hi,,
"There is music in the mighty Klipschorn."
Amen to that. Just listen to them with a open mind.
good listening
Larry
"There is music in the mighty Klipschorn."
Amen to that. Just listen to them with a open mind.
good listening
Larry
Klipschorn: Still relevant??
I owned the Heresy, LaScala's and CornwallÂ’s over the years. I never had a place that had two empty corners so I never got a chance to own the legend. I moved to the Paradigm Signature's now but I really miss the LaScala's at times. I have time and time again listened to the K horns and they are a real step up from the LaScala IMO. The only real problem with them is there size and room dimensions. In my living room the LaScalas were amazing ... in my smaller listening room - good but not great. Those horns like room. Throw on Chicago's second album/CD and prepare for a treat! Miles Davis or Dizzy Gillespie aint so bad either. I ran Carver equipment in the early years and switched back and fourth through tons of mid-grade stuff. I ended up spending a few more bucks and getting a Levinson No. 27 and I was in love. I never really did em justice. I wanted to run tubes but never got there. I heard the k-horns with a Mac amp once, and it was amazing to me. It takes so little to drive them ... they seem tailored for tubes. I would run Mac power, only because I heard it and was so impressed. |
Klipschorns will probably always be relevant - they are a classic design. The K-horns do some things that other speakers only dream of. Of course, other speakers do some things that a K-horn can only dream of doing. It is all a matter of sonic priorities. What are your priorities? Careful...you can't have it all! |
Klipsch do some things very well, but they are not modern speakers. If you want to get serious about horns you might want to consider something like the Classic Audio Reproduction line. They use much better drivers and parts than Klipsch and it's reflected in the sound quality. If you're stuck on Klipsch, search the archives, there were several threads on how to upgrade their performance through relatively simple parts swaps. In direct answer to your original question, no - the Klipsch will not be better than what you have if by better you mean higher levels of fidelity. |