Welcome to the Best Tower Loudspeakers section from the Part-Time Audiophile Buyers Guide for Summer 2024.
We’re not saying that these are the best tower loudspeakers in the world or that these choices somehow overrule anyone else’s favorites. We’re saying that these are the products we’ve reviewed, owned, or have extensively auditioned that have impressed us when it comes to value, performance and sound quality. This is the gear that we, the staff of Part-Time Audiophile, recommend.
Best Tower Loudspeakers
Zu Audio DW 6 (from $1,599 pr USD)
Featuring a 10″ full-range driver, rare in this industry, the high-efficiency DW 6s are “a delightful replacement for the Omen speaker of yore.” The DW 6 is perfectly capable of shaking the house as much as it is capable of moving your soul, and it’s one of the best tower loudspeakers for the money–“for less than $2k it still sets the bar in terms of value and fit and finish.”
Sonus faber Lumina III ($2,399 pr USD)
A pair of Sonus faber three-way towers, made in Italy, and retailing for just $2,400? There has to be a mistake somewhere, but there isn’t. The new Lumina line from Sonus faber is this affordable because the construction of the cabinets is so simple–right angles everywhere. The flagship Lumina III floorstanding speakers will make you scratch your head because you still get gorgeous veneers, real Sonus faber drivers and a real Sonus faber sound. A Best Value Award winner for 2020.
Acoustic Energy AE509 ($3,499 pr USD)
These new towers from this legendary UK marque, one of the best tower loudspeakers in this price range, offer impressive specs (they go down to 32 Hz) and are easy to drive with modest amplification. The AE509s offer considerable value for the money, and they might force you to consider whether you really need to spend more since they excel at placing listeners within the original recording venue. “When you’re shaming other British companies at half the price point,” we concluded, “AE must be doing something right.”
Charney Audio Maestro X (from $3,900 pr USD)
After enjoying the original single-driver, high-efficiency Charney Audio Maestros, we loved everything about them except for their inability to energize large rooms without unconventional placements. Brian Charney came up with the new X (extreme) version, which sports a deeper cabinet and the ability to use several 8″ drivers from Voxativ, Lii and more. “These are some great examples of full-range drivers coupled into a sophisticated cabinet that will work well in a wide range of listening environments.” A Reviewers Choice winner.
Triangle 40th Anniversary Antal ($4,700 pr USD)
The fit and finish on this relatively affordable French speaker is astonishing, and we found those attributes reflected in the rest of this design–drivers, crossovers and the overall performance. Triangle designs their own drivers, which helps to keep costs in control, and the gold magnesium dome tweeter is stunning in every way–making this one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers in terms of value. “The balance of this speaker is simply stellar and I can’t praise it enough,” our reviewer declared, giving it a Reviewers Choice Award.
Bowers and Wilkins 703 S3 ($5,999 pr USD)
The latest version of the popular Bowers and Wilkins 700 line benefits greatly from the advances made with the 800 series–the new Continuum driver cones, the tweeter module (which wiggles independently of the cabinet) and even biomimetic suspensions for the midrange driver. Everything else has been improved with the S3, from the cabinet shape to the motors to the crossovers. “It was one of, if not the best, speaker in terms of imaging I’ve had in my listening room, besting speakers at double its price point,” our reviewer concluded.
GoldenEar T66 ($6,900 pr USD)
These ultra-slim towers from GoldenEar pack a punch due to the DSP-controlled subwoofer, the AMT “folded” tweeter and a totally new design, the first since AudioQuest took over. Price is for gloss black–the gsingularly gorgeous Santa Barbara red model costs $7,200/pr. Review forthcoming.
Volti Audio RAZZ (starting at $7,500 pr USD)
The RAZZ is as dynamic and engrossing as any of Greg Robert’s horn designs, surprisingly so at this price point. These are undoubtedly outstanding party speakers–they energize a room like nobody’s business–but they also check off the audiophile boxes of superb imaging and soundstaging and tonal balance. Satisfying on a number of levels, and an Editor’s Choice winner.
Volti Audio RAZZ LE (starting at $7,500 pr USD)
A limited edition of the Volti Audio RAZZ, the RAZZ LE (which we’ve nicknamed the RAZZLE), is sonically similar to the standard speaker–but with new upscale veneers and an improved set of footers. This is a truly coherent design, focused on presenting the music as a whole. “Couple that with the killer dynamics, both micro and macro, that only good horns can provide, and you’ve got yourself a heaping plate of audio fun.” A Reviewers Choice Winner.
Fern & Roby Raven III ($8,500 pr USD)
Slotted between the Raven and Raven II full-range speakers from this charismatic Virginia-based company, the Raven IIIs have attractive proportions, a truly gorgeous solid wood enclosure made from American walnut (or the brand new ash) and the ability to match well with both low-powered and high-powered amplification. (It’s also one of the best tower speakers for quietly blending into your home.) The Raven III also uses a new SEAS full-range driver that was co-designed with F&B, providing a slightly more detailed sound. A Reviewers Choice winner.
Trenner & Friedl Osiris ($8,900 pr USD)
The Austrian-built Osiris may occupy the low-to-middle slot in the Trenner & Friedl line, but they’re so good that they made $35,000 worth of Mactone amplifiers sing like Julie Andrew on the top of some hill. The theme of the Osiris is balance, and they do qualify as an “all-arounder,” but the superb coherence of this best tower loudspeaker entry should not be understated. An Editor’s Choice winner.
Sonner Audio Legato Duo ($9,500 pr USD)
This 2.5-way tower, the floor-standing version of the Legato Unum, is the only Sonner Audio loudspeaker that isn’t a two-way bookshelf monitor. Sonner’s Gunny Surya simply starts with what is great about his smaller designs and expands in every direction, creating a visually striking profile and a very rich and detailed sound. “These splendid transducers are an out-and-out bargain, and they’re worthy of stellar amplification—which we gave ‘em.” A Reviewers Choice award winner.
ProAc D30RS ($9,600 pr USD)
The latest version of the two-way ProAc D30 uses an incredibly smooth ribbon tweeter mated to a Mica pulp woofer with a long port arrangement, creating a sound that’s “quick with an invisible midrange, sweet treble, and wide bandwidth sound.” The D30 is all about the sonic presentation as a whole, and is equally adept a playing both modern and classic recordings with ease. A Reviewers Choice Award winner and for one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers.
Rethm Trishna ($9,990 pr USD)
Rethm has significantly re-designed their lineup in the last few years, with entirely new cosmetics, isobaric woofers and a powered bass module. “Whether they were spaced wide apart, firing straight forward, or close together again with no toe-in,” our reviewer concluded, “the Rethm Trishna gave me possibly the best soundstage and image I’ve ever experienced in my room.” A Reviewers Choice winner.
Qln Prestige Three (starting at $10,995 pr USD)
We’ve been drooling over the Swedish-built Qln Prestige Threes, especially with Vinnie Rossi amplification, for a few years now, so it’s no surprise they’re still one of the best tower loudspeakers you can buy. Once we tested these, we didn’t want to give them back. The Qlns throw up a huge sound, warm and yet crystalline, and you’ll stare in disbelief when you hear these very petite towers in action. We felt they did so many things exceptionally well, that we suggested that many different types of listeners will find them to be “all they need.” An Editor’s Choice winner.
Focal Kanta No. 2 ($10,995 pr USD)
This beautiful Focal speaker is rare for “balancing several disparate parts, a metal dome tweeter, with soft cones, a 3-way complex crossover, but high efficiency.” It’s a surprising mix for such a coherent speaker, especially when you consider its undeniable dynamic punch. “This speaker is proof that the heyday of large, multi-way floorstanders isn’t over; it is perhaps in its golden age,” we concluded.
Marten Oscar Trio ($10,995 pr USD)
These Swedish towers from Marten sounded fast, detailed, accurate and resolving to our ears, combined with “a special soulful something heard in nearly every recording…a cozy feeling of rightness.” The ceramic drivers have incredible low levels of distortion, which indulged us with sublime overall sound during evaluation. A stand-out at the $11K level, these beautiful loudspeakers are also a Reviewer’s Choice winner.
Von Schweikert Audio Endeavor E-3 Mk. II (starting at $12,000 pr USD)
Even the “entry-level” speaker from Von Schweikert Audio is mighty impressive, and it took our reviewer some time to unlock its potential through careful set-up and system matching. “Is it the best in its category?” he asked. “Maybe if you are looking for a great all-around performer with amazing bass, a large soundstage, the ability to play as loud as you would ever want.” A Reviewers Choice award winner.
Børresen X3 ($12,000 pr USD)
It seems like a gift that Børresen has pushed the envelope of loudspeaker design over the last few years with the six-figure M series, and then circled back to apply those innovations to the entry level X series–which should keep the ultra-high-end skeptics at bay about skyrocketing costs. The X3 features the same Børresen tweeter membrane as a $550,000/pr M6, and designs and builds the rest of the X3 right in their Aalborg factory. “If AGD had placed a twenty-two, or even a twenty-five-thousand-dollar MSRP on the Børresen X3 loudspeakers, I wouldn’t bat an eye at those asking prices,” our reviewer stated, adding, “This speaker is THAT good.” A Reviewers Choice winner and perhaps 2024’s best tower loudspeakers in terms of sheer value.
TotalDAC d100 (starting at 13,800 pr EU)
These large speakers from France are a 2.5-way high-efficiency (98 dB) design with two 12″ woofers (the upper driver handles the midrange as well) and a “constant directivity horn” to handle to high frequencies. With its large dimensions and horns, you might be tricked into thinking these towers need a big room with a lot of space, so we were surprised by its superb top-to-bottom balance even in fairly small listening spaces. “These dark and mysterious French strangers knew what to say and how to say it–they are superb full-range speakers that are well worth the cost.”
YG Acoustics Talus ($14,500 pr USD)
Part of YG Acoustics “affordable” Peaks line, the two-way floorstanding Talus made a huge impression when powered by a Vinnie Rossi Brama integrated amplifier. Plenty of bass for a relatively compact design, and incredible levels of detail. We’re waiting in a very long line for a chance to review this marvel, which might just be the sweet spot in this company’s line.
Nola Champ S3 ($15,000 pr USD)
The latest design from hi-fi legends Carl and Marilyn Marchisotto, the 3.5-way, five-driver Champ S3 delivers a big spacious sound with plenty of power and dynamics and yet they can sound perfectly delicate and natural when needed. The open baffle design also creates an airy, expansive treble with superb balance and a fantastically big sweet spot. The roller-ball bases, now standard, provide more stable images and deeper, tighter low frequencies. A Reviewers Choice Award winner.
Sonus faber Maxima Amator ($16,000 pr USD)
“Both wildly beautiful and understated with its simple, clean lines,” this handmade Italian two-way tower is a feast for all of the senses. This was a project long considered by Sonus faber, a floorstanding two-way made from a solid wood enclosure only made possible through modern CNC technology–all affixed to a one-of-a-kind Italian marble base. “Heartbreakingly beautiful finishes and materials, the small footprint, the huge sound, and all the warmth and hope of my favorite music preserved in a way that makes [us] remember how this music sounded on the Amators, and nothing else,” we concluded. A Reviewer’s Choice winner, as well as the 2021 Product of the Year.
Volti Audio Rival (starting at $16,000 pr USD)
This three-way horn-loaded loudspeaker was designed by Volti Audio’s Greg Roberts to come close to the performance of the massive Vittoras at a much more approachable price, and with a more forgiving footprint. What’s special about the Rivals is how fun they are – they’re dynamic, they’re dynamic, and they’re really dynamic. Music can just leap out of nowhere, and the result startles and delights. They also can create a stunningly precise image, with all the audiophile trimmings, and have the unnerving tendency to completely disappear. Utterly addicting. Upgrades to the finish, and new outboard crossovers, are available for a modest upcharge.
Burmester B18 ($16,000 pr USD)
While the Burmester name implies “audio jewelry” with its stunning looks and incredible build quality, these fairly compact 2.5″ floorstanding speakers added just a touch of unexpected warmth to elevate the B18’s performance to an unexpected level of musicality. “If you’re really looking for a small-ish floorstanding speaker that will fill a big space with lots of energy, the Burmester B18 loudspeakers will surprise you.” A Reviewers Choice award winner and one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers.
DeVore Fidelity Gibbon X ($16,900 pr USD)
We’ve enjoyed many of DeVore Fidelity’s Brooklyn-based loudspeaker designs in the past, but we felt that the new Gibbon X, which we dubbed “Weapon X,” was a “show-stopper.” The X is so revealing that you’ll be tempted to feed your system only the best recordings so you can fill your “heart, mind, body and soul with the music of the spheres.” We couldn’t find a speaker that offered more for the money, so we kept them and gave them an Editor’s Choice Award.
Credo EV 1202 Reference ($16,995 pr USD)
The Credo EV 1202 Reference isn’t that big line-array speaker on the left, but the smaller speaker on the right that tricked us into thinking we were hearing the big line-array speaker on the left. After additional seat time at the factory in Switzerland, we determined that the EV 1202s were so “in the zone” that we begged to review them (which is happening). A quietly extraordinary transducer, one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers.
Qln Prestige Five ($18,500 pr USD)
Qln’s Prestige Five, along with the smaller Prestige Three, were so compelling that our reviewer wound up buying both pairs for himself. It’s no surprise that the PTA team is completely enamored with this Swedish speaker manufacturer; so much bass comes out of these still-petite enclosures that you’ll shake your head in disbelief. “Great imaging qualities and dynamic speed with an added something that gets us closer to the music,” we concluded, giving them a Reviewer’s Choice award.
Wilson Audio SabrinaX ($19,700 pr USD)
Wilson Audio is bringing some of our favorite innovations from the WAMM, XVX, Sasha DAW, Alexia Series-2 down to their new entry level Wilson Audio SabrinaX loudspeaker. The SabrinaX receives an exponential upgrade with a mass infusion of X-Material, a Synergy MK5 tweeter, a new woofer, new ports, new hardware, and custom capacitors. We noted that this is “a carefully crafted design that packs an enormous amount of the tech and sound reproduction embodied in its far more expensive siblings.”
Triangle 40th Anniversary Quatuor Magellan ($20,000 pr USD)
Another great product from the French hifi scene, Triangle’s flagship Quatuor 40th Anniversary floor standing speaker from the Magellan line challenges what you expect from a $20,000 speaker. With 3D holographic imaging that you can reach out and touch, a warm natural sounding treble that supports hours of fatigue free listening, and tight punchy bass this speaker offers incredible value at its price point. Triangle has made a stellar product that checks all of our own Graig Neville’s boxes that he bought the review pair for his new reference.
Von Schweikert Audio ESE ($27,000 pr USD)
Combining Leif Swanson’s affordable Endeavor Audio designs with drivers and technology culled from Von Scheikert Audio’s awesome Ultra speakers line—such as anodized aluminum woofer cones, a Kevlar midrange and a Beryllium tweeter—the ESE is entirely capable of providing full-range sound in almost any room. The ESE offers a big chunk of the dynamic sound of the Ultra 9 and Ultra 11 speakers for around one-tenth the price. An Editor’s Choice award winner.
Credo EV Reference ONE ($30,000 pr USD)
Sporting a utilitarian/professional look, which we still found attractive, the EV Reference One from Credo of Switzerland offered “lots of detail and texture, accompanied by a slammin’ low end and pinpoint imaging.” We found it confident and precise, and a superb transducer for string orchestras in particular. Reviewers Choice award winner.
Dynaudio Confidence 50 ($33,500 pr USD)
Fussy to set-up, especially when it comes to getting the deepest bass honest, these “Danish leviathans” can do the big and loud thing impressively. The floorstanding Dynaudio Confidence 50s do require a large room to really reach their potential, but at the end of the review period we wondered how we could possibly “go back to the presentation of a smaller pair of speakers.”
Audiovector R 6 Arrete ($37,000 pr USD)
These large Danish speakers from Audiovector achieved an almost perfect score on the listenability/accuracy matrix, providing a “sumptuous aural feast that was very easy to fall in love with.” We also found the R 6 Arrete to be an ideal speaker for hi-rez digital since it “LOVED getting a clean, dynamically punchy, recording fed to them.”
Acora Acoustics SRC-2 ($48,000 pr USD)
At least two members of the PTA staff felt these granite speakers from Acora Acoustics created some of the best sound they’ve heard anywhere, which led to only the third Summit Award we’ve handed out, and the first for a loudspeaker. Getting audiophiles to agree on the best pair of loudspeakers is fraught, but most of the PTA staff has heard these very special Canadian speakers from Valerio Cora and we agree that the emotional connections that are made with the SRC-2s are sublime.
Songer Audio S2 ($49,000 pr USD)
These truly beautiful field coil loudspeakers were shockingly great with 300B tube amplifiers like the Allnic Audio T-1500 Mk.2, delivering a lovely tonality that was seductive in all the right ways. With just ten watts per channel, the S2s were able to go extremely low and play convincing loud. “The S2s were indeed warm, as I like it, and yet they still preserved the detail in the recordings,” we concluded, with our reviewer contemplating getting off the audio merry-go-round with the Songer and Allnic combo. A Reviewers Choice award winner.
TIDAL Audio Piano G3 (starting at $64,000 pr USD)
The new Piano G3 may be the smallest speaker in this German company’s main product line, but it still offers a rarified level of performance that approaches a perfect blend of strengths. Detailed without being analytical, the Piano G3 will take you anywhere you want to go–high, low, micro-detail and macro-detail, and everything else that gives you goose bumps when you listen to your favorite music.
NOLA Grand Reference Metro Gold 3 ($65,000 pr USD)
After an extended visit to Dr. Vinyl, we were shocked at how close the Metro Gold 3 came to the $150,000/pr NOLA Baby Grand Reference Gold 3 and instantly became one of our picks for 2024’s best tower loudspeakers. The Metro possessed the same coherence–uncommonly good for a large, multi-driver open baffle transducer–and plays all musical genres with equal care and dedication.
TIDAL Audio Contriva G3 (starting at $79,000 pr USD)
The new Contriva G3s would have stolen the Best Sound at Munich 2023 if it weren’t for the $450K Tidal for Bugatti system elsewhere in the same room. (Don’t worry–they were selected as Best Sound in Munich for 2024.) You get more power and scale than the sublime Piano G3s, but the Contrivas still sound like TIDAL speakers up and down the product line. Very few loudspeakers can flirt with perfection and offer such an amazing and life-like presentation–absolutely one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers.
YG Acoustics Sonja 3.2 ($99,000 pr USD)
YG Acoustics is definitely a high-end audio brand reborn–the new ownership is committed to the original designs while employing state-of-the-art tech to push the performance even further. The new Sonja 3.2, after a weekend of listening, provided the same amount of detail, scale and impact as much larger and much more expensive loudspeakers. Review forthcoming.
Von Schweikert Audio Ultra 55 (from $110,000 pr USD)
The new “entry-level” model in VSA’s extraordinary Ultra line still features Accuton ceramic drivers, a beryllium ScanSpeak tweeter, a rear-firing Raal ribbon that captures ambient detail and an optional booster amp for the dual 9″ woofers. “There are plenty of bigger, flashier, seemingly alien tech-based, flavor of the year loudspeakers out there,” we concluded. “The Ultra 55 however, is the marrying kind.” A Reviewers Choice Award winner.
DALI KORE ($120,000 pr USD)
DALI of Denmark has made a serious entry into ultra-high end audio with this massive tower flagship, which is based upon everything the company has learned from its inception in the ’80s. Powerful and commanding, the KORE is a true full-range speaker that can easily compete at its six-figure price point–although it can be fussy with less-than-stellar amplification. The KORE has also signaled a return to Danish loudspeakers that are made in Denmark instead of the Far East, which makes it an ideal bellwether for the industry.
Wilson Audio Alexx V (starting at $145,000 pr USD)
The Wilson Audio Alexx V is unveiling details deep in the wax of our favorite recordings, surfacing things we haven’t heard in the past in Senior Contributor Mohammed Samji’s reference room. The floorstanding Alexx V brings forward many of the innovations seen in the larger Chronosonic XVX to a smaller footprint and adds a few new tricks including a 3D printed carbon fiber tweeter enclosure. Dynamics, tonality, and detail are all elevated vs the prior Alexx and the smaller Alexia Series-2. These towering speakers can play loud or whisper with a noise floor not experienced previously. A Reviewer’s Choice Award winner.
NOLA Baby Grand Reference Gold 3 ($150,000 pr USD)
Carl Marchisotto’s latest entry in his Grand Reference line now features newly developed drivers, Alnico ring magnets, gold-plated phase plugs and ribbon tweeters that can reach 100kHz. This is a big, full-range speaker–one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers–that reveals its impressive strengths slowly, as it excels in recreating the performances at the proper and realistic scale. What we found most intriguing about the Nola Baby Grand Reference Gold 3 “was its ability to melt into the music and not dominate the system–like most six-figure loudspeaker systems do.”
Credo Cinema LTM ($200,000 pr USD)
We’ve heard the LTM line-array speakers on numerous occasions, at both high-end audio shows and at the factory in Basel, Switzerland, and we’ve convinced it needs to be included in the discussion of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers. Designer Michael Kraske has devoted a great deal of attention to maximizing the advantages of line arrays, and the LTM is one of the most coherent “big” speakers you’ll hear.
Acora Acoustics VRC-1 ($218,000 pr USD)
What can we say about Val Cora’s masterpiece, one of 2024’s best tower loudspeakers, other than it’s the current “Chocolate Chip Trip” champion? This solid granite monolith rewrites the book on bass slam, while still creating some of the finest imaging and soundstaging we’ve experienced. An utterly mature and accomplished design that we hope to review one day. Special finishes such as Sunset Fire, above, are optional.
TIDAL Audio Akira ($255,000 pr USD)
“If I had the money” is a terrible way to start any review, but you get the picture. These floorstanding loudspeakers from fan-fav TIDAL of Germany are perhaps the most astonishingly transparent headphones you’ll ever get to hear. And yes, we do mean headphones: these speakers have the uncanny ability to wrap you in sound, and bring every detail, every micro-moment of musical nuance to light. The experience is, in a word, epic. These speakers are why we buy Megamillions tickets. In the meantime, just knowing these exist is like a window into possibility of futures beyond. Love them. Want them. Dream about them.
Børresen M3 ($280,000 pr USD)
Remember the Børresen M1, the $100,000/pr two-way monitor that shook up our beliefs about how small speakers should sound? Well, they decided to make a larger floorstanding version called the M3 which sounds so clear and so open and so detailed that you wonder how much better the sound can get. “These elegant and beautiful transducers boldly represent the realization of the striking potential possible when known boundaries are pushed,” our reviewer concluded, giving them a Reviewers Choice award.
Von Schweikert Audio Ultra 7 ($180,000 pr USD), Ultra 9 ($250,000 pr USD), and Ultra 11 ($365,000 pr USD)
None of the PTA staff has been able to bribe Von Schweikert Audio’s Damon Von Schweikert or Leif Swanson for a long-term review pair of the Ultra 11s, but we’re all thinking about asking our banks for a modest loan. We’ve spent so much time with these massive state-of-the-art floorstanding speakers at various high-end audio shows that we feel like know them and understand the very few limitations they have as transducers. Most audiophiles can argue all day about 2024’s best tower loudspeakers out there, but things get eerily quiet when someone brings up the Ultra 11 or its smaller sibling, the Ultra 9–and now the newest Ultra 7 (which we have reviewed). You have to hear these for yourself–words won’t do them justice.
TIDAL for Bugatti Royale ($450,000/pr USD including Royale MC-1 Controller and cabling)
Reviewers try to avoid using the word “best” while describing audio products–you’ll usually have to eat your words when something new comes down the pike. But the TIDAL Bugatti Royale system, which includes two Royale speaker, the Royale MC-1 controller and all the cabling, took us further down the road toward real, live music than anything else we’ve experienced. And yet the Royale speakers aren’t so big that they’ll dominate any room they’re placed–TIDAL’s Jörn Janczak discovered how to make a speaker that’s better without getting bigger. Listening to the TIDAL for Bugatti system at least once should be on every audiophile’s bucket list. 2023’s Product of the Year.
Borresen M6 ($550,000 pr USD)
When we first listened to the amazing Børresen M1 and M3 loudspeakers, we wondered how it could get any better. These big M6s, which expand the performance of the M3 in all directions, is the answer. Listening to the M6 is a breathtaking journey that every audiophile should complete, especially those who feel these kind of high-end products shouldn’t exist. Our thoughts: “Will there be an M9? An M18? An M56?” We’re waiting patiently.
Magico M9 ($750,000 pr USD)
A massive, exotic, and expensive loudspeaker, one that weighs half a ton per channel, the M9 benefits from cutting edge technology that expands the potential of future speaker design with the help of such tools as the Klippel Near Field Scanner System and comprehensive laser vibrometry. “These remarkable and arresting loudspeakers have established a new pinnacle, both for their unsurpassed accomplishments and for the efforts and imagination of Maestro Alon Wolf. Bravo.”
Read the rest of the Summer 2024 Buyers Guide from Part-Time Audiophile!
Best Phono Cartridges, Tonearms and Headshells
Listening to my Zu DW6 Supremes right now, and LOVE THEM!