Anticipation....And Conflict
The prospect of doing the first review of a new
loudspeaker from the hands of Albert Von Schweikert filled me at the same time with
excitement and with anxiety. The excitement was understandable. I had owned and cherished
a pair of his Vortex Kevlar Reference Screens for the past five years. My listening room
and system had seen a world of change during that time, but there was always the KRS's at
the center, the stationary leg of the compass around which all of my system changes
revolved. I had flirted with speaker changes during these years, but I always found other
elements to be the weak link in my system and no other loudspeaker had made me want to
retire the KRS's, my trusted friends. But then I hear from their creator that he had a new
speaker that surpassed the performance of the KRS's in every parameter -- Whoa! that was
something to get excited about!
So where did the anxiety come from? Well....I
suppose it came from a thought that lingered in my mind from the first day I talked to
Albert about the VR-4s. I've known Albert for about six years now and although we haven't
been burning up the phone lines, we have stayed in touch. During the days of his company,
Vortex Acoustics, I had provided Albert with business legal advise and had even toyed with
the idea of helping him distribute his Vortex products in Canada. Although nothing more
came from our ideas at the time, we still remained friends and I'd occasionally call
Albert to see how he was doing and tell him about my latest tweaks on the KRS's. Because
Albert is my friend, it is particularly difficult when it comes time to review a speaker
that I know has been a labor of love for him and one which he considers to be his very
best work. The anxious thought was,"what if they're not better than my modified
KRS's... how would I break this news to Albert?"
The problem lay in the potential for
disappointing or discouraging a friend. The review itself was not the problem. In keeping
with PF's editorial policy, if I personally didn't care for the VR-4s, I could decline the
review, or let another staff writer take a shot at them. The fact that Albert is my friend
and that I provided business advice to him in the past and may do more in the future, was
not the problem either. As our editor has stated numerous times in these pages, we here at
PF are into community and collegiality - we expect to develop friendships with others who
share our joy of music and that includes those who manufacture the systems that deliver
it. If relationships are openly acknowledged, building the"Chinese wall" between
reviewer and manufacturer is not only not necessary, it is, in our opinion,
counterproductive. Getting to know the manufacturer well, getting inside his head, if you
will, can yield some insights on the design and its sonic attributes that might otherwise
have escaped the more cursory analysis. Moreover, I think that there are a lot of readers,
who, like me, enjoy knowing something about the heart and soul of the people behind the
products. A"community" of high end audio focuses on the people in it and how
they relate to one another. If we ever elevate equipment or music above people, PF will
have lost its unique spirit and will be just another audio rag.
I'm sure my concerns about my friendship with
the manufacturer are a somewhat common, but usually unspoken occurrence for mainstream
reviewers. Since it is the first such occurrence for me, I thought I should make a clean
breast of it. Those who know me well will not have the slightest concern about this —
they know that I always tell it like it is and that I never buy a review sample for my
reference system unless it satisfies my listening preferences, has overall outstanding
performance and represents a true high-end value — I've got some of that Scottish
blood, don't ya know (am I tipping my hand here, or what?). For those of you who don't
know me, and may wish to avoid some of the audio angst that this review will no doubt
produce, you have hereby been provided with a very large grain of salt with which to take
it.
I'll come down off of my soap box now.
Albert Einstein, Albert Schweitzer....Albert Von Schweikert!
I remember well my first conversations with
Albert. I had grown somewhat tired of a pair of Vandersteen 2Ci's and was looking for an
affordable loudspeaker that would be a little less woolly in the bottom end and give me a
bit more midrange transparency and top end extension. Reading through back issues of
Stereophile, I spied a very favorable review of the Vortex Screen loudspeakers, written by
Robert Harley. His description of the sound of these speakers seemed to fit perfectly with
my current desires, the price was right and I must say I was more than a little intrigued
to learn more about a guy with a name like Albert Von Schweikert. I gave Bob Harley a call
to see if this Von Schweikert guy was for real and whether the speakers were still in
production. Bob assured me that Albert was very much for real and briefly described to me
a fellow who was a somewhat unusual, gentle spirited scientist. Well....now I was hooked
— the name association and Harley's comments made me think Albert Von Schweikert must
be a genius like Albert Einstein and a great humanitarian like Albert Schweitzer all
rolled into one.
After two telephone conversations that lasted
a total of about six hours, the Einstein/Schweitzer thing didn' t seem all that far
fetched — Albert could talk a blue streak on speaker design — "zoom,"
right over my head, like Mr. Einstein giving my brain a cosmic enema on the theory of
relativity — and like an audio Schweitzer, he really seemed to care more about the
joy of music and the needs of us O'philes on a budget, than he did about personal fame or
fortune. I bought a pair of the Vortex KRS' s sight unseen and sound unheard and I wasn't
disappointed.
The overnight sensation --- Twenty years in the making
The Company name Von Schweikert Research is new,
as is the VR-4 loudspeaker, but Albert certainly is not a new face in high-end audio, nor
is the speaker a flash of inspiration with no history. Both designer and speaker have an
interesting pedigree that I think you should know about.
Albert Von Schweikert has been an audio
hobbyist since 1957 when he and his father built a 10 watt Eico kit integrated amplifier
and a 15" Jensen coaxial speaker kit. since the 15" speaker did not sound as
clear on piano recordings as a set of crystal headphones, Albert, then 12, began to
experiment with the speaker to try to improve the sound quality. Thus a career was born...
In Heidelberg, Germany, Albert took piano and
violin lessons at the Conservatory at Heidelberg University over a period of five years,
and later switched his musical interests to the electric guitar. In 1964 he built a PA
system of radical design in St. Petersburg Florida which was used by bands playing at the
Civic Center. Famous musical groups such as Sonny and Cher, Neil Diamond, and the
Yardbirds played at this hall and remarked on the excellent sound quality of the speakers.
Seeking to improve on his technical
knowledge, Albert spent seven years at two universities including the California Institute
of Technology where he worked under Dr. Richard C. Heyser in the physics laboratory. Dr.
Heyser was inventing a measurement system which he named Time Delay Spectrometry; this
system could perform anechoic measurements in a normal room since gating was used. Time
delays occurring in the drive units themselves could be studied as well as phase
aberrations that plagued textbook crossover designs. An audio design club was formed by
five students at Cal Tech, and Albert was chosen to be the official evaluator of the
resulting designs since he was the only classically trained musician in the group.
Two years were spent in the laboratory as
Albert and his group evaluated and measured all of the pertinent speaker designs of the
period (1970's) including electrostatics, ribbons, and dynamic units. A plasma speaker
Albert termed The Forcefield was built which used high voltage to break air down into
ozone which was then modulated by the signal to produce sound. A six foot tall ribbon
speaker was also constructed for testing purposes, along with a transmission line
subwoofer with a line length of twelve feet. This unit was reported to have response to l0
Hz. In this period Albert designed the first Vortex Screen, a time-aligned and
phase-coherent three way dynamic speaker using 24dB per octave filters, a first for an
American company. The drivers and cabinet design were also years ahead of their time.
This research led to a job with Dr. Oscar
Heil, inventor of the Heil Air Motion Transformer, at ESS Laboratories in 1982. Albert
designed the first linear phase crossovers for the AMT and the first three way Air Motion
Transformer system. He also worked with Dr. Heil on the Transar, a push-pull series of
rods and discs which emitted sound from a dipolar baffle.
After ESS was sold to new owners, Albert
formed the Vortex Acoustics company which sold the Vortex Screen system factory-direct to
consumers. Robert Harley, as technical editor at Stereophile magazine, reviewed the
Screens in July, 1989, Vol. 12, No. 7. In his review, he called the three way cone system
legendary, since it had been an underground product with high acceptance with both
musicians such as Mark Andes of Heart, and recording studios such as Mobile Fidelity. The
Screens were said to have spectacular imaging, tremendous bass response, and a sense of
realism lacking in competing products. Harley also noted that the Screens were better
sounding than Theil, Snell, or Vandersteen speakers and were "highly
recommended."
At the same time, Albert had a position with
KSC Industries, the second largest driver manufacturer in the world, as a driver designer
and Quality Assurance engineer. From 1987 to 1989 he worked on more than 100 projects for
companies such as Apogee, Bose, Cerwin Vega, JBL, Jensen, NHT, Paramount Pictures and many
others.
In 1990 the Vortex Kevlar Reference System
was shown at the summer CES (Consumer Electronics Show) with VTL sharing the suite and
providing their excellent tube equipment. Corey Greenberg of Stereophile magazine was
"really knocked out" by the KRS, calling them "highly musical with pinpoint
imaging and depth out the ...." Vol 14 No. 8, August 1991.
Next, in 1993 at the Winter CES, Albert
showed his awesome $59,000 Concert Master Armageddon system. This four tower system used
20 Kevlar drivers, including 18" subwoofers with response down to 10hz, and weighed
over 2,000 lbs. Guy Lemcoe of Stereophile named the Armageddon the "Most Spectacular
Sound Of The Show" in vol. 16, no. 4, April 1993.
In 1991 Albert became a consultant to
Counterpoint Electronics and designed the Clearfield Continental and Metropolitan systems
along with a Home Theater speaker system. Martin DeWuIf of Bound For Sound awarded the
Continental a place on his Recommended Components in the December 1993 issue. Haute
Fidelite of France named the Metropolitan "one of the best systems in the
world". Larry Johnson of Audio Video Interiors called the Metropolitan "one of
the handful of best speakers in the world" in the December 1992 issue.
Most recently, Video magazine in the January
1995 issue awarded the Counterpoint Home Theater System designed by Albert "the best
home theater speakers over $2500." This system uses THX technology for the subwoofers
and rear surrounds, but Albert's own technology for the front three speakers. Brent
Butterworth, the author of the piece, concluded by saying, "they may be our favorite
speakers of all time".
Apparently impressed by the quality of
Albert' s Home Theater System, Lucasfilm's equipment design division, THX, hired Albert
for theater sound system evaluation in 1994, and have recommended him as a qualified THX
designer to other manufacturers.
Phew!..how'd you like to include all that in
your resume!?
I've gone to the effort of detailing this,
including some comments by other reviewers on Albert's designs, so that you will
appreciate what it means when Albert says that the VR-4' s, at a promotional price of
$3,000, are his best work to date. Also, quite frankly, I don't want you to think I' m
completely nuts when you read the rest of this review and see the comparisons I' m going
to make.
Technical Details
OK... techno dweebs, here goes.... The Von Schweikert
Research VR-4s stand 46" high, 13.5" wide and 19.5" deep. They weigh in at
about 120lbs for each side. They are tower speakers that have a separate bass module with
two eight inch woofers with separate crossovers. One woofer runs from the basement up to
125hz where it is crossed over to the midrange driver, the other woofer is rolled out when
it reaches 40hz. the separate woofer crossovers provide killer bass down to 20hz (my in
room measurement was actually flat at 20hz when four feet from the back wall and -1db when
moved out to seven feet), by having both drivers working together at the lower frequencies
without the mid bass bump that I've heard from other two-woofer systems that allow both
drivers to run all the way up to the midrange crossover point. Each of the woofers is a
polypropylene/epoxy resin hybrid with a separate enclosure and rear firing port within the
bass module.
The separate Midrange/Tweeter module sits, or
I should say docks, on top of the bass module to form an elegant tower. The midrange and
tweeter have separate time aligned cabinets inside the dowel supported, cloth covered
module, reminiscent of the Vandersteen design. No one would ever mistake them for Vandies
though, given their dimensions and two piece configuration. The crossover circuit for the
woofers is inside the woofer module, while the crossover for the midrange and tweeter is
located externally on top of the midrange enclosure. This midrange enclosure looks like a
long rectangular box that extends the full depth of the speaker. Internally, however, the
sides are not parallel. There are baffles inside that channel the rear wave reflection
away from the driver and through a labyrinth of increasingly dense absorptive material
until the backwave is 100% (theoretically) absorbed by the time it reaches the rear end of
the enclosure.
The front tweeter is mounted on what looks
like a three inch thick solid piece of wood which is curved to match perfectly the top
curve of the metal tweeter baffle. There is one inch thick felt on all of the surfaces,
including the underside of the wood top cap. The top cap looks to be a good eight inches
above the top of the tweeter, so there shouldn't be much reflection off of it
(...something that always troubled me with the Vandersteen design). Any sound waves that
do head in the top cap's direction should be absorbed by thick felt underlining.
The midrange driver is a 5.25" woven
carbon fiber model made by Audax and is reported as having a range of 57 Hz to 12khz. The
handoff to this driver begins at 125hz and ends at 3.5khz when it is crossed over to a
Vifa aluminum dome tweeter. These crossover points are significant, because you won't hear
much in the way of human voice above, or below this range. The low crossover is also very
nice for bi-amping when mixing solid state and tubes (particularly single-ended tubes).
I've tried it on other speakers with higher crossover points, including my KRS' that cross
at 250hz, without much success. The very different character of the tube and solid state
sound is much too obvious when the hand-off occurs in the lower midrange. At the VR-4's
125Hz crossover, there doesn't seem to be as much of the same weird juxtaposition of sound
characters. With level adjusted by a series resistor, my Meitner monoblocks sounded very
good on the bottom with the Anodyne MP300 monos on top.
There is a small rear firing tweeter mounted
inside the sock at the rear of the mid/tweet module. This tweeter has its own crossover to
integrate properly with the front firing tweeter. A rhodium plated toggle switch is
located on the binding post cup that allows you to turn off the rear tweeter in case you
have to place the speaker too close to a rear wall, or your room is too bright. A second
toggle switch on the other side of the binding posts allows you to cut the top end
response of the tweeter by one dB. Albert tells me that later models will have a three way
switch allowing no cut, 1db, and 2db attenuation. I think this kind of flexibility is a
good idea because of the tremendous variation in high frequency response you find in
different rooms and systems. In my room, I got the flattest response and best soundstaging
with the rear tweeter on and no attenuation.
Both the woofer and Mid/tweet modules have
separate Cardas gold/rhodium binding posts that easily handle the thickest of cables. From
the location of these separate binding posts (about three feet apart), it is obvious that
Albert intended these to be bi-wired, rather than jumpered. I bi-wired them with two eight
foot sets of the Tice 416 cables (by the way, the VR-4' s love these cables as much as my
KRS' s did).
The woofer and midrange enclosures are
extremely dead. The knuckle rap test only tells part of the story. When you listen to
music, you can't detect any cabinet colorations or resonance. Albert has accomplished this
by a really clever constrained layer damping technique that I'm not at liberty to disclose
— made me make one of those attorney/client oaths of confidentiality....sheesh! (see
Albert' s designer notes for more on this). The effectiveness of this damping technique
has got to be heard, or I should say,"felt," to be believed. We got a little
crazy with the volume playing some "boom car" music and got everything in the
room vibrating — at least so I thought, until I put my hands on one of the bass
module cabinets and felt almost no vibration.
The crossover networks are incredibly
complex. There are a total of five drivers in this speaker and each one has its own
customized compensating circuit. Albert considers the circuitry that melds the drivers
together to be the most important part of the design. The "virtual reality"
presented by the VR-4's in four dimensions (time being the fourth) has been accomplished
by a circuit optimizing time, phase, amplitude and impedance (hmmm...another four) which
Albert calls the Global Axis Integration Circuit (TM) ("GAI circuit"). The GAI
circuit design offers 24db acoustic slope performance for flat off-axis frequency and
phase response at more than 90 degrees horizontally and 70 degrees vertically off axis,
using only quasi first order electrical filters with integral phase and impedance
compensation. The impedance compensation is performed by Zobel auto-tracking circuits
which compensate for rising impedance that moving coil drivers exhibit due to inductance
of the voice coil. The result is a nominal impedance of 6 ohms, with deviations limited to
+3 and -2 from 20Hz to 25kHz, excepting a slightly larger dip at about 22Hz.
In order to integrate the phase compensator,
the EQ network, the amplitude level matching and the crossover filters themselves, Albert
used a program called "spice". This circuit optimizer "looks" at the
combination of the different circuits and integrates them into simpler combinations which
results in one part having several functions. (Not exactly, but close enough for a
"simple" explanation.) This program enabled Albert to reduce the parts count of
36 components down to 14 by combining the circuits, and thus reduced the overall phase
rotation. Since there are very few parts directly in the signal path, (most are ground
shunt circuits), the overall transparency is kept very high. In fact, there are no more
parts in series than many first order circuits.
Measured sensitivity of the VR-4's with a
2.83 v input at a distance of one meter is 87db - about average for a dynamic driver
speaker. Despite the average sensitivity, they worked well with many of the low power tube
amps I had on hand. I found that the realistic low power limit to be about 17 watts. The
Audio note P2SE signature and Anodyne MP300 are both rated at 17 watts and produced
adequate loudness levels in my 14' x 29' room (until my frequent listening companion, Dr.
Chuck, comes over and wants to play Rite of Spring at concert levels). The friendly
impedance of these speakers - no major peaks or dips - no doubt benefited the single-ended
amps. As discussed later in this article, I think a little more power is needed to get the
best of the very low bass these speakers are capable of.
Oh yeah, I should mention that although these
speakers are covered with a thin black cloth, they nevertheless have a very rich, elegant
appearance due mainly to the gorgeous hand rubbed hardwood end caps and center docking
strips. The edges of the end caps are radiused, so you know that they're not veneered. The
VR-4's proportions, fit, and finish should yield a reasonably high designer acceptance
factor. Our household's designer gave them a big thumbs up. The operative word here is
"big" --- "yah Hans,....this is no 'girly man' speaker....just lift the
bass module now-- yah, that's goooood..... VR-4's will pump you up!"
Still, it makes me scratch my head, just like
I did when studying the quality of the Golden Tube SE-40 -- how's Albert making any money
on this thing? Well, I think the answer is that he's not, at least not much right now. The
speakers were priced such that a reasonable profit would be obtained when demand increases
and the economies of bulk part purchases come into play. A risky, but I must say,
refreshing way of doing business.
So, how am I doing so far?.... thorough,....
well reasoned,..... but perhaps I'm being a tad restrained. Well, alrighty then, I'll let
you read how this frugal Scotsman first described the VR-4's to my friends on The
Audiophile Network:
First Impressions, As I Posted Them On TAN BBS
It's very early on Monday morning and I'm dead tired, so
I probably shouldn't be doing this...and I'll probably be accused of being an audio tease
again (and rightfully so), but tough noogies!...Before I hit the sack I just want to
relieve a little tension....
ALBERT DID IT!...the VR-4 is the Golden Tube
of loudspeakers....these babies don't just blow air up my kilt, they fire hose it right up
over my head, pull my shorts down around my ankles and tie a knot in them!
(I'm thinking here of the experience of being
"pantsed" - the embarrassment of being suddenly bare assed in public. That's the
feeling I get with these speakers - I'm vicariously feeling the collective embarrassment
of the manufacturers of all those over-priced loudspeakers ...well, O.K., so it's a little
exciting too.)
They're just stupid good at a price that's a
joke. Just how good?...well I just got done tonight setting up my friend Chuck's system
which is all Audio Research (including the VT150s), transparent Audio cables and the new
Wilson Watt/Puppy 5's and I think Chuck's in for the shock of his life when he compares
price tags and listens to the VR-4s. That will be happening this week at my place - the
VR-4s vs. the Watt\Puppy 5's and it's not going to be pretty!
...AND...they sound fantastic being driven by
a single Golden Tube SE-40!
Did you hear that...way out there across the
moors, it's the plaintive reedy wail of the bagpipes...and they're playing a tune on an
amp/speaker combo that costs under $4,000 retail!...Hmmmm...what's Chuck got into his?...
oh... about $26,700!
........AAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
I feel much better now and it's definitely
time to hit the sack.
The VR-4s Compared With The Wilson Watt/Puppy V's
Stu obviously gets a little punchy when he's tired; but
seriously, I consider the VR-4s at $3,000 to be a giveaway when you consider the price of
other highend speakers. I can't think of any speaker under $10K that is flat to 20Hz, has
as sophisticated a crossover and cabinets as well built as these — and I haven't even
begun to tell you what they sound like.
As for the Wilson Watt/Puppy 5's —
they're good, real good. I'm not making the comparison to take shots at the Wilsons.
They're a benchmark loudspeaker who's size and sound many people are familiar with--which
makes for an unusually effective and meaningful comparison. They also just happened to be
available.
When Albert sent out the VR-4's, he mentioned
to me his desire to have me compare the speaker to other highly regarded and more
expensive products, including the Wilsons. I told him that I no longer had the Merlin VSMs
or Mach 1 Acoustic DM-10s on hand and seriously doubted whether I could get a review pair
of the Wilsons on short notice. Then, three days after the VR-4s arrived, Dr. Chuck hits
me with the revelation that he's bought a new system that includes the Watt/Puppy
5's!...well now, you can't expect me to overlook such a providential occurrence, can
you?...
"....and there was much rejoicing as
they gathered up the speaker manna and brought it into the dwelling known as Stu's
place."
For the listening evaluation my system
consisted of the PS Audio Lambda and Theta Data Basic transports; Mach 1 Acoustics
semi-rigid digital cables; Audio Alchemy DTI-Pro; Audient Technologies A.U.D.I.T.;
Polyfusion Audio, Mach 1 Acoustics, Theta Pro Basic III digital converters; Reference Line
Preeminence and Melos SHA-1 Gold preamps; Tice Audio IC-1 interconnects and bi-wired runs
of Tice 416 cable; Meitner MTR-101 mono blocks and more tube amps than you can shake a
stick at, including the Golden Tube Audio SE-40, Anodyne MP-300, Cary 300 and 301 SE,
Audio Note P2SE, Manley mono blocks...oh, you know...all the "tube fest"
participants. Various isolation devices were used with the equipment, including Bright
Star Big feet and little rocks and under the speaker spikes I used A.R.T. Audio Q-dampers.
Placement of the speakers for good imaging
and tonal balance was not hyper-critical, provided you maintain a free field placement.
The dispersion pattern of the VR-4's is so broad, that you'd have to work at it to not get
good performance. I settled on a position seven feet out from the rear wall and about
three feet from each side wall with a 12 degree toe in. That placed the center of the
speakers 7.5 feet apart and my listening position eight feet on the diagonal from each
speaker. Toe-in was a matter of taste for the amount of upper midrange energy and density
of center images I preferred. The changes due to toe-in were really pretty subtle and
seemed to have no effect on the width of the soundstage.
Let's get the bass out of the way first.
Using warble test tones, I measured flat to 20 Hz at my listening position. This was with
the Meitner monoblocks and the speakers about four feet out from the rear wall. When I
pulled them out to the final position, which was about seven feet out, the reading was
-1db at 20Hz. The bass is surprisingly articulate and tight all the way down there. Of
course the amp you use will have a lot to do with the control and extension. Most of the
single-ended amps I had couldn't cut it much below 30 Hz. There is an impedance dip at
around 22 Hz which makes the real subterranean stuff a little harder to drive.
The Golden Tube SE-40 did pretty well as a
bottom feeder, getting down to the mid 20's with no problem. The Manley amps also shone as
bass drivers, providing more gut thumping low end then a tube amp has a right to-- but the
most incredible bass was reserved for the solid state Meitner monoblocks, which exhibited
incredible depth and control when run full range and which sounded even better when I
bi-amped with the Anodynes on top. I played my Dorian organ discs and heard (and felt)
things that I have never before heard in my room (excepting the one time I borrowed two
Velodyne 18" subs and had a bass freak out). Boy this is going to be one great front
speaker for home video fans. you don't need the extra space for the subs and you still get
all the thunder when you crank up Terminator II.
I just love string bass, particularly when
the low notes excite the wood body of the instrument and produce resonant undertones,
below the fundamental of the note. You hear this in spades with that gorgeous 1715 Klotz
Bass Fiddle on King & Moore, "Impending Bloom." The VR-4's reproduced those
"way down there" resonances beautifully -- no thinness or bleaching like I've
heard with speakers that can't plumb the depths.
Play most any recording taken from a concert
hall or other large acoustic space and you will "feel" the pressurizing of the
room with these speakers. It's amazing how much ultra- low bass information there is on
many of these recordings and how much that information enhances the illusion of your room
being that same concert hall. There is a down side, though. It can get a little
disconcerting when you can plainly hear the rumblings of the air ventilation system or the
traffic outside the recording site. I hear way too much of this on Chesky's Johnny Frigo
with Bucky and John Pizzarelli and the other recordings made at the RCA Studio
"A" site in New York City.
Another down side is that a speaker that goes
this low with real authority, will excite room resonances and standing wave problems much
more than speakers that don't move as much air or that have limited range. I don't have
resonance problems in my "audio bunker," my room being underground with concrete
under the floor and on all four walls, but I do have a standing wave problem at about 34
and 37 Hz due to the long straight and diagonal lengths of my room. With the Wilsons,
they're heard as only minor peaks -- with the VR-4's, they're quite a bit more prominent.
Not to worry though, the problem is nicely solved with a few of ASC's 20" tube traps
or some of Tyll Hertsen's (Mr. Headroom's) home brew frequency-specific cancellation
tubes. Let's face it, you have to pay your dues if you want killer bass with no peaks.
The Wilson Puppies do a very nice job of
extending the bass of the Watts, but they do not have the weight and authority of the
VR-4's, their bass extension being limited to about 30 Hz. Although both speakers are
using two eight inch woofers, the internal volume of the VR-4's bass module is quite a bit
larger than the Puppies and has two ports rather than one. I'm frankly quite surprised
that the puppies go as low as they do, given these limitations. I'd say that the mid to
upper bass sounds just a bit pushed on the puppies, perhaps because of having two drivers
operating together in their most efficient range.
The separate crossover points for the woofers
on the VR-4's work like a charm. The single woofer that carries up to 125Hz melds
seamlessly with the midrange driver and there is no mid-bass emphasis. In fact, the same
outstanding integration carries through the entire frequency response of the speaker. If
you stand next to it and bend all the way down while listening, even while standing 90
degrees off axis, you'll be amazed at how similar all the drivers sound. You don't get a
sense of the different character of the tweeter, midrange and woofers, just different
concentrations of frequencies. One of the first things I did when I got the Watt/puppies
at my place was to do this same little test of driver integration. The Wilsons do a good
job here — much better than most — but the VR-4s do it better. I wonder if this
is the result of the "Global Axis Integrator Circuit" (TM) that Albert talks
about in his literature. You know, all that stuff that goes right over my head, dealing
with dispersion patterns, lobing, phase, amplitude, etc....
The midrange and treble on the VR-4's is as
open and transparent as I have ever heard from a dynamic driver speaker — no, scratch
that — it is more open and transparent than any dynamic driver speaker I've ever
heard. These things sound very similar to a good electrostat or planar speaker — a
very fast transient response with no apparent overhang or artificial resonance. The timbre
of the instruments is portrayed very accurately — just the right amount of body and
warmth without dipping into the dark/romantic territory. It does take a while for the
speaker to reach this balance though. The surround on the carbon fiber midrange is
particularly stiff and sounds a bit "dry" until broken in. I had to hit it hard
for several days straight with the Purest Audio break in disc and run music through it
continuously for a full week, before the midrange began to reach its proper bloom.
Several of my listening buddies shared my
opinion that the VR-4's sounded faster, had a more airy top end and a less dark and foggy
midrange than either my Vortex KRS's or the Wilsons . With the KRS's, I would lay the
blame on cabinet resonance — but with the Wilsons' cabinets being deader than the
proverbial door nail, you have to look elsewhere. I suspect that the slower, more romantic
full bodied sound of the Wilsons came from the new Scan Speak 6.5" bass-midrange
driver and its attending circuit. This new driver added some lower midrange warmth and
body to the Merlin VSM, which I thought was a complimentary addition, but in the Wilsons,
it's just a little too much for my taste.
The perception of speed is I believe a
combination of physics and tonal balance. A much more massive 6.5"carbon impregnated
paper driver just can't start and stop as fast as a comparatively smaller and lighter
carbon fiber driver. the VR-4s midrange driver has a rated top end response of 12khz, so
it's breathing awfully easy up to its 3.5khz crossover point. The Scan Speak driver is, I
believe, rated up to 6khz, so I'd think it was pushing it's optimal range at the 2.5khz
crossover on the Watt.
Tonal balance plays a big role in the
perception of "speed." I've found that speakers with extra energy in the lower
midrange and upper bass always sound "slow"compared to those with flat response
or a recession in this range. Since the Wilson is noticeably more full in the lower mids
and upper bass, it is no surprise that it also perceived as being slower. Case in point:
when my friends Mario and Gary came down from Canada for a listening session, I
accidentally left the speaker cables disconnected from the bass modules on the VR-4 when
we switched from the Wilsons. Since we were listening to a piece which featured mainly the
vibraphone and the VR-4's midrange driver goes down to 125Hz, we didn't notice the absence
of the bass modules and we were all raving about how incredibly fast the VR-4's sounded.
When I corrected "the problem" and we listened again, the VR-4's still sounded
faster, but it wasn't quite the Ferrari vs. model "T"comparison like the first
time.
I described for you my definition of
"macro-dynamics" vs. "micro-dynamics in the first tube fest article
appearing several issues back. I still consider them to be very distinct traits that often
do not coexist in their highest form in the same product. in this case I would give the
nod to the VR-4's in resolving the subtleties of the micro-dynamics and call the Wilsons
the winner in handling the big crescendos. With micro-dynamics, I believe the difference
in performance is again traceable to the physics involved with the midrange drivers. you
would expect that the VR-4's smaller, lighter driver with a higher Young's Modulus (the
ratio of weight to stiffness) would be able to trace the subtle complexities of the
musical signal with greater fidelity than a larger, heavier driver that is more prone to
cone flex. Here's a good analogy: think of the complex musical signal as a winding
mountain side road and the dynamic drivers as a large van and a small sports car. Which
one do you think will be able to travel very quickly up the mountain road without
fish-tailing or skidding? The sports car, of course. This analogy helps me to understand
why it is that the VR-4's have better resolution of the fine details than the Wilsons do.
Here's a music example: on track seven of Narada's Celtic Legacy collection, there is a
digital sampling of a bag pipe sound that is used repeatedly as a droning rhythm. With the
VR-4's you can plainly hear a faint mechanical click and buzz each time the sampled sound
is re-engaged. on the Wilsons you can still tell its there, but the sound is somewhat
blurred or smeared into the note that follows, so it is not nearly as distinct. I know
that this is a somewhat gross example, but I think you can understand how this would
translate into other subtleties, like tempo and voice inflections.
I'm afraid I don't have as neat an
explanation of macro-dynamics. I suspect that the Wilsons have the edge here because they
are a more sensitive speaker, measuring 93 dB to the VR-4's 87db, and because the
Wilsons’ midrange and bass drivers use heavier magnets with longer excursions. If you
want to push a lot of air in a hurry, a longer excursion has got to help. I didn't feel
that the VR-4's were in any way flawed in their macro-dynamics, it's just that the Wilsons
are real over-achievers in this department.
The size of the VR-4's soundstage is huge
when the music calls for it. Closely mic'ed orchestral works gave me a panoramic view of
the orchestra stretching from beyond the left wall of my room to beyond the right wall.
Depth was also excellent, but what I noticed most was the increased layering within the
overall depth. The layers of depth were much more easily discerned than with my KRS's or
with the Wilsons. In my setup, the VR-4's rear firing tweeter had a lot to do with this.
When I turned it off, I could no longer state with certainty that the VR-4's depth
layering was much better than the Wilsons'.
The Wilsons' stage was about the same width
as the VR-4's if you were to measure it linearly, but one nevertheless gets the impression
that the VR-4's stage is wider because of the enhanced depth perception and space around
the individual images.
I found it particularly interesting that
although the tweeter on the VR-4 is located only a few inches higher than on the
Watt\Puppies, the soundstage of the VR-4 is taller by several feet. This one has me
baffled. I would have thought that with the Wilson's tweeter firing upward on a slant, it
would have as good or better height than the VR-4's. I'm sure there is some scientific
explanation for this that I'll kick myself for not knowing.
The imaging of the VR-4s is just plain
spooky! Focused, three-dimensional, living and breathing performers are right
there...well, at least as "right there" as I've heard to date in my listening
room.... goose bumps and hair standing up all over the place! Albert said he had a theory
about imaging - that if you can reproduce the exact inverse of the microphone, the same
radiation pattern, time, phase and amplitude of the sound pressure wave that the
microphone "saw," you would have a loudspeaker that would set a new imaging and
palpability standard. Well, I don't know if it's the same wave as the microphone saw, but
these speakers do throw off a nearly omni-directional sound wave which retains excellent
phase and amplitude-- you can walk all the way around these speakers and the timbre of the
instruments hardly change! I think it goes without saying that this is extraordinary
performance for a speaker with dynamic drivers. Perhaps it is this omni-directional
characteristic of the VR-4s (along with the non-resonant cabinets) that make them sound so
un-boxy, like electrostats.
I've had plenty of speakers in my room that
do a good disappearing act, but the VR-4's are an order of magnitude greater —
"our sensors are picking up no traces of carbon based molecules, Captain." Yeah,
that's the ticket, Albert's Global Axis Integrator circuit is really a Romulan cloaking
device! Even when I sit at my computer along one of the side walls, I still get a
recognizable soundstage— none of that nasty collapsing onto one speaker. The real
bonus here is that listening to the VR-4's can be more of a team sport. Instead of a
one-person sweet spot, I now have a two, or even three-person place of honor.
How'd they fare against the benchmark in the
imaging category? I'd say that the Wilsons have outstanding focus, but because the depth
perception is, in comparison, somewhat compressed, they don't have that last measure of
three-dimensionality. Coupling this trait with its more prominent upper bass/ lower
midrange produces what I would describe as very dense or thick central images, lacking
some of the roundness and light that I enjoyed on the VR-4s. I also found that, like most
speakers, when you listen far off center, the images from the Wilsons tended to
"glom" onto the closest speaker.
Conclusions
I can confidently say that the Von Schweikert Research
VR-4s are the finest loudspeakers I have had the pleasure of hearing in my listening room.
They hit all my hot buttons — deep, articulate bass, timbre accuracy, fast, open,
three dimensional soundstaging... You know what this means, don't you?....yes, the Vortex
KRS's are now officially retired from active duty at Stu's place. I'm buying the review
pair of the VR-4's and I don't expect to be lusting after anything else for at least
another five years, or until Albert builds a VR-5.
These speakers are an extraordinary gift to
audiophiles who have real world budgetary constraints. Imagine the joy of knowing that you
only spent $3,000 and got a pair of loudspeakers that are as good or better than speakers
that cost many times the price. I'm basking in that joy right now and it feels real good!
For those audiophiles who won't consider the
VR-4's because the price seems incongruous with world class performance — YOU'VE BEEN
WARNED! Sooner or later, some local 'phile, wearing a plaid beret, is going to invite you
over to hear his new VR-4's and you're going to experience audio angst in a BIG way!