Ohm Walsh Micro Talls: who's actually heard 'em?


Hi,

I'd love to hear the impressions of people who've actually spent some time with these speakers to share their sense of their plusses and minuses. Mapman here on Audiogon is a big fan, and has shared lots on them, but I'm wondering who else might be familiar with them.
rebbi
I just moved into a 1 bedroom apartment and my speaker set up is far from perfect, with one speaker being virtually against a wall on the right and the left being in an open area on the left.  You know what?, to my utter amazement , my 1000's sound great.  I love my Ohms
I’ve found that ability to sound good in rooms that are more challenging for whatever reason to be particular strength of the OHM Walshes. They can work surprisingly well close to walls and corners I find, as advertised, especially when compared to true omni speakers.

The room I put my newer Walsh speakers in is a larger L shaped room. They replaced planar and conventional more directional box speakers in there neither of which worked particularly well. But the Walsh speakers tend to just place the music naturally into whatever room they happen to be in. A very unique attribute that many might consider.

I find a main main key to good sound with OHM Walshes in particular in any particular room is to address floor interactions when needed, especially with the bottom firing ports on many Walsh models. Isolation platforms like Auralex Subdudes I use with my OHMS when on suspended plywood floors solve the problem.

I wonder how many "Ohmies"-or even those not necessarily Ohm lovers, managed to get to the NY Audio Show this past weekend? Anybody get to visit the Ohm Acoustics room and visit with John S. and listen to his setup? Am curious as to how well it all went down. I managed to catch a couple small snippets from my google searching, but nothing of much substance. Hopefully maybe some others will chime in at some point.

I do think it was a good thing(Hopefully) that John decided to attend, if nothing else to get more exposure, although I wonder if he/Ohm really needs it, and also if anyone in the mainstream audio nerdophilia really cares? Anyway.....

I went on Sunday.  What a kick to meet John in person!  I told him how his speakers bring beauty into my daily routine.  He set up a pair of Walsh 1000s fed by a Peachtree integrated (150 watts/side, internal DAC), and used a $15 DVD player as a source.  The sound was good, and the fellow in front of me bought a pair on the spot. My son-in-law, who accompanied me, almost pulled the trigger as well, until he called my daughter, and that was the end of that.

But the rooms all suffered from an upper bass boom, and Ohm's room was no exception.  I wondered aloud if moving the speakers a little further into the room would be better, but John's assistant said he had trieed that, and the positioning was as good as possible.  I played a track from a PT CD that sounded lovely, lots of transient detail with no etch or excess brightness.


John also brought a lot of potted plants along (I am aware of their desireable acoustic properties).  One of the simplest setups at the show, and one of the best sounding, except for the systems that DSP'd the room boom out.  When you factor in the prices of the gear and speakers, I think Ohm's room was a standout.


To me, though, John is a legend in this business, and it was a thrill to shake his hand. 

Bond, glad you went and got to experience the setup, and also to meet John in person. Would love to have gone, but not close to NY, and work was beckoning anyway.

Shows can be tough, but figured Ohm might be a bit easier to place in those rooms and get reasonable music out of them.

Nice to hear an account of how things fared, thanks for the note!