| The Consensus Audio Conspiracy
Loudspeaker |
| A Reference by Any Measure |
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|
October 2006 |
Based
in Austria, Consensus Audio Engineering (CAE)
was founded by dedicated music enthusiasts who
always have been part of the international
high-end scene, manufacturing reference
loudspeakers to the highest standards for
renowned brands that I legally cannot list
here. In 2005, when a group of investors
combined their efforts to design and make high
end products under their own brand, Consensus
Audio Engineering (CAE) was born.
In January, at the 2006 CES, I was excited to
learn that Franck Tchang of Acoustic System
International was aiding speaker designer
extraordinaire Stefan Fekete in
the design of CAE loudspeakers. I had an
immediate sense that this year would be a
great year. I was very intrigued by this new
loudspeaker and, at the time, as it happened,
I already had an itch for a new reference
loudspeaker. In other words, I just had to
have this loudspeaker in my listening room for
a full review. The following month I contacted
Stefan Fekete and he agreed to send me the
speakers for a test run. The rest is history!
I was first struck by the slim and exceedingly
elegant design and beautiful finish in piano
black of the Consensus Audio Engineering’s
flagship loudspeaker, the Conspiracy L. It
employs Stefan’s innovative air flow and
Franck’s resonance control technologies,
(Franck is known as the “world’s acoustic
resonance guru”). It doesn’t use a
conventional cabinet design, a well damped MDF
or for that matter, a resonance-dead cabinet,
as do, to name just a few, Kharma, Marten
Design, and Rockport Technologies all of whom
use exotic composite materials such as layered
exotic panels to create inertness. This is not
for CAE. Their design uses no internal damping
whatsoever. Instead it incorporates air flow
technologies which are the result of speaker
cabinet airflow research (flow bench
research). CAE tells me that the acoustic
properties of the speaker membranes are
activated by electrical signals and the
speaker cabinets are influenced by time
defined partial air reflex impulses caused by
the defined shape of the cabinet a
(beautifully crafted lute shape with an
airflow vent port system in the rear).
Stefan
states that there are several advantages in
using the air flow design. First, there is no
need for cabinet damping material because air
reflections in the cabinet caused by the
movement of speaker membranes are controlled
and time coherent. The resulting sound is pure
and natural. Second, the sound is improved
dramatically and is fast and transparent.
Third, the transient effect of the speaker
membranes is time controlled and the speaker
system generates its own mechanical damping
factor caused by the cabinet’s shape. Finally,
the total weight of the speaker system can be
reduced. The cabinet materials of the
Conspiracy L incorporate beech plywood
materials with seven layers using an animal
glue to create a rich-tight and natural sound
that’s truly daunting. The base plate is made
of a specially chosen pear wood and equipped
with top-of-the-line feet all designed by, the
man, Franck Tchang.
Stefan, who describes himself as a
“perfectionist and extremist when it comes to
the reproduction of music”, obsessed over
every detail of this three-way full range
system (18 Hz – 35 KHz/-3 dB). He uses only top
quality parts.
All
six drivers use only German Accuton ceramic
drivers for the four 7” woofers, one 7”
midrange and one 1.2” tweeter. (A 1.2”
pure-diamond tweeter is available as a cool $8000 per pair option). CAE puts a high value
on linear impedance behavior, low phase
shifting, high efficiency, high impulse
linearity, with the lowest possible distortion
and most natural sound transformation. All
drivers are matched in pairs for equal
dB-range (+-0.25dB), impedance and breakup
resonance. The crossover network (at 150 Hz and
2500 Hz) uses only the top quality crossover
parts made by Mundorf Germany. There are
high-grade pair/matched premium capacitors,
oxygen free copper-foil coils and metal oxide
resistors. The internal cabling is handmade by
Music Link, and incorporates a single wire
terminal using top WBT-Germany goldline 5-way
binding posts.
Enough
of the tech talk! Let’s see if they can handle
Mozart!
I placed the speakers 9’ apart, 11’ from my
listening chair, and back of the speakers were
30” from the front wall. The transducers were
toed-in slightly in my 17.25’ x 16 x 8 ½’
Manhattan living room. Fortunately, my room is
tuned, yes tuned by Franck Tchang himself,
with his incredible, must-have acoustic
resonators and other goodies. I used the
remarkable Virtual Dynamics Revelation cables.
The Virtual Dynamics cables sound more organic
and musical than other cables that I’ve tried.
Also my new reference amplification, the Karan
Acoustics KAS 450 amplifier and KAL reference
dual mono preamplifier are just out of this
world. I should mention that for the first
half of the review, I used the Tact Audio Boz
216 amp and an RCS 2.2X digital amplification.
Right out of the box the speakers sounded
impressive; there was a non mechanical
quality, a realistic soundstage, great
tonality and powerful deep bass. Overall, the
speakers sounded a bit tight and slightly
compressed as expected in new speakers. Stefan
had told me that the Conspiracy L requires at
least 200 hours of break-in. I took his advice
and let the system break-in for about a month
before doing any serious listening as Fekete
had suggested.
I was anxious to listen to the Conspiracy L
once it did pass the 200 hour mark. I
positioned myself in my listening chair, a
favorite java in one hand and my remote
control in the other. With 200 watts of Boz
power going into the Conspiracy L’s friendly
92 dB (5 Ohm) load it drove beautifully and
played relatively loudly. The sound was now
more open, smoother, grain free and with
better bass. I put CD after CD into my Reimyo
CDP-777, using it as transport only with the
Tact digital amplification, and the sound was
outstanding. However, I noticed something
wasn’t quite right. The sound didn’t have the
vividness I expected. It didn’t really move me
as it should have. Then I realized that I had
some personal EQ settings on my Tact RCS
2.2X’s levels a few dB off. After making the
adjustment to flat (0 dB across the board) the
system improved and became even more open,
focused, and dynamic. It just sounded better
and came to life. The Conspiracy L is like a
monitoring loudspeaker, it’ll reveal any
little changes you make to the system making
it a great reviewer’s tool as well as a
sit-back-and-relax loudspeaker. Also, I
strongly recommend exceptional quality front
end components. These are a must as these
speakers reveal any weakness in the audio
chain’s input signals.
As I spent more time with the Conspiracy L,
the sound just got better and better. About
half way into my time with the speakers I had
the opportunity to listen to one of the
amplifiers that they were voiced with. This
was the mighty Karan Acoustics KAS 450. At 450
watts per side, running pure class-A operation
and along with their KAL reference dual mono
preamplifier, the sound was “amazing.” Franck
Tchang’s recommendation of the Karan Acoustics
gear was right on the money. I was losing
sleep, often staying up until four in the
morning. The Conspiracy L’s magic persisted
throughout its range, from top to bottom. Day
in and day out, it reproduced music with an
effortless, open transparency, and resolution
that set it apart from all others I’ve heard
in my room.
The incredible amount of
information the Conspiracy L’s were capable of
pulling into the room was difficult to
comprehend. On one of my favorites, Rossini’s
Sonate a Quattro No.1 in G major with Ensemble
Explorations (HMC901776), the Conspiracy L’s
overall presentation created a lifelike
experience that drew me into to the music and
let me forget that I was listening to the
electronics and instead made me feel I was
listening to a live Ensemble Exploration in my
room. The strings had a no mechanical quality
whatsoever. They sounded organic; like the
real thing. The individual instruments were
revealed with unusual ease. There was detail,
delicacy, body, warmth, and an overall
transparency which presented the delicate
strings with a visceral believability I’d
never before experienced. By the way, this
incredible work by Rossini, believe it or not,
was composed when he was only 12 years old!
The Conspiracy L delivered its full rated
low-frequency performance in my room without
any apology. It even outperformed my reference
Ascendo System Z with Talon’s Thunderbird
subwoofer. The Conspiracy L delivered the
deepest, tightest, most precise bass I’ve ever
heard in my room. Most shocking was the
complete lack of excessive mid-bass overhang
or any bass sloppiness. The KAS 450 grabbed on
to my bass drivers like a pitbull with an
astonishing damping factor rated at better
than 10,000 (at 8 Ohms, 20Hz-20KHz).
The
performance was mind-boggling. There was deep,
unbelievable extension, and the four bass
drivers came to life. The Conspiracy L’s
demonstrated an effortless low-frequency
performance and an ability to play loud, while
maintaining full dynamic expression and
composure. Listening to Yim Hok-Man, Master
of Chinese Percussion, track 1 “Poem of
Chinese Drums”, (Naxos World 76002), the
drum’s low-frequency extensions were rendered
with thunderous impact, control and speed that
were the best I heard in my room. The
Conspiracy L delivered the sounds with the
punch and impact of a sledgehammer. The drum
whack of Yim Hok-Man had a snap and punch with
control that was simply remarkable.
The Conspiracy L’s effect on my system’s
spatial performance was equally remarkable.
The soundstage was wide and deep; my front
wall disappeared making the speakers vanish.
Not surprisingly the Conspiracy L carved out
soundstages the sizes of which were exactly
what were on the recording.
As
I listened to the historical performance of
Dvorak’s Concerto for Cello and Orchestra
in B minor, op. 104 (DG 413 819-2)
performed by the master, Mstislav Rostropovich
and the maestro, Herbert Von Karajan
conducting Berliner Philharmoniker, both the
stage, and the space were distinct. The
individual instruments were much more finely
drawn than I was used to hearing. The
Conspiracy L’s production of the cello and
full orchestra were rendered naturally and
organically. Rostropovich was well in front of
the stage and the orchestra remained behind
him in a natural way, in a deep, deep, and
wide stage.
The midrange performance of the Conspiracy L
proved awe-inspiring. The longer I listened
the more I become involved and appreciated its
supremely natural and unforced sound
regardless of the type of music. The sheer
amounts of information the Conspiracy L’s were
capable of producing in my listening room were
outstanding. Jacintha has been my personal
reference for female vocals.
Listening
to Jacintha is her name (GRV1014-2),
the Conspiracy L delivered her lush, rich, yet
detailed voice in a way that was just
incredible. Jacintha’s voice was reproduced
with more clarity and transparency, but also
had more body and solidity. It was as if I was
hearing it live for the very first time. A
must have cd piano work, Mozart’s Piano
Sonata in C major, K330 (DG B0005827-72),
with Lang Lang was a breathtaking experience
with the Conspiracy L. Lang Lang’s magical
touch on the keyboard exemplifies how Mozart
intended his music to be. The sound of the
piano was so naturally real. It was reproduced
in such way that it was clear, clean and
transparent; it has to be heard to be
believed. The rendering of the piano was
extremely detailed, high and low, and the
changing of the resonances of the piano’s body
were easily discernable as Lang Lang
controlled the pedals. The physical images and
the velvety solidity of individual notes were
spectacular. There was no ringing whatsoever
and all the nuances were audible. The Sonata
was played delicately, with sensitivity and
the immediacy of the piano was realistically
rendered in a natural, organic way.
The Conspiracy L was free from treble grain,
rendering a superbly clean sound with
transparency and tons of air. Listening to
Paul Motian’s cymbals on Tati (ECM1921), the
cymbals were reproduced in a way I’ve never
heard before in my system. It was a different
experience, actually more like an education;
it seemed I was learning how cymbals should
really sound. The presentation was very
natural and sizzled like the real thing rather
than sounding statically or artificial. The
clarity, transparency permitted the Conspiracy
L to reproduce complexity of the cymbals in
real organic way. The cymbals had life; they
had weight, were richly detailed, and the
transparency gave new meaning to the music.
What was missing was the loss of richness that
usually accompanies this sort of transparency
and overly defined edges. Such transparency is
usually bought at the price of a skeletal,
lean sound. There were no such trade-offs with
the Conspiracy L; there was simply music.
Played over the Conspiracy L, the drums,
trumpet, and piano maintained their
individuality and separate characters which
drew me deeply into to the music.
The Consensus Audio Engineering Conspiracy L
is an extraordinary loudspeaker in its
innovative design and, most importantly its
sonic performance. I guess by now, you guys
have figured out that the Conspiracy L is not
going back to Austria where it was born like
the Mozart himself. Until the day I can find a
better loudspeaker, the Conspiracy L will be
my reference. I plan to have it for a long
time to come.
Key Kim
_____________________
Specifications:
Speaker: CONSENSUS CONSPIRACY L
System: 3-way Airflow Damping
Cabinet: Resonance optimized plywood materials
Driver Arrangement: One 2" Ceramic Tweeter;
One 7" Ceramic Midrange; Four 7" Ceramic
Woofer
Basket spiders & magnets
airflow optimized
(Custom-made by Accuton for CONSENSUS)
Impedance: 5 Ohm
Sensitivity: 92 dB
Recommended Amp Power: 50 - 500 Watt
Frequency Response: 18 Hz - 35 kHz / -3 dB
Single-Wire Terminal
WBT – Germany Goldline: Crossover Parts:
Custom-made by Mundorf - Germany
Internal Wire:Handmade by Music Link
Dimensions: (HxWxD) cm 142 x 27,5 x 53cm
Weight: (per piece) 61 kg
Price:$30,000
Contact: Musiclink
international
Stefan Fekete
Ferdinand Porsche-Ring 14
A-2700 Wiener Neustadt
AUSTRIA
Phone:+43 2622 20886
Mobile:+43 664 28 39 124
e-mail:
musiclink@chello.at
Website:
http://www.consensusaudio.com/default.asp

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