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In-Wall Speakers Test, Part 3 by Keith Yates
Subjecting 20 putatively "high-end" in-wall speakers to the same performance standards used to judge conventional in-room speakers proved to be something of a novel idea back in the February and March '96 issues. The responses those twin installments provoked were fascinating, though, in retrospect, probably predictable. Manufacturers whose flagships fared poorly tended to opine that it was folly to take the in-wall breed so darned seriously. Several, in fact, openly dismissed in-walls as doomed never to amount to anything more than background music reproducers. Most of those whose speakers ended up in the middle of the pack acknowledged that they had work to do: "Give us 12 to 18 months and we'll rule the roost," predicted one eager marketing fellow. (I don't know the current status of that company's efforts; he was sacked a few months later.) And the handful whose in-walls proved competitive with similarly priced in-room models simply smiled, presumably content to watch the purchase orders roll in while quietly parceling out more resources—engineering talent, R&D funds, tooling—to close the remaining gap between the lifestyle-friendly in-wall and its bookshelf- and freestanding-type cousins. With the hubbub
all but died out, I was itching to find out how far the state-of-the-art
in in-wall speakers may have come in the 2-year interim. I polled a couple
of fellow listening-room and home-theater acoustics designers, some dealer/installer
friends and a few independent loudspeaker engineers to ferret out "the
contenders" from the "wannabes," ordered up the review
samples, and put them through the same grueling review process. [See "Testing
In-Walls" for details.] Outwardly resembling the Signature Seven, behind its nondescript grille and distinctive grooved front baffle the AWM70 boasts a purpose-built active crossover with built-in spectral shaping (equalization), a dedicated 100-watt amplifier for the 7-inch woven Kevlar woofer, and another 100-watt amp for the 1-inch metal dome tweeter. All that circuitry draws both its power and audio signal from the central control unit through the Cat-5 cable. The audio feed itself is delivered
in balanced format, which suppresses noise and distortion from contaminating
the signal on its way from the controller. From an engineering standpoint,
the whole arrangement is very sensibly conceived and executed, offering
near-ideal electrical intimacy between the amplifier's output stage and
the speaker's voice coil, which is barely an inch away. Since the hot-`n-heavy,
high-voltage part of the amplifier is tucked away in the central controller,
the crossover/amplifier/speaker package is a low-voltage, cool-running
affair and, in fact, has been approved by various regulatory agencies
for in-wall use. The AWM70's overall sonic success wasn't due just to its refusal to commit the customary sins of the in-wall breed: It seemed to take "active" steps to get things right, in the way that the better floor-standing speakers get them right, most noticeably the way it handled dynamic contrasts. Big, driving rock numbers by Led Zeppelin and John Hiatt pounded and swelled into convincing roars, and Marc-Andre Hamelin's big Steinway positively erupted in the demonic and magnificently recorded "Grande Sonate" by Alkan. A bravura composer somewhat along the lines of Liszt, Alkan calls for almost humanly unplayable torrents of notes: In several passages it actually sounds as if several pianists are playing the same piano at the same time. The sheer density, rapidity and dynamic surge of the passage (subtitled "Vingt ans") is nearly as hard on loudspeakers as it is on pianists: I don't know of any other pianist who can keep up with Hamelin, and I don't know of any other in-wall speaker that can keep up with the AWM70 keeping up with Hamelin. On only two of the dozen test tracks did the speaker falter ever so slightly: the Scarlatti piano sonata, where the quiet, "black" spaces between notes weren't as deep as with the reference Genelec studio monitors, leading to the impression that the individual notes themselves were somewhat less vividly articulated than they could have been; and on the Jennifer Warnes pop vocal track, where just the barest trace of sibilant emphasis added a hi-fi-ish coloration. To be fair, these are quibbles,
not indictments, and blame for the piano effect can probably be pinned
not on the speaker itself but to the way gypsum-board and wood-stud wall
cavities typically add a resonant smear to the sound by storing and releasing
acoustic energy over time. On track after track, the AWM70 handily sailed
past the competition, ending up as the most satisfying performer of this
installment. The aural effect produced by the Sekrit was not quite up to the high visual standard set, falling somewhere in the middle of the second tier of performers. The sound was decidedly darker than that produced by the competition, an effect that was unmistakable from the very first tracks. On the Wallflowers' tune, the bass came across as slightly bloated, putting it out of balance with the guitars and vocals. On the Alkan sonata, I noted that it was "as if someone had stuck a big, thick shag rug under the piano and filled the concert hall with sofas": Individual notes didn't ring and "coruscate" like the real thing. On the John Hiatt number, the vocal took a back seat to the bass guitar, an effect also encountered with the Keb' Mo selection where the guitar seemed too fat and slow to successfully play off the vocal line. It should be admitted here that there were a few cases in which the Sekrit's overtly rich tonal presentation actually flattered the music: in the Allegri "Miserere," where the recording itself can otherwise seem a tiny bit too forward; in the Albinoni "Adagio," where Gary Karr's big, nearly four-hundred year old Amati contrabass acquired a solid-as-granite authority unmatched by any other in-wall; and in Jennifer Warnes' pop tune "The Hunter," in which the vocal took on an attractively golden honeyed smoothness, making the other speakers sound raspy by comparison. In general, the softer the playback,
the better the Sekrit fared. I suspect this was due to the speaker's inherent
bass-lift functioning as a built-in "loudness contour." (Found
on many receivers, the loudness contour button increases bass at low volume
levels to offset the ear's natural insensitivity to low frequencies at
low volumessomething referred to in psychoacoustics
circles as the Fletcher-Munson or Robinson-Dadson effect.) Perhaps inevitably, though, the highlighting and clarifying of inner detail had a bit of a dark side, heard in this case as a slight but unmistakable bleaching or "leaning out" of harmonic richness. The piano sounds on both the Scarlatti and Alkan sonata tracks showed good piano "bite" but were missing some "body," the sense that the sound was emanating from an instrument the size and weight of a real piano. Similarly, Janis Ian's voice on "Breaking Silence" was not as fleshed out and therefore not as believable as with the very top rank of performers. And John Hiatt's voice lacked the requisite fullness and therefore conviction on the M&Ks: When he sneered, "Don't you know you're riding with the King," I thought the better phraseology would have been, "Would you believe you're riding with a Duke?" Though noticeable, these timbral
effects were generally quite slight and, with the exception of the Hiatt
tune, did not generally diminish my musical satisfaction; clearly, the
SW-95 belonged in the top 4 or 5 in the field of 25 in-walls I've tested
to date in this series. Like the InWall Gold (and all Triad
in-walls for that matter) the OmniPlus has a lot in common with a conventional
in-room speaker, including the fact that it is supplied with its own enclosure.
From the engineering perspective, this allows Triad's design team to optimize
the woofer's response for a known enclosure volume, as opposed to the
conventional arrangement, in which the speaker is simply stuffed in a
hole in a wall of unknown size and construction particulars. In Triad's
design, not only can the woofer's response be predetermined and massaged
by the engineer in advance of installation, but by not utilizing
the walls themselves as the enclosure, the Triad approach significantly
reduces the sonic mud that typical walls cause by vibrating more or less
sympathetically with the woofer. My listening session notes for the OmniPlus enthuse about best-of-class clarity, focus, dynamics, and even bass performance. Recorded in an old French monastery, the 10 voices in the Allegri "Miserere" had a haunting, and entirely appropriate, floating-in-space quality that even the B&W AWM70 couldn't quite match. Cecilia Bartoli's rich mezzo-soprano integrated flawlessly with her piano accompaniment on the Scarlatti "Gia il sole del Gange" canzone. The speaker kept its grip on the demanding Alkan piece, preserving a realistic piano sound no matter how maniacally it seemed Marc-Andre Hamelin ripped up and down the keyboard. But it wasn't only the classical
genre where the OmniPlus satisfied. The Wallflowers rocker quickly turned
into an exercise in grinning and foot-tapping more than dispassionate
note-taking, and the bluesy Keb Mo number positively radiated front-porch
authenticity. The Janis Ian song was tight and sassy, sounding more like
a good floorstanding speaker than like a relatively affordable in-wall.
Perhaps even more than the Signature 7, the OmniPlus sounded convincing
enough to make me want to turn it up, something which increased the listening
pleasure—even
magic—albeit
only up to a point. That point, as it turned out, was 95 decibels, beyond
which the OmniPlus took on a progressively hard, shouty character, although
it should be admitted that this occurred with all the speakers
at about this level or even lower—all,
that is, except the AWM70, which was good for another 2-3 dB before the
same effects set in. Likewise, the off-axis average
shows exemplary control, confirming that the speaker ought to be considered
a leading candidate for installations necessitating placement in less-than-ideal
locations relative to the main listening area. Priced at a fraction of
B&W's stunning new AWM70, and Triad's own equally stunning InWall
Gold system, which has defined the performance possibilities for the whole
in-wall genre for several years now, the OmniPlus has quietly emerged
as the odds-on favorite for those who care deeply about music but don't
want to spend thousands on in-wall speakers that do it justice. The enclosure hangs on the wall
by way of a sturdy steel clip on the back side that slots into its mate
that is attached to the wall by molly-type bolts. The whole affair has
the advantage of being rock-solid and also removable: Lifting up the 31-lb.
speaker "undocks" it without involving so much as a single tool
or speck of sheetrock dust. With the output levels carefully matched by adjusting the digital volume control on the preamp, I settled in for several extended listening sessions. As with all the speakers, I led off with the Jennifer Warnes vocal track, which came across cleanly and convincingly, albeit with a little extra boost in the sibilance region. (Sibilants are the noise-like "s" and "sh" sounds, typically characterized by strong output in the broad 2-6 kHz part of the spectrum.) Next, the percussion strokes on the "Danza Alta" were rather better defined than on the competition, the whole lilting number being brought off tidily and successfully. Bartoli's Scarlatti canzone and Pogorelich's piano sonata from the same composer likewise earned high marks. So far, the speaker was meeting its audiophile pedigree. The VSM-1 did not fare quite as well on the pop tracks that followed. The Carver amplifier's LEDs flashed "clipping" before the John Hiatt number got up enough steam to rock wholeheartedly, an effect that was also limited the success of the Janis Ian, Wallflowers and Led Zeppelin tracks. On all these pop tracks, as well
as the classical "Grande Sonate" by Alkan, the sound was noticeably
compressed dynamically at all levels above about 90 decibels. Whether
this was due to the 65-watt per channel Carver amp running out of steam
prior to clipping, or the natural reluctance of the Vandersteens to track
musical dynamics remains a bit of a mystery. The shape of these peaks, and their location on the frequency axis, reminded me of the KEF CR200Qr speaker reviewed in the February 1996 installment and the Canton InWall 9 reviewed the following month. Both the KEF and Canton were disappointing performers united in their use of a coaxial design, that is, the tweeters was nested in the center of the woofer. I wondered whether the Vandersteen might have employed the same physical arrangement. A careful reading of the literature disclosed that, indeed, the tweeter is mounted coaxially with the woofer. As with the KEF and Canton, I suspect that the rather anomalous response curves are the product of interference patterns between the wave energies radiated by the tweeter and the woofer cone that surrounds it. The VSM-1's rating of 86dB with
a 1 watt input, measured at 1 meter, would appear to be very close to
the actual test result I got, which was in the 85-86dB range. And, despite the measured similarities,
it certainly sounded a lot better than the coaxial designs tested
in previous installments. If you can give it 80 to 100 watts of clean
amplifier power; listen at low to moderate levels; like the slightly forward
tonal balance; and take comfort in the notion that you could take the
speaker with you without having to patch a big hole in the wall, the VSM-1
will prove to be an intriguing possibility. Sidebar: Test Setup Each speaker was mounted in a four-foot high wall formed of two-by-four wood studs set 16 inches on center, and sheathed with a single layer of half-inch gypsum board on the back side and two layers on the front. The two front layers were separated by a paper-thin, sticky constrained-layer damping sheet (Omni-brand dB-Rock) to control drum-like wall resonances. The 2,436 cubic inch cavity-a volume typical in residential wall construction with requisite fire-blocking-was filled with conventional R-11 fiberglass insulation. Each speaker was installed by Patrick Calderone, a professional A/V installer based in Northern California, per manufacturer instructions. All speakers were checked for good "seating" in the wall, as well as for buzzes, rattles and air leaks. Both gypsum board layers and contrained-layer damping sheet were changed whenever the cut-out requirements for a speaker did not closely match the hole left by the preceding speaker tested.
An ACO Pacific instrumention microphone and a Techron TEF20HI connected to a PC were used to generate, capture and display test signals. The test signals were amplified by a Soundstream DA-2 power amplifier set to deliver 1 watt at 8 ohms (2.83 volts) and then routed to the speaker under test via 12-gauge low-oxygen speaker cable. Each speaker was tested with the microphone at 2 meters away directly on-axis, as well as at 30 and 60 degrees off-axis laterally, and at 30 and 60 degrees up and 30 and 60 degrees down. Lateral responses for those speakers with non-vertically aligned drivers were taken at 30 and 60 degrees both to the left and to the right. Six decibels were added to the curves to show the plots as if they were derived at 1 watt/1 meter. I exported the on-axis and off-axis response files to WaveMetrics' Igor Pro scientific analysis and graphing program, where I averaged all eight off-axis curves for each speaker at each of 4,096 data point to provide a composite picture of how the speaker distributed its energy into the environment. (This is a critical element of the sound of in-wall speakers in particular, due to the fact that off-axis energy predominates the sonic presentation in most casual residential environments.) Prior to taking frequency response measurements, an energy-time curve (ETC) test was run for each speaker to verify the accuracy of the test setup. Reflections off structures, etc. received within the 58 millisecond measuring time window were never higher in level than -40dB, and typically registered about -60dB out to 120 milliseconds, enabling an extraordinary level of performance detail to be captured, stored and analyzed. I'd like to thank the following individuals for their help in establishing what amounts to the most rigorous regimen ever used for comparative testing of in-wall speakers: Dr. Floyd Toole, director of research at Harman International; Don Keele, technical editor of Audio magazine; and Farrel Becker of Techron, Inc.
SIDEBAR: Software Used The following compact discs were used in the core listening portion of the tests: Francisco de la Torre: "Danza Alta" from El Cancionero de Palacio: 1474-1516, performed by Hesperion XX, Jordi Savall, director. Astrée. Alessandro Scarlatti: "Già il sole dal Gange" from If You Love Me: 18th Century Italian Songs, performed by Cecilia Bartoli, mezzo-soprano, and György Fischer, piano. London. Domenico Scarlatti: "Sonata K.20 in E major," Ivo Pogorelich, piano. Deutsche Grammophon. Mary Black: "Still Believing" from Babes in the Woods. Gifthorse/Curb. John Hiatt: "Riding with the King" from Riding with the King. Geffen. Sting: "Mad About You" from The Soul Cages. A&M. Sergei Prokofiev: Introduction to "Romeo and Juliet, op. 64," Kirov Orchestra, Leningrad, Valery Gergiev, conductor. Philips. Counting Crows: "Mr. Jones" from August and Everything After. Geffen. Chris Rea: "Auberge" from Auberge. Atco. Federico Torroba: "Castles of Spain" from A Tribute to Segovia,
Christopher Parkening, guitar. EMI Classics.
The author owns Keith Yates Design Group,
a California-based consulting firm providing architects, builders and
owners with design, engineering and testing services for residential entertainment
venues nationwide.
Performance-Based
Room Design (sm) |