The best speaker you ever heard?


In my opinion, the speaker is by far the most important part of the audio system. After all, it is the only part you hear. OK, the other stuff really matters a lot, but without a great speaker... No go.

I am a bit 'speaker-obsessed' I guess, and now I am wondering: What are the best speakers you have ever heard, and what made them the best?
njonker
Now I am using Acapella companille drive with JL3 signature,
sounds 3D holograme , very wide and details .
But I am stil impress my old speaker B&W 801 s3 with Krell MDA300, the bass and mid verry good tonal balance.
The Kabuki Ohaku powered by Audio Tekna tube monoblocks with 35 watts pc at the last Newport audio show.

I heard a drum solo that was "as real" kick drum, cymbals, wow the best I have ever heard. vocals, strings, and big classical were absolutely flawless! I guess having $200K amplifiers and a 50K pre-amp does not hurt! Also, I've never seen a raal ribbon tweeter loaded in a bass horn before but it really worked.

The room seemed to have zero room treatment!

I thought the sound was really open with tons of air, natural tone, and very, very dynamic with huge natural bass!

Lots of other great gear at the show but this was the best to me by good margin.

For a lot less money the Grimm room was really good as was the Vapor audio room and MBL always good!
For me, the best speaker depends on the date.

1967 - Altec Valencias driven by Fisher tube power amp and preamp.

1968 - Bozak Concert Grands driven by McIntosh MC-2505 and C-26 preamp.

1969 - Rectilinear III's driven by Marantz 16 amp and 7T preamp.

1972 - Dahlquist DQ-10 driven by Audio Research D-75 amp and SP-2 preamp. Shook hands with Saul Marantz and Jon Dahlquist at the DQ-10's premier.

1988 - Apogee Diva driven by Krell monoblocks and Krell preamp.

1996 - Avalon Osiris driven by Spectral monoblocks and Spectral preamp.

More recently, Wilson MAXX 3's driven by Dan D'Agostino Momentum amp and Ayre preamp.
Well, Opus_two, I can agree about the Rectilinear IIIs and the Dahlquists DQ-10, modified. I also owned the original Apogees.

Early on I would agree with your speakers are getting better idea, but I think now I would argue that every speaker is a compromise somewhere. I also suspect that few speaker designers ever had any idea about how much vibrations were drowning their innovations.
Norm

I think Jon Dahlquist was a mechanical engineer and may have been aware of the swamp of vibrations you refer to. The fact that part of his crossover though mounted on the top of the cabinet was a step ahead by not being hammered inside of the main cabinet. The fact that 4 of the 5 drivers were mounted on their own baffle boards would effectively reduce noise and clutter and cross pollination of resonance.

Jon once sent me a box speaker to audition and called me for an opinion. It was just okay. Months later I received the same oak speaker now finished in Nextel and with some flocking material on the front baffle..they sounded like a totally different design. He said everything was the same except for the 2 features I just wrote of. I think Jon was way out ahead of this peers. Tom