Yeah, just to go tangential on my own thread here, but the little 30-pound Lahave speakers have a place in my heart such that I'll never sell them even if I the upgrade bug hits and I try something new out of curiosity.
I have many speaker I liked in the past that all did something special : Von Schweikert VR7s (percussion, mids in general), Wilson WP6s (detailed natural bass, layering, staging), Kharma 3.2s (coherency, the disappearing act, imaging, speed), Aerial 10Ts (easy on the ears sound all the time), Apogee Stages (completely real human voice reproduction and a 4th-wall-dropping in-the-room sensation that was amazing).
But, in tonality aspects, including bass quality, the little Lahave Melas are as good in all these areas and have that special natural and live sound with soaring/exciting but totally non-fatiguing highs and a deep satisfying non-soft bass and palpable super-natural vocals. So the Lahaves are my favorite as the total package overall of all the other speakers. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't had them in my room. (They were recommended to me by an audio-buddy.)
I have many speaker I liked in the past that all did something special : Von Schweikert VR7s (percussion, mids in general), Wilson WP6s (detailed natural bass, layering, staging), Kharma 3.2s (coherency, the disappearing act, imaging, speed), Aerial 10Ts (easy on the ears sound all the time), Apogee Stages (completely real human voice reproduction and a 4th-wall-dropping in-the-room sensation that was amazing).
But, in tonality aspects, including bass quality, the little Lahave Melas are as good in all these areas and have that special natural and live sound with soaring/exciting but totally non-fatiguing highs and a deep satisfying non-soft bass and palpable super-natural vocals. So the Lahaves are my favorite as the total package overall of all the other speakers. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't had them in my room. (They were recommended to me by an audio-buddy.)