When Gene DellaSala brought a loudspeaker brand called ‘AudioSmile’ to my attention, I had to confess never having heard of them. I went over their website to see what they had, and I was impressed by the detailed and no-nonsense white paper on their
Little British Monitor product page. It looked like a lot of thought was put into the design of this small powered standmount speaker, and I was intrigued. AudioSmile is a small business owned and operated by Simon Ashton in England. I inquired about the possibility of a review which brings us to today’s review of the Little British Monitor (LBM). On paper, the LBM looked like a solid loudspeaker for situations that demand a small but high-quality speaker such as a desktop monitor or a speaker for a small room or something that can easily be carried around. But I decided to check that out for myself; does the LBM deliver on the promises of all the technology involved in its design? Read our in-depth review to find out…
READ: AudioSmile Little British Monitor LBM Desktop Loudspeaker Review
Shady, I think that is a sentinel design. Clearly this offers unparalled performance for a speaker of that size, and clearly out performs a lot, if not most, larger ones in many aspects.
I hope this sells well, and leads to them applying this to larger speakers.
The way forward is active speakers, with electronic crossovers and DSP to get the timing right. Putting the bass management in the speaker is exactly the right place to do it. Having speakers with a dispersion pattern like that will put an end to this "room correction" nonsense. I suspect that you know as well as I do this room correction is really defective speaker correction. That is only marginally effective at best. So this really paves the way for simpler front ends and an end to this receiver nightmare that I keep harping on. Members don't like it, but I know I am right on target.
Approaches like this will lead to speakers with performance above the current crop we can barely imagine.
This speaker is already there to be able to make a full range integrated three way. It just needs an LFE port and a sub designed for the speaker
That tweeter being able to perform down to 1.5KHz is the most surprising and novel aspect of that speaker to me. Crossovers right in the middle of the speech discrimination band have always been highly problematic because the ear is so critical to phase and polar response aberrations in that region. Active speakers with DSP can solve the problem that can not be solved any other way that I know of.
So you could make a really good active three way with DSP. Making a driver that is a sub driver but with good performance out to the 350 400 Hz range is possible now. The venerable KEF B139 goes down well into sub range and lower than some. I was playing my rear TLs the other day with two KEF B139s, and you would have sworn there was a sub. The 32' pipes still shook the floor. So this speaker means a design with a sub designed specifically for an optimal match to a driver that can cross to a tweeter at 1.5KHz would really be an advance. You could use two mids for increased power and better dispersion pattern. Three way active crossovers with DSP for perfect time and phase alignment, would no doubt be the best speaker in the world currently. That is now certainly possible as indicated by this audacious design.
All this has the promise of simpler set up and an end to big boxes, so we can get back to good audio in most homes and make them able to be driven by electronics most have.
I would bet many would settle from a reasonable priced and sized front end, and may be one that could be driven from TVs directly would get us out of our current doldrums. I have it on good authority that unsold AVRs a stacking up like prison walls. I was just talking on Saturday to the owner of Hi-Fi Sound in minneapolis, and he confirmed my suspicion that consumer resistance to the current state of affairs is massive and on the increase.
If someone buys Sound United, and I hope they do, then they need to rethink from square one and not business as usual. This organization is well positioned to really shake the status quo. They have experience in the electronics and B & W still have their facilities in Worthing UK. Probably the UK is the place to start pulling this together.
The UK has a tradition of producing the finest speakers over decades. This novel design just builds on a long tradition.