Sumiko Primare L30 Floorstanding Speakers
Sumiko Primare L30 Floorstanding Speakers
USER REVIEWS
[Oct 30, 2002]
Jan
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Depth of soundstage, bass (in my room anyway), midrange clarity.
Weakness:
I can't think of any at this time. I think my system is finally done, for now. I've had been for a while, slightly disappointed with my former DM604 S2's but had not been willing to really admit it, or take any steps towards buying anything better. But when a chance to get a pair of these for $1100 presented itself, it seemed like the opportunity I needed and not the kind of thing to pass up. I went back the next day and bought them. Now, don't get me wrong, the 604s are still a great speaker for the price, but working at a dealer that sells the Vienna and Sonus Faber lines had me constantly aware that no matter what I used to run the 604s, that they would never cross the boundaries into the high-end realm. When I got the Primare L-25s home the differences weren't as immediate as I had hoped for them to be. I guess it was me being too eager to HEAR a difference instantly... I was trying too hard. Then as I spun a few more tracks, subtle nuances began to obviate themselves in a way the 604s never had. I noticed for the first time, a prolonged decay on crash cymbals, strings sounded more true to life, and piano recordings rang through with an eerie realism. THIS is what I had been longing for all along. The bass response is also quite formidable for a relatively small speaker. They have a strong presence down to around 40Hz in my room. Tympani and concert bass ring through with power and clarity. My "vintage" Velodyne ULD-15 takes care of the rest. All in all I'm very happy with them. And I will no longer say my equipment is outclassing mt speakers (the older 604s) Similar Products Used: B&W 604 |
[Jul 06, 2000]
Sivalingam Rameish
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Holographic 3-D sound stage
Weakness:
Maybe the wood veneer - not up to the finish of say the Jamo Concert 8 or Sonus Faber When we listen to music, we want to be swept away and not analyse the timbre, depth etc. This is the first speaker, that I have heard in it's price range and a little beyond of say up to US$3,000, that allows me to forget that I'm listening to Hi-Fi. And that's since my first hi-fi seperates system since 1977! It's a wolf in sheep's clothing! Music is giver proper height as well as width. It's a soundstaging champ that lets you place the musicians in depth, width and I swear to you, height! The only speakers I've heard better it is the Dunlevy range! And, that's saying something. It was a close match to it's own sibling the L20 (see review). But in the end, the L30 is my ticket to music. The only caveat, if any, is that it is a stable 4 ohm speaker. So those low-powered SET amps probably can drive it. My 30 watter Luxman SQ38 Signature amp (EL34 pentodes in push-pull config) drives it well enough -- this amp thrives on quality not quantity. Enough Said! Similar Products Used: Jamo Concert 8, Sonus Faber Grand Piano |
[Jan 24, 2002]
Stefan Karlsson
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Clear sound, tight and fast bass, easy to listen to, focus on the music
Weakness:
Isn't the most detailed speakers I have heard IMPORTANT NOTE: This review is of the Primare L25 NOT the Primare L30.... Similar Products Used: Amongst other: Dali 8008, B&W DM603 S3, Audiovector M1 & M3, JMLab Chorus 725, Sonus Faber Concerto, Tannoy R2 & R3 |