| The
Avance
Epsilon
980
Loudspeakers |
|
| Clement
Perry |
| 9
May 1999 |
Specifications
Type:
3 Way Ported
Floor Standing
Bass/Midrange:
2 × 7"
Scanspeak
Drivers
High Frequency
Driver:
3/4"
Scanspeak
Tweeter
Frequency
Range:
38-20,000 Hz
Impedance: 4
Ohm
Sensitivity:
89db
Recommended
Power: 50-200
watts
Weight: 55lbs
Size, H/W/D:
39"×
8.3" ×
13.8"
Price: $2,099
Recommended
Retail
website: www.avance-international.com
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After
spending
countless
hours
listening,
and
breaking
in,
many
different
loudspeakers
during
and
after
the
making
of
StereoTimes,
I
must
tip
my
hat
to
designer
Poul
Rossing,
president
of
Avance
International.
Not
for
making
a
splendid
sounding
loudspeaker
(read:
easy
to
break-in),
but
for
making
an affordably
priced
speaker
that
just
happens
to
sound
good.
Real
good!
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The
Epsilon 980s,
in my opinion,
are heir to
the throne of
$2,000-$3,000
floor standing
loudspeakers.
Actual cost is
$2,099, but
the real
question
should be
"how?"
How has he
managed to
keep the price
so low?
Consider this:
the
competition
asks way more
when boasting
even less
"PPC"
(premium parts
count).
Consider if
you will: dual
7" Kevlar
woven
Scanspeak
midrange
drivers
equipped with
massive motor
assemblies and
extra-large
voice coils.
The Epsilon’s
3/4"
fabric dome
tweeter,
specially
designed with
a concave
mounting
flange. First
and third
order
crossovers are
employed
perfectly
inphase; first
order on the
mid/woofers
while a third
order high
pass crossover
is used on the
tweeters to
improve power
handling.
Solid
construction
of the cabinet
was apparent
in my knuckle
rap test. Up,
down and along
the sides I
rapped
verifying that
this speakers
a solid
design. I’m
told, up to
35mm MDF was
used in design
and
construction
to deal with
any unwanted
resonance (and
hard-hitting
knuckle
rappers).
The
System
Listening
was done using
the 980’s
five feet out
from the front
wall exactly
in the same
spot my
reference,
(albeit, sadly
out of
business) Von
Schweikert VR6’s
were set. The
amplifiers
were Odyssey
Line’s new
stereo Stratos
150, Blue
Circle’s
wonderful
single-ended
BC6 and Lamm’s
incredible
M1.1 mono’s.
The
digital front
end was Ed
Meitner’s
recently
updated (3/99)
Bidat
processor and
transport
which require
no
intermediate
preamplifier.
All cabling is
the excellent
Harmonic
Technology.
The Epsilons
standard dual
binding posts,
allowed
bi-wire
capabilities
with the HT’s
Pro 9 speaker
cables.
Needless to
say, the 980’s
were ready to dance!
Listening
Impressions
Here’s
a three-way
ported floor
standing
speaker that
reasonably
reproduces the
full frequency
range along
with an
impressive
dose of
dynamics. But
the Avance
980, in truth,
really wins in
the area that
counts most,
and where many
others fail in
this price
range, and
that
is...Envelope
please: the
midrange!
Whether
choosing
between the
silky smooth
saxophone of
Ike Qubec or
the hypnotic
tenor
phrasings of
Jose Cura, the
Epsilon 980
proved more
than
competent. The
Epsilons kept
the music
intact, clean
and open with
a remarkable
sense of
resolve,
timbre and
correct
tonality. Ike
Qubec’s
stylistic
phrasing in It
Might As Well
Be Spring,
(Blue Note
99178)
revealed this
speakers true
character. The
bold, big
sound that
becomes
immediate in
Quebec’s
approach is
never
compromised.
The 980’s
performance is
seamless, from
top to bottom,
as though
listening to
one driver. It
never shouts
or draws
attention to
itself; it
allows the
listener to
become
involved on a
more intimate
level with
Quebec’s
tenor
expressions.
It was amusing
to grasp this
level of
resolution and
sophistication
in the Epsilon
980’s. These
speakers
handle jazz in
an exemplary
manner.
So,
I thought,
lets see how
well behaved
this baby is
with the
dynamic
intricacies of
the Philharmonic
orchestra
featuring Jose
Cura (Erato
18838-2). This
excellent
audiophile
recording took
the 980’s on
a rhythmic
trial that
showed how
well put
together this
speaker really
is. Listening
to Nessun
Dorma, an
instant
liability with
speakers of
lesser design,
was a pleasure
with this
speaker. When
played at
realistic
volume, Cura’s
voice
typically
breaks up and
compression of
the background
choral is
heard. This
reduces the
overall size
and scale of
this
magnificent
performance.
The 980’s
showed their
true merit in
the realistic
replica of
Jose’s’
voice, neither
faint nor
forward but
solidified
dead center
between the
loudspeakers.
There is
however, a
slight sense
of strain when
attempting to
push these
babies. That
told me when I
was driving
them too far
and they do
not reproduce
the same sense
of
effortlessness
as high
efficiency
designs such
as the 96db
VR6’s.
That’s
not to say,
dear reader,
what I have
before me isn’t
a revelation
in it’s
price class.
Bear in mind
the cost
normally
associated
with
loudspeakers
supposedly
capable of
recreating
this scale of
soundstage and
imagery. Never
light in the
pants either,
the 980’s
reproduce a
tangible,
beefy, yet
realistic bass
that will
surprise most
big speaker
lovers when
you consider
it’s
intermediate
size.
What
about the
potential
system buyer
on the serious
budget?
Okaaaay...you
wanna play
rufffff...lemmee
inaa-duce
yuutu my
liddle
friennnd!
Wahhla! Enter
the $1,299
Odyssey
Stratos 150
stereo amp,
along with Bob
Finch’s
delightfully
affordable
line of Custom
House Cables
strapped to
these
marvelous
loudspeakers.
What
you now have
is the most
inexpensive
separates
offering the best
sound I
recall hearing
from a system
in this price
range….ever!
Example number
one: when some
of my friends
came over for
a visit; I
played the
incredible
Stevie Ray
Vaughan cut,
"Tin Pan
Alley,"
from the
killer Couldn’t
Stand The Rain
disc. This
disc easily
demonstrated all
the
finesse,
speed, bass
definition and
control one
could wish for
in a system at
this price
range. Stevie’s
guitar sounded
so clean and
so sharp and
detailed,
without a hint
of that etched
upper treble
emphasis noted
on some
systems
costing far
more. My
friends swore
up and down
that the
system cost
much more than
it did. They
considered it
a bargain if
the cost were
between three
and five
grand.
Grasshopper….Snatch
this Pebble
from My Hand
The
Epsilon 980 is
a bargain
hunter’s
dream, an
audiophile’s
starter kit of
the highest
order. You’ll
literally have
to scour the
earth like
Cane from Kung
Fu to find,
both in terms
of build,
parts, and
performance, a
better
loudspeaker.
Quite simply
it is a more
expensive
loudspeaker
that’s
affordable.
Need I say
more?
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