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Avalon Acoustics Arcus
Avalon Acoustics Arcus
MSRP: $ 6995.00

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Rating
Reviewed by:

Maprik

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
January 18, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
4.20 of 5, 5.00 votes

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Review 1 of 6

Price Paid:  $4000.00 from Used

Summary:
The best speaker I have owned in every aspect: musicality, soundstaging, imagery, detail, tonality, smoothness, low level detail, rockability, etc. Retail price was very steep but on the used market it's worth a try. Quilted cherry has very high WAF. Associated Equipment: PS Audio PCA-2 preamp PS Audio HCA-2 amp Cary Rocket 88 tube amp Cardas Neutral Reference ICs and SCs. Dan Wright modded SONY SCD-333ES SACD Rega Planer 25 w/Benz Micro Glider M2

Strengths:
With high definition recordings the players are in your room. Piano is especially realistic which is very difficult to achieve.

Weaknesses:
Very revealing of poor quality recordings.

Similar Products Used:
Audio Physic Virgo 2 Audio Physic Spark III Thiel CS1.5 Spendor SP1/2e Silverline Sonatina MkI Sonus Faber Grand Piano Vandersteen 2ce Magnepan 1.6 Coincident Triumph Signatures Coincident Conquest Reference 3A MM DeCapo Totem Forest Totem Arro


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Rating
Reviewed by:
David Camacho
(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
January 30, 2002

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
3 months to 1 year

Visitors rate this review
2.33 of 5, 6.00 votes

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Review 2 of 6

Summary:
Sorry Doug, you get what you pay for with the Avalon Arcus.
Total coherence, correct tonality, transparency, a spectacular soundstage and unparalled craftsmanship. They are extremely musical, but also reward you for the use of better electronics. These are definately "decade speakers".
Maybe you have a problem with the value, but quality costs and in this case the sound delivers!

Associated Electronics:
Arcam FMJ CD23 player
BAT VK30 preamp
BAT VK200 amp
Tara Labs Air2 interconnects
Tara Labs Air2 speaker cables
Acoustic Zen & Harmonic Tech. power cords.

Strengths:
Coherence,Tonality,Soundstaging, Just plain Musicality!

Weaknesses:
Lack the lowest octaves, but thats no weakness as far as this speaker is concerned.

Similar Products Used:
Thiel CS2 2's along with many others auditioned.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
David
(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
August 13, 2001

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
2.33 of 5, 3.00 votes

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Review 3 of 6

Price Paid:  $6500.00 from Quintessence Audio

Summary:
Even though I have only owned these speakers for two weeks and they are not fully broken in, I can no longer resist singing their praises. The Arcus has changed the way that I think about home audio. I used to think that there were two kinds of sounds – home audio and real world. An audio enthusiast upgraded components to achieve the best possible home audio sound, but this could never approach real world sound. I do not think that way anymore. No longer do I ask how much better my system sounds. Instead, I ask how close to the real thing it sounds.

Let me provide some perspective. My wife and I are long time subscribers to the Chicago Symphony and Lyric Opera. We know what a real orchestra sounds like and how a real vocalist should sound. No matter how often we upgraded our home audio system, it never sounded like the real thing. This was not the fault of my old Hales speakers – they were terrific for their price. But the Arcus are in another league. When we play a Mozart concerto (or REM or Miles Davis, for that matter), we can close our eyes and we are transported to the live event. Singers are in the room with us (and choirs are filling the room from wall to wall!) The timbral accuracy of the instruments is astounding. Horns blare like horns, oboes have reeds, a violin section is a section, not a single loud metallic instrument, pianos really are percussion instruments, and timpani notes are distinct, rather than some guttural thunder. (These modest size speakers deliver bass down to 30 hz, with some bass energy down to 24 hz, thanks to support from the room).

The speakers are also very easy to live with. I have them just three feet from the front wall, with minimal room treatments (all household items). They are relatively small for speakers of this quality, so they fit right into our family room, rather than overwhelm the room. The speakers also sound good virtually anywhere in the room. (and their cherry cabinet looks beautiful too.) No matter where we sit, the soundstage is three dimensional and fills the room (just as the other reviewers promised!)

But the best thing I can say about the Arcus is that my wife the musician is finally listening to music at home. She loves the way they sound. Enough said.

Associated equipment:

Arcam FMJ23 CD player
Nakamichi CA1 preamp
Muse 160 power amp
Audioquest interconnects

Strengths:
Almost like being at the live event

Weaknesses:
None to date

Similar Products Used:
Hales Concept Two


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Gene
(Audiophile)

Review Date
December 28, 2000

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 3.00 votes

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Review 4 of 6

Summary:
After nine years of those dipoles you love to hate, the time had come for speakers less ruthless, less dry and less beamy. The replacements also had to be less demanding of placement and ultimately, provide hours of excellent listening without fatigue. They had to, above all, be musical.

After auditioning a number of speakers, we found the Arcus provided--overall--the sound we had unconsciously been looking for. While the speed and extreme transparency that makes ribbons more analytical--and drier--and in some way, attractive, was missing, the Arcus more than makes up for what is almost excruciating detail with its fullness--an honesty of musical presentation--particularly with acoustic intruments and voices, and its overall tonal truth.

The cabinet design was a new direction for Avalon. Instead of a sealed box, the bottom of the cabinet is designed with a U-shaped opening to the back of the speaker. This port acts to augment the bass from the 8 1/2" woofer/mid range speaker and must not be closed off. To this end, Avalon provides three proprietary spikes on which the speaker sits, either on a bare floor--not recommended--or carpet.
Speaker setup is easy, made so by the excellent owner's manual replete with a multi-page dissertation on room acoustics and sound wave theory. Avalon leaves nothing to chance.

Upon first listen, you are struck with the vast soundstage that stretches way beyond the sidewalls on many recordings. It's also deep, reaching easily to the back wall of the listening room and into the corners to define the size of the recording venue. The excellent dispersion of the Arcus also allows a generous sweet spot for more than one listener, a luxury not afforded by a good number of speakers. Focus and imaging are excellent. Even when listening well off to the side, the Arcus continues to provide a well-developed three-dimensional soundfield.

Some listening notes: Wind instruments are reproduced with clarity and finesse, brass rings and cuts with crispness and authority, as it does in a live performance. Drums and percussion sound natural as do strings, with cymbals, bells and other instruments in the higher registers presenting themselves clearly, cleanly and without negative artifacts. Piano can be glorious, depending on the recording. The Arcus is a dynamic speaker, warm without coloration, transparent without a trace of edginess. The speakers absolutely disappear and you hear nothing but music. They enjoy rock as well as classical or jazz, and like to played with gusto. The common thread here is the musicality of the speaker. They draw you in.

Designer Neil Patel has favored the Arcus with an excellent crossover allowing a seamless transition from upper bass to mids to highs, which are displayed without glare or hardness. While bass frequencies below 30hz are not an Arcus strong suit, the overall presentation doesn't leave you demanding a sub to make things work. On the other hand, if you're an aficianado of subterranean organ notes, I suggest you find another speaker.

The Arcus mates very well with SS or tubes and is not demanding of either components or cable, but the higher the signal quality, the more you may expect of the speaker.
I would not, however, attempt to mate the Arcus with a 5wpc SET. It likes to played hard and it will deliver. This is not to say it's not a fine companion for late night listening; at lower volumes the Arcus continues to maintain its transparency and ability to project inner detail.

An excellent speaker in every way, from the quality of the speakers and crossover, to the hand-worked cabinetry of selected book-matched woods and exceptional finish. I find there is little out there that would entice me to change.

Strengths:
Transparency, tonality, soundstage, extreme musicality

Weaknesses:
Lacks extreme LF capability--excellent bass to lower 30s

Similar Products Used:
Formerly owned Apogee Centaurs


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Phil Barton
(Audiophile)

Review Date
November 23, 2000

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 1.00 votes

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Review 5 of 6

Summary:
Easily outperfoms those in its class of $5000 - $10000 (retails for $7000). Imaging and transparency at this price range is uncanny. Very tonally balanced and doens't apper too picky about room set up. Although doesn't have the ceramic drivers that its bigger siblings do (Opus and Eidolons), much of the sound is still there secondary to the crossover. Smooth top end and tight bottom end with very quick drivers. Another bargain, even at $7000.

Strengths:
soundstaging, tonal balance, transperancy, imaging, musicality and smoothness of top end

Weaknesses:
none noted for price range, bass doesn't extend to the 20 - 30 cycle range, but easily and accurately gets to 35 - 40 Hz

Similar Products Used:
Hales Transcendence 3's and 5's; Thiel CS 6's; Revel Studios


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