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The Morel Applause
Reference Home
Theater Speaker
System |
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There's no Place
Like Home |
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Clement Perry |
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23 October 2002 |
Specifications:
130mm
+ 43 mm mild steel
sphere enclosures.
Acoustical damping
treated
Drive units:
Woofer 100 mm with OD 54
mm Hexatech™ aluminum
voice coil
With rear vented Hybrid
motor
Tweeter: 28 mm Acuflex™
coated soft dome, liquid
cooled Hexatech™
aluminum voice-coil
With rear, vented
Neodymium motor
Nominal Impedance: 8 Ohm
Power Handling: 120 W
(1000W Transients)
Operating Power: 15-150
W
Crossover: 6 dB per
octave at 4000 Hz
Frequency Response:
60-22000 Hz (-5 db)
Sensitivity: (1W 1M) 89
dB Net weight 0.90 Kg
Price: $2399.00
US Importer:
Allan Warshaw of
Jason Scott Distributors
Phone: (800) 359-9154
Website:
www.morel.co.il/
Established in 1975,
Morel has
manufactured some of the
finest high-end raw
drivers in the world.
Morel has been dubiously
linked to numerous
high-end manufacturers,
most notably, the
Eggleston Works Andra II
which is currently under
my review and is
imported into the US by
Allan Warshaw of Jason
Scott Distributors, whom
I believe to be one of
this industry's
brightest businessmen.
Warshaw distributes
products like Talon
Audio loudspeakers and
Electrocompaniet
electronics, both of
which I think perform
near top of their
respective classes. So
when Warshaw says you've
got to hear his newest
product, well then…
you've got to hear it.
The latest to come from
camp Warshaw is the top
of the line Morel
Applause Home Theater
loudspeaker system.
The Soundspot system is
composed of five model
SA-2 grapefruit sized
monitors using 4"
mid/bass drivers mounted
in a steel outer
enclosure. Atop each
mid/bass driver sits a
1" soft-dome tweeter
housed in a spherical
metal shell about the
size of a golf ball.
This minimalist 2-way
design is built on a
first-order crossover
that's said to decrease
crossover-induced
distortions and thus
improve transparency.
The tweeter's voice coil
is a liquid cooled type
permitting its frequency
to extend down into the
mid-band (1000-20,000
kHz) region. In
addition, the SA-2
mid/bass enclosure is a
ported type said to
prevent acoustical
coloration and
distortions when played
at high volumes.
Small in stature yet
capable of high volume
levels, thanks in part
to what Morel calls
their External Voice
Coil (EVC) design, the
unique EVC design places
Morel's patented
Hexatech™ Aluminum Voice
Coil pole piece inside
the magnet rather than
around it, providing the
high power handling
ability. Utilizing a
lethal blend of
Neodymium and Ferrite
magnets-up to six times
smaller than
conventional
magnets-they are able to
achieve the same driver
excursion as
conventional magnets,
minus the space. "This,"
the company claims,
"leaves more room in the
enclosure for the bass
notes to build up
compared to similar
sized satellite designs
where the bulk of the
enclosure is taken up by
the magnet." This novel
approach is said to
accomplish two things.
It makes the voice coil
sturdier, which in turn,
helps the driver
maintain high levels of
power handling.
The powered IS-9A
subwoofer, which
measures 24" wide, 16"
tall and a very sleek 8"
deep, makes for an easy
hideaway. Composed of
twin nine-inch Morel
patented dual-magnet
woofers loaded in an
isobaric chamber, the
IS-9A, powered by a
super efficient 120-watt
amplifier (the IS-9 is a
non-active option), is
rear ported and hidden
easily behind the rack
supporting my Sampo 16:9
HDTV monitor. The IS-9A
offers both high-pass
(100 Hz/6 dB) and
low-pass input
connectors via two pair
of five-way binding
posts for variable
hookup options.
Ironically, the IS-9A
offers these inputs for
its front pair of
satellites only. True,
the SA-2's behave more
like true mini-monitors
than as bass-shy
satellites due to the
copious amounts of bass
they can handle. But the
IS-9A subwoofer was
designed primarily for
connection to a surround
sound processor or
receiver using its
internal crossover
settings. Due to the
substantial low-end
capabilities of the
SA-2's, the IS-9A's
primary function is to
supplement low-end
information rather than
reproduce it solely. In
addition to high-pass
output speaker
terminals, the IS-9A
also boasts crossover
frequency control, phase
control and a subwoofer
volume controller. A
detachable AC cord that
allows for specialty
after-market AC cords if
tweaking is your delight
is also provided. I got
noticeably tighter bass
when I swapped out the
factory AC cord for the
highly respected
PowerChord from
Audience. Lastly, a
three-position power
switch allows the IS-9A
to be set to on, off or
auto-on mode. I
ultimately chose the
auto-on mode since which
powers up the sub the
moment a signal is
detected.
Great
Balls Afire
Aesthetically, the
Applause system is one
of the most appealing
I've reviewed. Mine came
in black (white is the
other option) and
seamlessly blended
themselves against the
backdrop of my living
room furniture. Weighing
in at about 2 pounds,
each SA-2 can be easily
hung from your walls. I
chose the optional
stands, but used the
standard base for the
center channel since I
was placing it directly
atop my Sampo 34"
(SME-34WHD5) widescreen
monitor. The Applause
system is shielded and
therefore can be placed
atop or next to your TV
monitor. Using the
Musical Fidelity HTP
Home Theater processor
partnered to its
(HTP-600) five-channel
amplifier gave the
Applause system a
formidable partner at
100 watts per channel
and me a real
opportunity to see if
the technical hype was
real. Using the HTP's
internal on-screen menu
allowed easy
user-adjustable
loudspeaker size (small)
adjustments and
low-level crossover
options (40 to 140 Hz).
For the best overall
performance, and after
some serious small
adjustments with the
crossover frequency
knob, I stuck with the
80 Hz setting for the
SA-2's, which is quite
low for this tiny little
ball. For a nice
acoustic feel of the
low-end I chose to
overlap the bass with
the IS-9A's crossover by
setting it to 90 Hz.
This gave me the best
full-range feel
throughout, regardless
of music or DVD video
material.
Burn-in was achieved in
100-hours or thereabouts
with full, tight and
authoritative bass about
as good as I felt
necessary before
beginning serious
listening observations.
Of course, the first
thing any respectable
audiophile is going to
do to find out how good
a home theater system is
play it first in natural
stereo. And my first
choice was, as usual,
Miles Davis' So What,
from the classic Kind
of Blue CD
[Columbia
CS 64935].
My first glimpse at what
the Applause system
could do in standard
two-channel was quite
impressive. There
existed a freedom from
boom and sizzle that I
normally associated with
the many satellite
systems I've heard due
to their deficient
low-end and midbass, not
to mention their
typically cheesy made
subwoofers. In listening
to the Applause system,
I noticed immediately a
wholesome, high-end
quality to the sound
that at once becomes
undeniable. The Applause
system sounded more
full-bodied and box-less
than a quintet of much
larger and very good
sounding BMB A8 monitors
I purchased from
Singapore two years ago.
Don't get me wrong, I do
enjoy the A8's and think
they're very good in the
areas of harmonics,
imaging and detail. But
when it comes to the
extreme separation of
instruments, and the
ability to place them in
their own space, I must
take my hat off to the
Applause system.
There's no getting
around the pleasure of a
true box-less design
when done right. The
sound of Miles muted
horn, for example,
sounded much bigger
physically than the
grapefruit sized
transducers had any
right to project-which
ain't easy no matter
what the size. "This
certainly ain't Circuit
City sound," was the
first thing my friend
Terry Smoaks declared
since he and I often
trek to the local
Circuit City store
listening to the ever
growing supply of
so-called high-end
surround sound systems
while looking at new DVD
releases. Personally,
after hearing some of
pretty bad sound there
in a variety of
satellite packages,
anybody with a good set
of ears would believe
you had to shell out
lots of bananas to get a
respectable home theater
package that includes a
powered sub. After
hearing this Applause
system, both Terry and I
realized, with a sigh of
relief, we were both
wrong. High-end home
theater sound with a
sticker price of around
$2,500 is real after
all.
The first movie I threw
into my DVD player was
Disney's Monster's
Inc. Hey,
Monster's Inc. just
may be geared toward the
kid in us all but its
sonics should read For
Adults Only. I knew the
picture was awesome
having seen it in the
theater, but I had no
idea the transfer would
be done in THX super
deluxe. Not until I
witnessed the THX intro
featuring a heard of
cows mooing in the front
three channels, then
sweep around the room to
the rear channels did I
realize what I was in
for. This is exactly the
same type of excitement
that got me all revved
over home theater in
first place years ago.
At this new level of
digital surround,
there's no need for me
to admit I enjoyed the
movie more than my two
kids did. Hearing this
instant Disney classic
again through the
Applause system gave my
room a sense of space
and dimension it never
could reproduce prior.
The Applause system, due
to its incredibly small
size, virtually
disappeared in my living
room once the lights
went low and supplied a
level of sonic clarity
and power that belied
their miniature size.
Using this diminutive
system with the Musical
Fidelity processor and
five-channel amplifier
showed it accommodates
dedicated separates with
aplomb.
Simple and sleek seem to
be the catch phrases for
successful home theater
products. The Applause
system is all of these.
A powerfully compact,
standout performer that
sounds like one of the
big guys, yet is small
enough to disappear
against your living
space earning a
designated "lifestyle
systems" stamp. With
LCD's and Plasma's
becoming more readily
available (and
affordable), I can't
imagine a more invisible
pairing than mating the
Applause system with
your flat screen TV. The
accompanying IS-9A
subwoofer, which does an
excellent job on its own
account and is slender
enough to hide behind
almost anything, will
bring that added
dimension to movies and
music that only a
subwoofer can. That
said, I've thoroughly
enjoyed the Applause
system listening to
two-channel stereo or
watching my favorite new
DVD's in multi-channel
mode. It never allowed
the action or excitement
to slip and easily
sounded superior to any
lifestyle satellite
system I've heard… and
I've heard plenty!
Highly recommended!
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