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Heritage ... w/ my Paramours


sfleming

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Hi all!

This looks like the obvious place to ask:

I've seen plenty of Klipsch Heritage line speakers on ebay and in local (SF Bay area) ads.

What would go best with my little 3.5 watt SET 2a3s?

Belle, Klipschorn, LaScala, etc too big for my space and WAF comfort ..

For under <$1000 I've seen Heresy II, Chorus, Forte and while their sensitivity ratings look fine (nay: great!), I'm concerned about impedence dips.

Should be holding out for the Heresy I ?

thanks !

Steve

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depends somewhat on your listening habits. while the heresie is listed among heritage line it really is a quite different animal than say a k-horn or belle. can you tell us a little about what you listen to, in what space and with what other components? that would help. regards, tony

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I'll chime in here ... I have Wright WPA 3.5 SETs and a house full of Heritage.

Even though you speak of available space and WAF, my wife's favorite speaker in the house is the Klipschorn. Yes, it's huge out in the middle of the floor, but they fit into corners and intrude less into the room than a Cornwall, Belle or LaScala. So, if you are one of the few lucky souls that has two good corners in a room (adjacent or opposing even), I'd go with the Klipschorn. There simply is no comparison in their dynamics, and they mate very well (as 104db/w/m) with the tiny SET. Klipschorns can be had for less than two grand if you shop. I paid $1100 for mine and $100 worth of material for rehab.

If you can't, for one reason or another, go the Klipschorn route, I think the Cornwall is the next best thing. They are large speakers, though, and they loom large in any but the larger rooms. The older Cornwall II's with the vertical mid and tweeter horns are (IMHO) the best. I've owned both the olders II's and the I (1985 vintage). Both are great sounding though.

After the Cornwall, I'd go Belle or LaScala (with possibly a sub to augment bass). Both a lovely speakers and are very similar with minor differences. The LaScala is deeper size-wise than the Belle, but the Belle is wider. It just depends on your corners and your room in general.

If you have a small room and no place for a sizeable footprint, the Forte or Chorus are great choices. There are many many fans on these speakers on this board. You might want to do a search on these here. There are zillions of posts (literally).

All in all, you can't lose with Klipsch and SET unless you listen to music and exceedingly high volumes like a few here (Jeff C, Tony and Craig come lovingly to mind); if that's the case, a nice push-pull comes to mind. Tony just got a lovely and rare 2A3 PP built by Jean-Francois Lessard up in Quebec City. Sweetness according to Tony.

My definitive answer is the Klipschorn, space permitting. Your wife will love them once in situ.

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I own the Paramours & can only speak for RF3II speakers coupled with them. Its a nice match, if you don't pump up the volume to high, and like vocals, jazz, not to complex type music, the reference line will fill the boot as far as astetics, value and sound. You could lug your gear to your HiFi dealer and give it a test drive. Thats more than can be said for some of the Heritage line.2.gif JMHO!

Tom

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I already have a sub (Adire Rava), so the bass I've pretty much got covered. The room is less than ideal. It's a big "L", and my speakers are setup currently about in the middle of the long side of the "L" a few feet off the wall. Usual suspects in the CDP are vocals, jazz and acoustics, but sometimes I get a wild hair and bring out my old Zeppelin, Who, Stones. Apartment building, so rarely get a chance to crank it up. Just would rather not have my amps breathing hard.

There are no corners in the room that would make obvious sense for placing 2 speakers. Those K-horns do look cool though ..... of course, I don't need to tell y'all that.

steve

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we have similar listening tastes (though I soccum to my bad boy zep mode more often that my wife would like at "I own the house" volumes! lol).

Cornwalls may do the trick for ya. though I cannot vouch for their "SET friendliness" someone else will need to chime in on that issue. Belles are darn nice if a little big and La Scalas too (though I find them a little industrial looking for my taste). size and budget will dictate which way to go.

have you heard heritage klipsch speakers before? they have a distinctive sound that should be heard before investing. Tony

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Ditto on the big old horns, my wife does not complain about the Khorns at all, they fit nicely into the corners of the room, where all other loudspeakers are out from the walls 3 to 4 feet, plus with flea-powered amplifiers, like the 2A3 tube, you want the most sensitive speakers possible, as for bass, I love the deep bass and have two subwoofers, but the truth is, with the Khorns, but in-room frequency response is fairly flat down to 30Hz, so I get realistic and accurate bass, but not a lot of punch (for that a cheap sub works great), I say defiantly go for the biggest horns you can!2.gif

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Since no one has mentioned how Heresy's might work I thought I'd chime in. Sounds like we listen to the same type of music.

I do have a Decware SE84C-S (Zen Select) driving my 80 vintage Heresys and they sound just fine. They are a tad weak on the low, low bass (under 50-60 hz) but make up for it in spades elsewhere. Don't get me wrong, a doghouse bass sounds mighty fine on the Heresy but I'm thinking a sub might be a nice addition to fill in the 'longwave' gap (down to 10-20 hz).

Make no mistake, Vocals, Jazz and acoustics sound *incredible* on the Heresy. And they rock when you want em to as well.

As far as the sensitivity is concerned, no problem. Even 2 watts (@ 8 ohms) gives me more volume available than my condo neighbors would probably like me to have ;)

If you can't afford the bigger horns or are are cramped for space like I am then I'm sure the Heresys would be a great choice.

2 channel analog system:

Oracle Alexandria, Prelude arm, Denon 103 Cart

Audio Solutions MX-10 MC pre-preamp

Conrad Johnson PV-4 preamp

Ah Tjoeb '99 CDP

Decware SE84C-S Select

Klipsch Heresy

HT system

Harmon Kardon AVR500

RCA ultimateTV

Sony DVP-S3000

Sony 37" Trinitron

JBL L-100 Mains

JBL TLX Center 2

JBL 3 way in-wall rears

Dahlquist PDQ1200 Subwoofer

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I would add the Chorus-II to the list. It is a classic 3-way approach that uses a reasonably fast passive radiator bass to get around the size problem associated with pure horn bass. I like my Fortes, but wish they were Chorus-II. I just don't have space for horn bass. Also, with 3.5 Watts, the added efficiency of the Chorus-II is important. I think the impedance characteristics of the Chorus are not an issue.

BTW, Don't the Paramours use parafeed output? If so, I'm familiar with it because I've modified my Moondogs with parafeed out.

leok

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the Paramours are parafeed. Eventually I'll drop in some better output iron than the stock ones, but that's a ways down the upgrade path. Thanks for all the feedback.

Is Chorus II a significant upgrade to Chorus I ?

I'll see what I can find. Looking for ease and openness. My Omega (Fostex) monitors sound good, but at times ..... "congested" I suppose is the word.

steve

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Chorus bass uses a port. Chorus-II uses a passive radiator. I prefer the speed and more damped sound of my Forte-II bass to the ported RF-7 bass. If Klipsch makes ar RF-9 with passive radiator bass I might have to get a pair.

Also, the mid horn of the Chorus-II is Tractrix which is more neutral than the exponential type used on the Chorus.

leok

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