Wilson Audio CUB Floorstanding Speakers
Wilson Audio CUB Floorstanding Speakers
USER REVIEWS
[Feb 20, 2006]
mixn4him
AudioPhile
Strength:
Solid image and dead on tonallity
Weakness:
Huge Monitor , really need the Sound Anchor stands. These really are wonderful speakers. They do take quite sometime to set up but once you find that sweet spot it is magic! Listened to lots of other brands and keep coming back to Wilson and this was a model I could afford and enjoy! Some have complained that they are bright but i tell you they are not they will just show weaknesses of upstream components. Again Placement has alot to do with overall tonallity. Similar Products Used: Proac, Aerial, Red Rose, Kef |
[Oct 27, 2005]
RBez
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
* Unsurpassed clarity * Pinpoint imaging * Wide 'sweet-spot' for listening * Exemplary build-quality * High sensitivity - 94dB/1m * Allow electronics to shine through * Cheap for a Wilson speaker.
Weakness:
* 4 Ohm load, or less, presents difficulties in bass reproduction for a low powered amp, so consider a sub-bass. * 19" weighted & isolated stands mandatory. * Expensive for any speaker but a Wilson. * Unforgiving of poor quality ancillaries, or poor room acoustics. I've owned CUBs for over six years, having purchased them after auditioning many competitors. They are exacting in terms of room acoustic, placement, and electronics, but when set they offer sound that rivals the very best on offer. With outstanding build quality, they would be a great second-hand proposition, mine having been entirely trouble free. * Wilson emphasize the importance of room acoustics in their instruction brochure. Certainly, it is critical with the CUBs. My experience saw the CUBs sing in certain rooms, and cry in others. * In terms of sheer size, with their obligatory 19" stands, and 22" depth, they are larger than many floorstanders. In gloss black and with grills on they are reasonably innocuous aesthetically. They also demand being pulled from the wall, some 24" at least. * As for electronics, I've found tubes best for timbre and character, with 100wpc required for exemplary bass response down to 50Hz. That said, currently they are teamed with a Jadis Orchestra Integrated (KT90 tubes, 53wpc), and a REL StormIII sub-bass, and the results are absolutely wonderful. The CUBs do let the characteristics of the electronics come through, so a poor quality source is likely to be inadequate, and the tonal qualities of better products will be evident. With the above, and an Audio Reseach CD1, they are alive, natural, involving, and utterly non-fatiguing. Poor room acoustics, poor placement, or unsympathetic electronics would see all the well-publicized criticisms borne out, but then this would be true of any Wilson, even an X-2. * I liked the sound of Watt/Puppies, but could not afford them - this fact might be the best guide for a potential purchaser, because The CUBs definitely provide a good dose of the Wilson house sound, at a fraction of the cost. I'm tempted to list the many speakers I auditioned both at home and in the showroom, but in the end these won the day. They are a fairly sizeable chip off the block of the larger Wilson models. Similar Products Used: Sonus Faber Guaneri Homage; B&W Nautilus 805s & 802s; Avalon Monitors; Thiel 1.5 & 3.6; various Genesis models; Martin Logan SL3, CLSz; Wilson Watt/Puppies - V3/2 & 5. * CUBs heard with Audio Research D125/SP9MkIII for years; Jadis Orchestra Integrated currently; auditioned with ARC VT 200/Ref 1; Jadis Defy7MkIV; Gryphon S100; ARC VS110; ARC VS55; |
[Mar 06, 2000]
Todd
Audiophile
Strength:
Bass, especially for size.
Weakness:
Everything else. Junk. This is one of the WORST loudspeaekers I have heard. I demoed it at a local dealer in a $50000+ system, with a Krell / Classe / Audio Research front end and room treatments, and no matter what music was on, I could not turn the volume down fast enough. Finally, it sounded best when it was off. These speakers are BRIGHT, BRIGHT, BRIGHT. So much so, in fact, that everything else was lost on me. Whatever detail there was was drowned out by bad sound. I couldn't even listen to Beethoven's 3rd Symphony for God's sake. I cannot adequately describe how bad the experience was. And all this for what, $7000. Please. Similar Products Used: Monitor Audio 700PMC |
[Aug 03, 2000]
Rick
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Image well. Able to play at high SPLs with out driver compression. Very detailed.
Weakness:
Need sub(they are a monitor you know). These are very well built monitor speakers that are very flat and unforgiving down to about 50 Hz. They need to be set up in a room with absorbing matterial behind and to the sides of the speakers and at the primary reflection points at the side walls as well as in the rear behind your listening position. Rugs and heavy furniture will also help. They sound much better in medium to larger rooms. This speaker is regarded as small and therefore I think people tend to think that it will work well in a small room with low amplification. It may fit better into a small room, but, it is critical that your room is big enough to allow you to sit outside the near field (12 feet away is fine.) If you do not set these speakers up this way, they will drive you nuts. They will beam at you and will sound bright. Similar Products Used: Revel salon and studio, Dynadio M2 studio monitors, B&Ws, Waveform Mach17, Wilson 6.1 WattPuppy, etc... |
[May 29, 2000]
Charles
Audiophile
Strength:
Very accurate speaker with brigh imaging.
Weakness:
Poor low end response Purchased Cubs after hearing them several times in stores over an extended time period. Both stores I heard these speakers in had small rooms with rather dead sound. Speakers were impressive. In my set up, with Krell monos, Wadia CD, and Transparent Interconnects and Speaker cables, they were ok, but far from great. Could have had something to do with the set-up (which was admittedly less then perfect) and most likely had much to do with the big, very hard, open room I had them in. Could not get any low end to speak of without having volume up very high. They were accurate but really would only do well with jazz and some classical music applications. Perhaps I should have tried some of the suggestions others made, tube amplification to start, but it was only a bandaid on a serious deficency of these speakers. These speakers would do well as rear channels in a a/v set up. Not my cup of tea for your primary listening if you are into a broad range of music. Traded them in for new speakers less then two months after buying them. Oh well. |
[Sep 14, 1999]
R Finley
an Audio Enthusiast
I have had a pair of Cubs with the target stands for a couple of weeks now. |
[Jan 06, 1999]
Paul
an Audiophile
I am a audio engineer/producer, and own speakers from Tannoy, Yamaha, Audix, |
[Jan 18, 1999]
Ivin Seabrook
an Audio Enthusiast
Wow!!!!What a lot of sound from a mini-monitor!Dynamics are first rate - a forward sound made my recordings kick!! Large, open soundstage. I didn't know a small speaker could do this! |
[Jun 04, 1999]
Jason Fiske
an Audio Enthusiast
I thought I would submit a follow up review nearly twelve months later. I have not bought the cubs yet. I was very close to a purchase until I went back east and heard them in a very different set up then I had previously heard these speakers in. |
[Jun 15, 1999]
Harvey
an Audiophile
I do agree with the rest of the reviews posted here, I tryed them with solid stateamp (Krell KSA-150) and ARC VT-100MK2 and in both cases sound was bright,lean |