Where can I get small apogee speakers?


The apogee ribbin tweeters have always impressed me do they make a small bookself speaker with these and where can I get them? Or at least the ribbin tweeters? Thanks Nick
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Stands made by Apogee were mandatory for Centaur Minor performance, making them about the same size as the Centaur. This isn't exactly a small speaker, at least not compared to the bookshelf variety.
It certainly isn't small as a bookshelf speaker, but I think the Stage may have been as small or smaller than the Centaur Minor.
The Stage had a longer ribbon and was larger than the Minors. The Centaur (not Major, not Minor) had the same size ribbon as the Stage but used a bigger driver than the Minor (8" vs 6"). The Major had a longer ribbon than the Stage and a 10" driver, I believe. Stages likewise benefit from Apogee stand mounting (consider it mandatory to get them off the ground somehow)-- better yet, get the Apogee stands/subs combination and have a Mini-Grand system. I owned Stages, Centaurs and Centaur Minors and thought that each had their strong points. In fact, I still have a pair of boxed Centaurs but I've been too lazy to double box and ship them to interested parties. I pulled them out of the bedroom system in concession to my better half for the CLS/SW800 array in the living room ;-)
Apogee actually made a small hybrid (ribbon/cone) speaker for monitoring purposes right before their demise. I don't recall the model, but I see them in used ads occasionally.

Check the Apogee user's web site. I don't have the URL handy with me here, but perhaps another poster can supply it.
Hi:

Took this out of the Apogee users web site. http://www.apogeespeakers.totalserve.co.uk/. Hope it helps. "Apogee also manufactured a large “LCR” monitor speakers for use as Left, Center, and Right channel speakers in a home theater system. A well built, large 40 pound monitor speakers, the Apogee LCR’s contained two 6½ inch dynamic woofers in a D'Appolito configuration around a 4 inch ribbon which was “rotatable” for use in either vertical (center) or horizontal (left or right) placement. In 1998 the speaker was re-designated Perseus.

Another home theater speaker was the Apogee Ribbon Monitor. This was a essentially an LCR without one of the 6½ inch dynamic woofers in a proportionally smaller enclosure, I believe the Hi-Fi journalist Ken Kessler uses 2 pairs of these in his home theatre setup.
The 1998 Cassiopeia speaker was essentially a re-styled Ribbon Monitor, designed to match the Cepheus series with a slanted outside edge, available in wood veneer finishes. To allow "bookshelf" use the bass port was relocated to the front of the enclosure."