KEF Reference Series Model 101 Bookshelf Speakers
KEF Reference Series Model 101 Bookshelf Speakers
USER REVIEWS
[Jan 09, 2022]
spoorarthur
Strength:
Articulate, fast, warm, lucid. Fantastic speakers. Really high-end, meaning that what you put in gets translated as it is. I use a NAD Silverline S200/S100 with them. Does 250 watts sound like overkill? It works like a charm. These speakers are designed for high quality, high power amps. This setup works amazing to my ears. Mids and treble are superb. The bass is lacking, but what it does, it does with confidence. It’s an honest design. It’s not pretending to be bigger. I inherently these, what makes me very lucky. I just love these speakers. Five stars, without any hesitation. Weakness:
Bass doesn’t run deep. Needs expensive stuff to sound best Price Paid: 10
Model Year: 1980
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[Feb 08, 2020]
grof
Strength:
Perfect linearity of sound, very good balanced, extrem durability, very good spatialisation, no distortion, protection circuit always fully functional. Weakness:
The bass is very warm but lacks presence. Price Paid: 400£
Purchased: New
Model Year: 1979
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[Aug 29, 2017]
Jim
AudioPhile
I've been in this hobby for about forty years and long ago recognized that there are certain
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[May 02, 2012]
Arjan_S
Audio Enthusiast
I have some great sets of Kef speakers; the Kef 103/4 and Kef RDM two. So I really didn't need the Kef Reference 101. I became interested in them because of the LS 3/5 series, which used the same tweeter and woofer that the 101 uses. I have never heard the LS 3/5 from Rogers, Harbeth and other brands, but these BBC speakers do have such a great history that at least I had to listen to the versions Kef had made.
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[Nov 05, 2009]
Classical_Nut
AudioPhile
First let me say that I listen to 90% classical music, and most of the rest is also acoustic music (jazz, etc.). I first heard the KEF 101's almost 30 years ago. It was an unforgettable, life-changing experience for me. I walked into the "high end" room of a stereo shop where a demo was in progress. There were probably a dozen pairs of speakers, most quite large and expensive looking, in a row about 8 feet in front of the listening couch where a middle-aged couple sat listening intently to an opera recording. The salesman was standing behind the couch listening as well. I walked over and stood next to him. The sound was unlike any I had ever heard before: detailed, holographic, musical... just stunning. I leaned over and whispered to the salesman "Which speakers are we listening to?" He pointed and answered "The small ones." I thought he was trying to insult my intelligence, as he probably thought a young person like myself couldn't afford any of the speakers in that room anyway. But I was fascinated by what I was hearing and persisted, "No, really, which ones?" He repeated "The small ones." I shook my head in disappointment at his attitude towards me. Then I walked over to the line of speakers, turned my ear toward them and walked down the line to determine which ones were playing. Yes, they were "the small ones" - KEF 101's. This was the moment of my "birth" as an audiophile.
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[Apr 22, 2009]
Meeuwnie
AudioPhile
These beauties followed up my KEF 103.2's. They are very responsive and absolutely non-obtrusive. These are the most smooth and neutral loudspeakers i've heard so far and yes, they can fill up quite a large room. The 101's were designed to compete with the LS3/5a and KEF never came closer to these legendary close-range BBC-monitors. I found that my 103.2's lacked the mid-frequencies and with the 101's all music comes to life. Soundstage is superb and you forget that you're listening to two seperate speakers. |