My friend Phil Marin and I headed out to Woodbury MN this morning to visit Audio by Van Alstine.
We were received warmly by Frank Van Alstine and quickly updated each other on our activities. The three of us had not met for around a quarter century.
Frank is in the amplifier business. He has an association with Salk and they share expenses at exhibitions and use each others products.
The major purpose of the visit was to hear the
Salk Veracity HT 3 loudspeakers.
This is the driver complement.
The woofer is a custom 10" aluminum driver made by TC sounds. Xmax exceeds 20mm. This woofer is in a ported enclosure with two rear ports.
The mid range driver is the
SEAS W 18E, in a sealed chamber. This driver I'm very familiar with, as I use four of them in my reference TLs.
The tweeter is the
Aurum Cantus G2 Ribbon.
The speaker was driven by the new
Van Alstine Ultimate 70 tube amp based on the Dynaco Stereo 70. Power output is 33 to 35 watts per channel.
The DAC for digital audio conversion from the CD player was by Van Alstine, and his latest model.
The first disc for evaluation was the Hyperion disc of Rameau key board suites played by Angela Hewitt on an Italian Fazoli piano. The recording is superb and the playing beyond reproach.
I have to say the Salk HT3s delighted this listener right away. The piano had a good perspective, balance was natural, with no hint of tubbiness in the bass. The bass was light and of correct weight, and there was no brittleness to the piano. This was a thoroughly accurate rendition.
Next we moved on to one of my favorite anthems, Blessed be God the Father by Samuel Wesley, from Salisbury on the Priory label.
Here the bass of the organ remained articulate, even if the speakers failed to reproduce the very deepest reach of the organ with authority. The boys voices had no sibilance, but there was a slight accentuation of the upper register of the trebles. I think some would describe it as airy, but it is not natural. However I personally did not find it unduly unpleasant. My friend Phil Marin objected to this aspect of the loudspeakers performance more than I did.
On the Fortes, the HF had a slightly strained quality. Since the amplification was tube I can not be at all certain if this was from the lower end of the ribbons or the tube amp clipping. I was at pains to keep the volume moderate. The room was not large.
The next disc was from Worcester recorded by EMI in the sixties and is one of the most technically perfect recordings I know of. The perspective of this recording is uncanny. We played Elgar's Ave Marie Stella On the Salks a good perspective was achieved, but the organ was not as nice and distant as I would have liked. On my rig you can definitely hear the right and left rows either side stretching away from you, and the organ high behind the choir, with the organ notes floating in space. I did not quite get that from the Salks, and felt that the ribbon tweeter was again the weakest link in the chain.
Next we played the final movement of the Sibelius Symphony N0. 2 in a performance by the Latte Symphony Orchestra under Osmo Vanska, on the BIS label.
The string sound was gorgeous, especially the cello passages. Woodwinds were correctly balanced, and I could distinctly discern the notes of the tympani. Trombones and horns were lusty. I thought the upper reaches of the trumpets slightly marred again by the tweeter. However the sound was good enough that I was thoroughly engaged in the music and enjoyed it.
Unfortunately I could not play this piece at concert level, due to the limitations of the tube amp.
Those of you who have followed my posts will know that I have a hard time finding a justification for using tube amps. Today's experience reinforced my opinion, that tube amps when connected to the vast majority of speakers just can't cut it. I believe members inquiring about tube amps should receive even stronger discouragement. I felt this tube amplifier was compromising this speaker evaluation for lack of power. I have a suspicion the bass would also have had more weight if these speakers had been driven by a good powerful solid state amp. I think a speaker should have a minimal sensitivity of 92db one watt one meter before even considering a tube amp. The sensitivity of the HT3s is 85 db 1 watt one meter.
The final evaluation was a new recoding of the Wanamaker Organ in the Macy's Philadelphia store. This is the largest mechanical instrument on Earth. The piece was the Jungen Organ Concerto with the Philadelphia Orchestra. This work was written for this organ, but this ended up being the first performance on this instrument about 90 years late! This is a smooth wonderful recording on the Gothic label.
Again the Salk speakers acquitted themselves well. Strings were lush, and the organ atmospheric. Again the deepest depths were not there, but I will easily forgive minor sins of omission. I really felt the limitation of tube power more in this selection than any other, and would love to hear these speakers with more competent power.
Now to return to the upper reaches of this speaker. Here we get into the only significant sin of commission of these speakers.
This is the frequency response of the ribbon tweeters.
This is the Waterfall plot.
Now there is a slight broad based peak between 6 and 16 kHz. The waterfall plot has irregularity around 12 kHz, suspicious for a resonance in the ribbon.
I suspect this is responsible for what we heard. I should state I had no knowledge of these facts before the audition, but hoped I would find an explanation for what I heard.
The finish of the speakers was outstanding. I rate these speakers as very good value for money at under 6K.
I have to say however if I did own them, I would be trying to tame the tweeter. In my view HF roll off is preferable to a rise, and this is borne out in listener studies.
So for me I think these are speakers I could live with. However for full disclosure, my good friend Phil Marin, said he could not. He said he found the HF problem irritating enough he would not recommend them. May be I'm more tolerant as I have moved snow the last few years with the Model A JD tractor!
I think these speakers would be better off with a good dome tweeter. My personal view is that the problems of high distortion, especially in the lower range of the ribbon, the tendency to rising HF response and the difficulty getting a good transition with cone drivers because of significantly different dispersion patterns, outweigh the advantages. In all honesty the few times I have selected a ribbon driver, I always somewhat regretted it and doubt I will ever select one again for one of my designs.