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Boston Acoustics VR 35 THX Home Theater Speakers
6 Reviews
rating  4.83 of 5
MSRP  650.00
Description: 6 Piece Home Theater Speaker System


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Steven K Ford
(an Audiophile)

Review Date
July 26, 1999

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

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Summary:
I just purchased the VR35 and the VR14 as my center channel. Hardly any speaker i listened to could reproduce an acoustical guitar so real, i wish the bass had a little more punch howver i blame this to not having a subwoofer yet and im using a Pro Logic reciever. Dolby digital recievers sounded superb when using these speakers. The VR14 had the brightest clearest highs. I allways had the problem of never making out the dialogue in a movie with my older bose. I even used phantom mode without the center and the VR35 detailed dialogue very good. Im using the VRS Micro for surrounds, however if you have a big frontroom like i do, i would recommend the extra money toward the VRS or VRS Pro. Im very pleased with the THX system, allso placement is crucial for this speakers as they have a
very narrow dispersion rate.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Wisrute
(an Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
May 23, 1999

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

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Summary:
I've heard the complete Boston THX system quite sometimes ago and now I couldn't resist the temptation to take them home. My current non-matching speakers are on the verge of blowing
since I've been watching movies a lot. A local store played the Lost World LD (DTS) through
Yamaha A-1 and these Bostons, and I was amazed how much detail these speakers can handle, along
with great soundstage. The scene where the motor-home was about to fall off the cliff was
produced with great detail and accuracy. Everything that moves, the Bostons will let you hear it.

So I decided to take a set of these home since I own the Yamaha A-2, these speakers should perform
nearly as well as I've heard at the store. I already own a Yamaha sub (YSTW-300) so I didn't go
with the VR2000. I didn't intend to build a full THX system from the very beginning, hence many
non-THX pieces mixing with some THX pieces. All I want is a good set of 'movies' speakers that
will not blow on me after 2-3 years. Since these are movies speakers, I will rate them only and
strictly for what they are.

The fronts (VR35) produces good details on movies like Armageddon, Ronin where things get
blasted a lot. I hear details previously not heard on KEF Q series (previous generation). Lower
frequencies are accurate and controlled. Effects of rain or crowded place are very realistic, also
thanks to the VRS-Pro at the rear.

Just about the same can be said to the VR14 center channel. Dialogue is even more convincing than
before. Voices have more weight, and volume to it. This speaker is big and heavy, but it's a
perfect match to the VR 35. The three front speakers produce very good and accurate frontal slam
on movies like Godzilla and Dragon Heart.

I used to overlook the rear surrounds, but now with the VRS-Pro, that is no longer the case. Its
design makes the speakers disappear, all I hear is accurate and well-positioned sounds. A scene in
Dragon Heart where the Dragon is flying around, talking to the main character in an open field was
produced with great precision. The dialogue is uniform all around in every channel, and the height
of the voice is very convincing.

The subwoofer VR2000 is very very accurate and has more than enough power to handle a large
space. It's in a class slightly above my Yamaha (as far as movies) but it's probably much better for
music also.

I'd give these Bostons a 5-star, including their sub (VR200) which I've heard at the store.

Related equipment:

Yamaha DSP-A2
Yamaha YSTW-300 subwoofer
Sharp DV-880 DVD player (multizone)


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Michael Mock
(an Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
April 27, 1999

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

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Summary:
I have the whole Boston Acoustics THX package, a pair of VR35, a VR14 centre, a VR2000 subwoofer and a pair of VRS Pro dipole surrounds. If you are looking for a complete set of THX speakers then these are the ones to get. Great cinema sound and matches my Onkyo receiver perfectly. If you want a fuller sound for music then I recommend getting the VR40s instead of the VR35s but then they don't quite match the VR14 quite so well.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Matthew Malone
(an Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
January 15, 1999

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

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Summary:
Boston Acoustics is happy to hear all of the positve reviews of our products found on this site. A point of clarification. The VR35 and VR14 are current THX models. They replaced the 555THX system.
Matthew Malone, Boston Acoustics.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Brad Sanderson
(an Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
November 1, 1998

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

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1.00 of 5, 1 votes

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Summary:
Although Boston Acoustics no longer makes these models, I bought a pair of VR35 fronts and a VR14 center channel as demo models two months ago for $1,230.00. After comparing the VR14 to the Boston VR12 model and a few other great center channels from Klipsch, Energy, and Definitive Technology, it was the VR14's full, clear and remarkably real sound that made my choice easy. I only regret not having found this great center channel speaker sooner. Although it's very high frequencies are a bit exaggerated, the overall sound quality and 'presence' are outstanding.
The fronts are billed as sonically identical to the center and they've done the center channel justice with every DVD I've played. The sound stage is defined and gives me the feeling I'm 'right there' in the action. They have just the right amount of tight and realistic punch to the bass. As a home theater speakers I love them and as 2 channel stereo speakers the CD's sound great too. Having also tried mixing and matching other comparably priced speakers to make a home theater system before buying this one, I'd definitely recommend making sure at least the front three speakers are timbre matched.

Other components: receiver / Yamaha RX-V992, rear speakers / PSB 300i, DVD player / Panasonic A310, sub / Energy ES-8.


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