Klipsch Heresy Floorstanding Speakers
Klipsch Heresy Floorstanding Speakers
USER REVIEWS
[Jul 19, 2018]
tomvett
Strength:
I have a pair of walnut Heresy ! speakers. These use oil base capacitors vs electrolytics and autoformers vs coils in the crossover. There is an excellent simple modification on the internet which flattens the response of this speaker as it was initially "voiced" as a center channel speaker. I highly recommend making this simple change. Horn loaded speakers generally have much lower Doppler distortion than traditional speakers and more efficiency. That said, they tend to have frequency and directional aberrations which can impact their accuracy. In generally the Heresy speakers sound best for far field vs near field listening. If you sit near your speakers I would look else where. If your room is fairly large, I think you will really appreciate the Heresy. Weakness:
These sit near the floor and require careful placement. Purchased: Used
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[Jul 02, 2018]
popo
Strength:
Amazing how some folks will come on here to criticize a brand/model they obviously have no experience with. The current iterations of the Heritage speakers will go toe-to-toe with many speaker models priced between 4 and $15K. I'm not talking about garbage from Polk and Cerwin Vega, but honestly good speakers like Harbeths, Maggies, Totems, Dynaudios, KEFs etc. Weakness:
Concerning the Heresy, it's only real weakness is bass extension. It doesn't produce much bass under 50Hz. I estimate it's about -6db at 50Hz. Other than that, they can wipe the floor with far more expensive speakers in imaging, soundstage, resolution, timing...you name it. Price Paid: 1700
Purchased: New
Model Year: 2016
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[Jan 08, 2015]
bob
Audio Enthusiast
while Klipsch speakers can be very dynamic, and can get really loud as these are such efficient speakers these will sound very nice with the right amp. Klipsch speakers can be great for Jazz, acoustic music, folk, new age, and even classical music if you have the right amp. Yamaha integrated amps are real smooth. Tube amps go great with Klipsch speakers. Any of the Klipsch line. I sell Jolida audio gear and vintage Klipsch speakers. The amps and speakers always sound great together. Klipsch speakers can seem kind of bright at first, but one gets used to that. After all, the upper ranges are part of the music as well, and usually come across the loudest in live performances. And the horns reproduce horns very well. Klipsch speakers make a trumpet, or sax sound super. And, one a final note, Advent speakers are great speakers. Those were an excellent value when new. I have a pair of 6003 3 way full range speakers with real walnut veneer cabinet. Those Advents are about the best sounding speaker over all that I have ever heard. Again, put the right amp with these speakers and you will enjoy listening to music all the time. For years I used a Jolida Jd202BRC 40wpc tube amp with my Advents. Sounded live in the living room. I have heard a lot of live music in the living room as some of my family play- piano, guitar, organ. That is what I use as a guide- live piano in the living room, guitar, organ, singing. All without the benefit of electronics. If music reminds me of that then the system is good. I have a pair of RF 52II that sound real nice and smooth and detailed with a Jolida hybrid amp. If you connect a Big Box AV receiver to a pair of Klipsch speakers most likely it will sound harsh. The problem will not be the speakers. Some people just want loud. Go for it. Some people are bass crazy as if that is all they crave- bass, bass, bass. When listening to a jazz combo live there is a clarinet player, a drummer, a string bass player. While the bass sounds nice it is in the background. It lays a foundation, a backdrop. That is music. If you want to listen to a flute along with an acoustic guitar and an acoustic bass get a nice amp, and Klipsch speakers and enjoy. but everyone's hearing is different as everyone's voice is different too.
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[Feb 23, 2014]
Miguel
Audio Enthusiast
I owned a pair of Bose 601s in the early 80s and they sounded rather flat. We had a DJ host our family Christmas party one year and he had two Heresys. It was amazing how crisp and clear they were. So I shopped around and bought two Heresy HIPs for $800 in 1986. Been loving them ever since. Paired them with a Yamaha receiver and KSW-15 sub and an RC-7 center speaker and I couldn't be more pleased. Some day I need to get some vintage LaSalles to finish off my set up.
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[Dec 28, 2013]
Boat Guy
Audio Enthusiast
The Heresy is a center channel, no more and no less. Personally I use a Klipsch Quartet center channel, better tonal balance. My Left and right fronts are a pair of Klipsch Chorus II's, Klipsch Cornwall II's Forte II's.
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[Feb 24, 2013]
Klipschman
AudioPhile
To nodahomer.Please sell me your Cornwalls for next to nothing as that is what you seem to think they are worth.I bought my Heresy speakers pre 76 and wish I had bought the Belles.My cars and trucks have all come and gone but my Heresys are still worth almost as much as what I paid or them and are NOT for sale.If you have some sort of hidden agenda ,so be it .I hope you enjoy shopping at the big boxes on Black Fridays. |
[Jul 25, 2011]
dyjams
Audio Enthusiast
Want to have a some fun and create a sound system that meets audiophile standards, while on a comparably reasonable budget, that simply floors the unexpected listener with a huge yet detailed wall of sound? I did. Here we go: Buy six (yes, 6!) H1's (1970's-mid-80's) via CL or eBay for $300-$400/pr. Stack 'em 3 per side, paint to match, bond 'em with a some tape and corner 'em. Replace all the woofers with Eminence Delta 12-LFA's @ 100 db/w. Great musician setup since you are already deaf, lol. Hope ya like it since this is my crib notes from years experimenting and I'm already deaf anyway... Cheers!, Doug |
[Jul 07, 2011]
GIG on the strip
AudioPhile
I first heard the Heresy's at a nightclub from across a narrow river in 1978. The Village People were pumping and reverberating off the nearby buildings. It sounded wonderful. When I turned 18 I was able to go into that nightclub and saw four birch Klipsch Heresy's suspended around a small dance floor. About 20x20' with a Klipsch each corner. I thought it sounded good outside, it was astounding inside. There was no way you could stand still. These are such lively and crisp speakers with that punch in just the right frequency.
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[Feb 11, 2011]
NodaHomer
Audio Enthusiast
Klipsch speakers and accuracy? Like Iced Tea in your Chili they don't blend. The Heresey is not some killer speaker. The cubic box crammed with variations of woofers and horns is not exactly what the "homers" say. These claims of accuracy in hearing all these fine details and subtle changes are just plain fantasy. If you come from Cerwin Vega or other cheesey mass consumer type brands I'm certain they are an upgrade. I've owned different pairs of the Heresy's, Forte's, and Cornwalls, KG's, and others. None are "audiophile class" or capable. Let's go beyond comment and opinion though? There are web pages filled with comments regarding Klipsch speakers. When it comes to Heritage types or vintage versions from the mid 85's back the one constant that is evident is this: On their own they are not as good as you can tweak them to be. People and business both combine to making an industry on tweaking and updating them. That's where the popularity resides mostly.
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[Nov 30, 2009]
rickcoder
AudioPhile
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