First, I heard ProAc Response 2, and I liked them. Then, I heard Response 3 and their sound stuck in my had as the best I have ever heard. However, they were way beyond my reach, so I purchased Response 2. At some point later, I heard Response 2.5 but they did not tempt me enough to replace my Response 2. When Response 3.8 appeared, I purchased a pair without hearing them and they exceeded Response 2 in every possible way. They were exactly as I was hoping they would be.
In an unlikely case that I get an opportunity ($$$) to upgrade, I would go for K6 and I would not insist on hearing them. But chances are I will die with Response 3.8 in my possession, which is not a bad way to die at all.
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Yes, 3 of the last 5 pairs of speakers I purchased were without hearing them first.
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No way. Audio preferences are very personal. There is no universal standard. Reviews can steer you but thee is no substitute for how your own ears react to the sound.
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Never heard any speaker before I bought it except one (JBL L40) at the start of my hifi life.
Since the L40s (handed down to baby brother) I bought Boston Acoustics A40, Proac D2, Reference3A DeCapo I, and ELAC DBR62 Reference.
All have been keepers. The Proacs sounded wonderful in mids and highs, but needed more power than I had available at the time. The Boston Acoustics died of old age. The DeCapos and the ELACs are in use to this day.
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Lates 60s I bought JBL Dorian S12 after hearing a huge JBL system at a Dick Clark concert production at the Chicago Stock Yards amphitheater. I think I did listen to them at Allied Electronics on south Western avenue when buying.
Mid 70s I bought JBL L222 Disco after listening to them at a store north west of Chicago.
I still have both sets. The L222 are my active speakers.
Now for the ones I did not listen to but purchased. I was into collecting JBL at the time.
L25,L36,L40,L120,L300,AquariusIV,S1,4408,L65,L100,B380. Still have but not using the last 3.
If I had the space I would have really tried for a Paragon. 😊
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Bought my tannoy eatons w/o a listen, luckily I like them. Hifi stores used to be prevalent...not any more. Also bought my wharfedale diamond 225’s without an audition. I bought them based on Stereophile’s Herb Reichert and the late Art Dudley’s review of them. They both seemed to enjoy them and gave them a very positive review. I’d have to say they were not lying...they are terrific speakers for cheap. My last acquisition was the JBL Synthesis 4309's bought on line. Still new in box, no idea how they sound. I bought them because they have horns, and because I think they look cool. They did receive many positive reviews as well.
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I bought my entire +$30K system online without auditioning at any audio store. I’m 74 years old and I don’t have the energy to drive to Denver for two hours and drive back after what would be hours of auditioning I would hope. There is one hi-fi store in Boulder. Not many choices of equipment and full retail +Tx at Listen Up. Ugh
I did buy Zu speakers! (Not too popular here) Yes you have to pay to return them, but they let you keep them for a while I bought the Soul. They were great, but I wanted something better, so I traded them in for a pair of Soul Supreme. Paid shipping only to return them. The new-traded speakers were shipped free as I remember. Could be wrong on that. They have a very generous no fee trade-in program. and great to work with.
Electronics, including phono, pre and amp are all from Aric audio. Without audition. I bought the Pro-Ject carbon 10 EVO Table from Music Direct, I think. I researched hard. I shopped hard and bought everything at a discount online for about $22K. Everything, cables, SUT, phono, cartridges, all without audition and online. Nothing is used except one pair of cables. Don’t forget the NOS tubes from Brent Jesse. The entirety of my system was purchased on-line, on-line trying anything. I’ve not been disappointed with anything. And never traded anything in or had to resell any of these components except an ion Audio preamp.
I must admit this is a very fine system. It does take work to do it. You have to do a lot of research. It can be done!
Good fortune to you on your quest!
Bent
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The speakers I bought after a dozen auditions of all sorts of speakers at local hifi shops in 2000 were good, but ultimately, not keepers. In 2009 I bought my current speakers without any auditions, based largely on a lengthy thread here on the 'gon. They sounded exactly the way the posts described, and were exactly what I wanted in a speaker, including the price point. 14+ years on, I haven't had a minute's regret. The speakers were direct from the manufacturer, and came with a 120 day return option. Ohm Walsh 2000s. It's a shame that Ohm seems to have gone dormant since founder John Strohbeen passed last October.
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I bought without hearing either the speakers or other examples of the same model but I did listen to the two next/later examples of that size/type speaker made by the same company. I liked the house sound, bought my speakers used, unseen and unheard, and it worked in this case.
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So far, only from brands and technologies that I have owned and liked. Scanspeak drivers for the sub, Magnepan DWM for mid bass boost.
But as you point out, the days of auditioning are fast disappearing.
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I have owned Vandersteen speakers for the last 40 years. Going in order from 2C to model 3 to 3A to 3A Signatures to Treo CT’s now with stereo subs. They just reproduce what goes in with a “you are there” sense of realism. I bought them before hearing them after reading consistent and corroborative reviews along with 40 years experience working my way up the Vandersteen line.
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I just purchased a pair of Heco Aurora 1000 towers from Audio Advice in the US. I was not able to listen to them prior to purchasing. They meet and even exceed my expectations for sound quality and esthetics.
One tower suffered a small area of damage on the rear corner around the mid point during transit. Audio Advice apologized for the damage even though it wasn't their fault. They shipped out a new tower less than 24 hours after learning about the damage from the contact support form on the website. They also emailed a pre-paid return shipping label for the damaged tower. What excellent customer service.
I still have the 30 day return available if I decide I don't like them. I am 100% sure I will be keeping these gems.
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Four of the last six were bought without hearing them. One was returned (Walsh Ohm Tall). For the other three I read or watched every review and looked at user comments in the forums about the speakers/manufacturer. Two of the three (Volti and Coherent Audio) had something similar I could listen to (Klipsch/Tannoy) so those were not completely blind. The third was Tekton which was completely unique. Those three also had some type of custom finish which was important to me as well.
My next pair will probably be direct since it I am looking at open baffle - PAP or Caladan?
Good luck.
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Only once but it was a good buy. A great review in IAR that sounded (SQ) fine.
More telling is the homemade pair.
My two main pairs were acquired after schlepping the same records to dealerships.
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I feel your pain. I'm an American living on a Pacific island. The nearest hifi showroom is 3000 miles away. So for decades, I've had to buy every speaker system, audio component, even cables, without the benefit of auditioning them first.
I really hate that, but I've learned to live with it. The last few years, I've prefaced any major purchase with lots of researchm including enough questions on Audiogon & similar forums to make myself a real PITA! (Actually, I hope not, but I bet I have.)
And even so, about 1/4 or my purchases were disappointing.
D
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Yes, multiple times. I have bought usually with a right to test and return, and fortunately have not needed to do so. Most have been standmounts, so shipping could have been done without freight shipping with crating and palleting. In each case purchase was preceded by searches and reading. Were I in the market for very expensive speakers (I'm not) I would travel to have a demonstration before buying.
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I ordered my last two sets of towers WITHOUT hearing them first. My first ones I went with Greg Belman's Bache Audio Tribecca-001's by just talking with him and going by the specs... They turned out to be fabulous speakers for $6000 and play way above their price point. They were custom painted and I love them.
Second pair I ordered were the Focal Aria 938's since Crutchfield was blowing them out for $3000 a pair or something crazy like that. Unfortunately the left side tweeter was not working once hooking them up, but no foul: Crutchfield sent me a replacement and I was back in business. LOVE the bass response and both sets of speakers REALLY cater toward highs and voices.. .LOVE THEM BOTH, NOT disappointed.
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I have purchased several KEF speakers without auditioning and never been disappointed. Risky maybe, but I’m a diehard KEF addict and unfortunately there are no good audio dealers anywhere near Albuquerque!
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I've never bought without hearing, but I have bought without listening. I buy almost exclusively used speakers. I will always make sure all the drivers work and there are no defects, but I have found there is not much point in focused listening until I get them home.
That is of course after research and being interested in a specific set. Then I probably know I'll like them enough to give them a real try at home.
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Depends.
I buy used gear and use reviews e.g here, YouTube (Thomas, Jay, audio excellence in Canada), etc and if they all say the same thing, and you know what you like you can have good results.
I just bought Gresham Studio II (50lb bookshelf) speakers which will arrive this week.
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Not never.... but rarely. If I'm familiar with the brand and they are utility speakers, then yes. My current surround speakers for instance. I wouldn't do this for main L and R.
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Crutchfield and others offer returns my guess have to pay shipping .I do buy a lot of opene box that people must not have liked.other dealers offer same thing wish Mac did that more for people like me in small area.the music room did that but must have had a taken advantage of because now charge 10% return.
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I do, I bought a pair of Revel 228be (in fairness I head the 328be before buying) and JBL 4367 unheard. Both have been exceptional. I also listen to anything I can. Locally I have access to the Kef Blade, Revel Salon 2, 802D4, Sonus Faber Olympica, Martin Logan, magnepan, entire Klispch line, etc. This I all in suburbia mid west. The only dealer that is now a bit of a drive for me is wilson audio.
When it is all said and done I am glad I went with the unheard JBLs as I think they are a step above these other speakers in key areas (dynamics, tonal balanced, as detailed as anything). So don’t be scared to trust measurements if you understand how to read them. Estimated in room measurements are the key.
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It all comes down to IQ level of the engineer...
If it's a high IQ engineer behind the speakers, for example,
Andrew Jones
Michael Borresen
Shinji Tarutani et al
Yoshiyuki Kaku
Greg Timbers
Peter Comeau
Masahiro Tobise
Akira Nakamura,
etc
you can buy it without hearing it...if these kinda guys were given a enough of a budget to work with it.
On the other hand, If a low IQ dude is designing your speakers...yeah, it's imperative that you hear it and decide if you wanna run away (as fast as you can) or not...In general, you can throw all kinds of cash on a low IQ engineer and he'll still come up with crap because cash never created aptitude/brain cells.
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My last 2 speaker purchases were without audition; Buchardt Audio S400 MKII, and Clayton Shaw Caladans (which have finally shipped and should be here Wednesday now). Both bought direct from manufacturer without dealer middlemen.
The Buchardts turned out to be a home run for $2,000 two way bookshelf, and here's hoping the Caladans are as well. I definitely bought those on Clayton's reputation alone, and an extremely attractive price point.
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I really sympathize with folks who live removed from metro areas and have no hi'fi shops. When one buys new speakers there is always a large loss taken if the speakers are unsatisfactory and have to be sold. I think I would be OK with buying speakers that I've never demoed off the second hand market. They can always be sold for break even or a small loss. Good luck and cheers.
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As a general rule,I’d never buy anything without hearing it first, although I made one exception. I have a Hegel H390 and when Hegel was at the shows, they were using KEF speakers for a while. I figured that Hegel would want to show off their wares in the best light, so I bought a pair of KEF Reference speakers and after two years I’m still pretty happy with them.
All the best.
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i did that with 3 speakers
BW602s2
Triangle Comte
Ref 3A de Capos-had these for 14 years now
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In general no. Descriptions of the sound of speakers is only really effective if done in relation to speakers you have heard and know. Otherwise each qualitative statement has little quantitative information. A comment like a bit bright and detailed could mean anything from something you might not hear it to ear shattering, chalk board scraping sound. It is difficult to talk about without common sign posts.
But after three decades of experience and owning a lower tier speaker from Sonus Faber to verify that they had exactly the sound I wanted, the next two upgrades with the same company and doubling or more my investment was very safe. The outcome was exactly what I expected.
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I've had IMF Monitors and now the KEF 104 a/b so i do know the KEF signature sound, just can't pull the trigger.
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I bought once great speakers from few states away and then company went bankrupt. Why? Because of poor dealership base. They had only 3 places for whole US to demo them. Still love them, but there is no support in case of any problems.
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Just did. I bought some KEF Reference 1’s used, without hearing them. These were preceded by LS50’s, so I figured it was low risk. An excellent upgrade.
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I'm up against that right now. I want to hear the KEF r 7 Meta but no dealer within reasonable distance. The r7 non Meta are available and at a good discount but if I buy them it will always bother me if I missed something not hearing the Meta ized version. One way or another this will be my last speaker as I am 73.
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It depends. Even if you audition a loudspeaker you can not be sure of what you will get at home in your room. If you have a dealer that will let you audition at home that is a huge plus but rare now a days. I usually by based an design and reputation. But my interest in loudspeakers is limited to dipole line arrays, principally ESLs. My choices are limited. If you know what format you want, tower vs bookshelf, efficiency you need to get the volume you want, know your amp will drive them correctly and have a set price you can go by reputation. An example would be you want a highly efficient loudspeaker as you have a 60 watt/ch tube and you like rock at realistic levels and size is not an issue. The Klipsch Heritage series very well made and supported. The Cornwall is the speaker for you. I like 8 foot tall dipole ESLs. I have only one choice Soundlabs and I got exactly what I wanted without hearing them in person first.
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After research ... would buy wo audition!
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My favorite speaker of all time was bought without a demo BUT it was based on much feedback that in one case included a common denominator (Magnepan 1.7) that we both had owned and which served as a reference point. The new speaker exceeded expectations.
Another case was based on one very enthusiastic professional review. That speaker I never learned to love.
So with the right type of feedback (and a return policy) I would not be fearful at all. Gone are the days of showrooms packed with speakers. Honestly, that isn't the proper way to evaluate a speaker anyway.
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I've done both, but if I've never heard them, I only buy with full free refund privileges...
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Good speakers can be quite expensive. If I hope to keep them long term, I’d definitely want to listen to them first, or ensure there’s a 100% return option. Speakers are so subjective and personal, and they behave differently in different rooms and systems....each case is unique, so I’d want to listen to see if they’re going to work for me.
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