I would really be interested in hearing - um, reading - your impressions. I have found from extensive listening and casual comparos that the B&W CM and 7 series go from "nice" to "wow!" once the tweeter is freed from its box (ie, CM6 and now 705) and I'd love to hear how the CM6 stacks up against your 805 D2s.
Sure, if there's an interest I'd be more than happy to give you my impressions. Give me some time and I'll start a separate thread. I've already spent some time giving the CM6 S2 & 805 D2 a comparative listen so I have a very good idea what the primary differences are.
I haven't compared the CM6 S2 with the CM5 S1 yet - but you make an interesting point about the tweeter on top. I will probably do so next weekend if I have time. All three speakers have the same Sensitivity rating of 88 dB SPL so conducting fair listening comparisons should be easier to do.
I'm sorry to hear the LS50 did not work out for you, but I think I understand why, from everything I have read in the previous posts.
Yeah me too, I don't want to give the impression that I always play my music at insane levels or I'm a bass freak. I just wanted a speaker that was good all around since I have eclectic musical tastes.
I spent some time listening to the CM6 S2 in their final set-up and here is what I gained over the LS50:
*Much wider soundstage
*Deeper soundstage
*More space/openness within recording
*Precise realistic imaging
*Smoother highs-less strident
*More resolution without pain
*Cleaner/deeper tight bass (what’s there before it disappears)
*Midrange that is more tolerant of closer front wall placement
*Grill covers
*I can now get away without a sub in this room (which I was hoping to do) without getting that boom that some low frequency capable stand mounts can sometimes produce.
*Dynamics without flinching, no noticeable compression or distortion (see graph below- the LS50 would have exploded
).
I'd like everyone to know that I'm not knocking the LS50 in any way, they are what they are. It's what they're designed for. The primary area where I was not critical of them was the vocal midrange, athough I would have preferred a bit more openness in that area but I can see how that would not be a problem (or needed) for true monitoring.