which is mounted on the
front of the cabinet. Spikes are cleverly concealed
within the base of the tower. In fact, they were
concealed so well that for the first two days I
listened to the speakers without them being properly
coupled to the floor. A quick call to Dynaudio’s Mike
Manousellis fixed that as he told me that the supplied
hex wrench should be used to unscrew the spikes from
out of the bottom of the speakers and into the floor.
Duuh!
Speaker connection is done via a set of rather tricky
to use WBT binding posts that are designed for either
spades or 4mm plugs. Thankfully the posts are located
at the base of the cabinet so you don’t waste a lot of
(expensive nowadays) speaker cables by having to run
cables two or three feet up the back of the speaker to
reach the binding posts. That was something I used to
hate about my old Merlin VSMs.
Sounds Like …?
During my early listening sessions I found it
difficult psychologically to get around the S5.4’s
rather peculiar driver alignment. Rather than using
the classic tweeter-midrange-woofer array or even the
popular D’Appolito midrange-tweeter-midrange array,
the S5.4 sits its two woofers above the midrange which
in turn sits above the tweeter. When I sat in the
sweet spot it seemed as though the high frequencies
were being generated at chest level while sitting and
that the bass was above my head. But once I got all
that psychoacoustic mumbo-jumbo out of my head I
realized that the musical performances were being
reproduced in a very realistic space and with
excellent height and depth. Though I also couldn’t
help but think that this odd driver array had
something to do with why these speakers did so well
with movies.
After removing the Kenny G disc, which really does
belong to her, (honest it’s not mine!) I put on one of
my favorite recordings to use for loudspeaker
evaluation, “Exotic Dances From the Opera”
performed by Eiji Oue and the Minnesota Orchestra
(Reference Recordings RR-71CD). The opening track,
Rimsky-Korsakov’s The Snow Maiden is a perfect
test of a speaker’s ability to realistically reproduce
huge orchestral scale and still lend delicacy to tiny
bells and chimes. The S5.4s do this exceptionally
well. The sense of air and space around the
instruments and musicians seems true; instruments that
support from the rear of the soundstage sound as if
that’s where they’re placed. Lesser speaker designs
often shrink the depth of the stage to make all
instruments sound as though they are coming from the
same horizontal plain. Not these speakers. They throw
a large enough stage to make all instruments sound
like they occupy real space.
The ability to reproduce live jazz is still the thing
that warms my cockles. What warms your cockles is your
own business. Any loudspeaker that costs what this
Dynaudio speaker costs has got to bring a whole lot
more to the table than just reproducing the music, it
must also reproduce the emotional involvement of the
audience. The late Eva Cassidy’s “Live At Blues
Alley” [Blix Street Records G2-10046] is a
performance that is filled with the kind of emotion
that if not reproduced correctly, will illuminate a
speaker’s shortcomings. There is always an emotional
energy that can be felt in your toes, in your
breathing pattern, and in your eyes when you go to see
and hear a live performance. Because of the intimate
nature of most blues or jazz clubs that energy is
intensified. That’s why you’ll always see at least one
person become overwhelmed by that energy and get up
out of their seat and begin doing one of those dances
that can sometimes inexplicably cause torrential
rainfall. Track 2 from this delightful disc, Stormy
Monday is one of those emotionally charged songs. It
starts out in classic moody fashion but just moments
after the first chorus Cassidy blisters a small part
of the lyrics just enough to let you know where this
tune’s mood is headed. The S5.4s let her soar when she
wants to and gently brings her back into intimate
focus.
These speakers did not seem to emphasize any one
aspect of the performance. In other words they don’t
seem to possess any particular tonal colors. While
some tastes may feel that this means that the speakers
might sound a bit bland, the way they really sound is
honest. These speakers will reveal the true quality of
your recordings. I learned that the hard way when I
dug out one of my old favorite discs Phil Collins’ “No
Jacket Required” [Atlantic 81240]. Drum machines?
Yuck! This is one crappy recording.
Conclusion
I really enjoyed my time with the Dynaudio Contour
S5.4. They settled in to my reference system so well
and unassumingly that I initially took them for
granted. They handled the different types of music
with such naturalness that I didn’t initially
appreciate their virtues: accurate soundstaging, fine
imaging, and deep well-articulated bass. This is a
speaker system that does it’s job and gets out of the
way of the music and according to my fiancé, really
looks nice with the furniture. Highly recommended.
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