![]() |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
A mate has recently got on loan a pair of Celestion DL6 speakers and stands.
Not surprisingly, they sound rather a lot better than the little bookshelf speakers he was using previously (if such things are quantifiable, the improvement seems to me to be between 1 and 2 orders of magnitude). He's already realised that, when the Celestions are returned (probably in a few months), he'll find it very difficult to go back to the original speakers and is consequently looking into possible replacements. Budget isn't huge, maybe £100-150, and he's looking at stuff in Richer Sounds. Allowing for Richer Sounds discount, is he likely to find something of similar quality for that kind of money? For a similar spend, would it be worthwhile considering DIY, and if so, what drivers would be up to the job? (I suggested he take a look at Wilmslow Audio's site.) -- Wally www.art-gallery.myby.co.uk On webcam: Black Cat In Coal Cellar |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
On Fri, 9 Jan 2004 21:33:06 -0000, Wally wrote:
Allowing for Richer Sounds discount, is he likely to find something of similar quality for that kind of money? For a similar spend, would it be worthwhile considering DIY, and if so, what drivers would be up to the job? (I suggested he take a look at Wilmslow Audio's site.) My first set of loudspeakers, when I was a young teenager, were built by my father from a kit (this was in the early 1970s and kit building was very common then), as was my amplifier, a Mullard Unilex. They were absolutely superb, and outperformed most other loudspeakers that I heard, including the (I believe Rogers or Harbeth) loudspeakers in the music room at our school. I seem to recall that Wilmslow Audio actually have premises where some of the built loudspeakers can be auditioned; it might be worth a trip up there for a listen? -- Anthony Edwards |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
"Wally" wrote in message ... A mate has recently got on loan a pair of Celestion DL6 speakers and stands. Not surprisingly, they sound rather a lot better than the little bookshelf speakers he was using previously (if such things are quantifiable, the improvement seems to me to be between 1 and 2 orders of magnitude). He's already realised that, when the Celestions are returned (probably in a few months), he'll find it very difficult to go back to the original speakers and is consequently looking into possible replacements. Budget isn't huge, maybe £100-150, and he's looking at stuff in Richer Sounds. Allowing for Richer Sounds discount, is he likely to find something of similar quality for that kind of money? For a similar spend, would it be worthwhile considering DIY, and if so, what drivers would be up to the job? (I suggested he take a look at Wilmslow Audio's site.) -- Wally www.art-gallery.myby.co.uk On webcam: Black Cat In Coal Cellar If he is 'doing' Richers then he should try to go to a branch with a listening room. Gale are owned by Richer but don't dismiss them for that - they are often quite pleasant. Otherwise consider the TDL speakers that they also sell. Don't know who makes TDL now since they went bust a couple of years back, but their small boxes, especially their Near Field Monitors, were always highly regarded. -- Woody |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
"Wally" wrote in message ... A mate has recently got on loan a pair of Celestion DL6 speakers and stands. Not surprisingly, they sound rather a lot better than the little bookshelf speakers he was using previously (if such things are quantifiable, the improvement seems to me to be between 1 and 2 orders of magnitude). He's already realised that, when the Celestions are returned (probably in a few months), he'll find it very difficult to go back to the original speakers and is consequently looking into possible replacements. Budget isn't huge, maybe £100-150, and he's looking at stuff in Richer Sounds. Allowing for Richer Sounds discount, is he likely to find something of similar quality for that kind of money? For a similar spend, would it be worthwhile considering DIY, and if so, what drivers would be up to the job? (I suggested he take a look at Wilmslow Audio's site.) -- Wally www.art-gallery.myby.co.uk On webcam: Black Cat In Coal Cellar If he is 'doing' Richers then he should try to go to a branch with a listening room. Gale are owned by Richer but don't dismiss them for that - they are often quite pleasant. Otherwise consider the TDL speakers that they also sell. Don't know who makes TDL now since they went bust a couple of years back, but their small boxes, especially their Near Field Monitors, were always highly regarded. -- Woody |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
In article ,
Anthony Edwards wrote: They were absolutely superb, and outperformed most other loudspeakers that I heard, including the (I believe Rogers or Harbeth) loudspeakers in the music room at our school. Think you'd have to define 'outperform'. Rogers and Harbeth made(make) some very fine speakers indeed. The ones your school used were very likely based on the BBC design which also created the Spendor BC1 - still a highly regarded speaker. -- *Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now * Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
In article ,
Anthony Edwards wrote: They were absolutely superb, and outperformed most other loudspeakers that I heard, including the (I believe Rogers or Harbeth) loudspeakers in the music room at our school. Think you'd have to define 'outperform'. Rogers and Harbeth made(make) some very fine speakers indeed. The ones your school used were very likely based on the BBC design which also created the Spendor BC1 - still a highly regarded speaker. -- *Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now * Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
"Anthony Edwards" wrote My first set of loudspeakers, when I was a young teenager, were built by my father from a kit (this was in the early 1970s and kit building was very common then), as was my amplifier, a Mullard Unilex. They were absolutely superb, and outperformed most other loudspeakers that I heard, including the (I believe Rogers or Harbeth) loudspeakers in the music room at our school. This is most interesting - I'm an absolute convert to kit-building, having managed to throw a WAD kit together myself with great success and, more importantly, maintain it despite having bugger-all knowledge and experience! The important thing, other than the obvious personal satisfaction and 'emotional attachment' to the amp (fruit of my own soldering iron kinda thing :-), is that it really is a very good-sounding amp anyway. Also, it cost about a quarter of an equivalent 'ready made' amp with a fancy name on it and still less than half the price of an Oriental cheapie. I think kits are on the up atm and would encourage just about anyone to give one a go. Was your own gear particularly 'special' because your father had built it or was that just too commonplace practice those days? (Needless to say, my own kit amp is most definitely not in my planned 'amplifier cull'!! :-) |
Celestion DL6 replacement?
"Anthony Edwards" wrote My first set of loudspeakers, when I was a young teenager, were built by my father from a kit (this was in the early 1970s and kit building was very common then), as was my amplifier, a Mullard Unilex. They were absolutely superb, and outperformed most other loudspeakers that I heard, including the (I believe Rogers or Harbeth) loudspeakers in the music room at our school. This is most interesting - I'm an absolute convert to kit-building, having managed to throw a WAD kit together myself with great success and, more importantly, maintain it despite having bugger-all knowledge and experience! The important thing, other than the obvious personal satisfaction and 'emotional attachment' to the amp (fruit of my own soldering iron kinda thing :-), is that it really is a very good-sounding amp anyway. Also, it cost about a quarter of an equivalent 'ready made' amp with a fancy name on it and still less than half the price of an Oriental cheapie. I think kits are on the up atm and would encourage just about anyone to give one a go. Was your own gear particularly 'special' because your father had built it or was that just too commonplace practice those days? (Needless to say, my own kit amp is most definitely not in my planned 'amplifier cull'!! :-) |
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:55 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk