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Review 1 of 10
Price Paid:
$299.00
from Audioadvisor Summary: I've used Sound Dynamics RTS-3 speakers as small bookshelf units at various places in my home and studio. Nice, solid speakers with no low end. I saw the RTS-7 on sale at blowout prices at audioadvisor and decided to give them a shot as both music and home theater speakers.
I've only been using them for a few days, but so far I'm quite impressed. They have MUCH more and better bass than than their little brothers. Imaging is excellent, placing instruments accurately in the stereo field is easy, and the sweet spot on them is wide. I expect this will make them great HT speakers as well, giving more listeners a fair shot at hearing what is happening.
Other people knock the midrange on these speakers, saying it's recessed or choked. I don't hear that at all, the mids seem very accurate and pleansant to me. I haven't (and probably won't) mix on them, but the mixes I've done on the RTS-3s have translated very well to other systems and didn't have any excessive honk.
At this price, they are probably a good deal if they make any noise at all, but the noises they make are really quite nice. They have been happy with pretty any kind of music I've thrown at them, from very acoustic classic jazz to very modern processed electronica. Strengths: Better than expected bass, excellent imaging, wide sweet spot. GREAT price. Weaknesses: After the Maggies, transients aren't as well produced. Bass isn't earth moving. Not particularly sexy looking Similar Products Used: RTS-3, NHT Pro A-10s, NHT 1.5s, Magnepan 1.6s. All listening done with a Denon receiver as preamp, Parasound 6 channel HT amp for power.
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