NHT 3.3 or Mirage M1Si?


Hi. I want to upgrade my speakers (and eventually all my other components..) and I'm considering these 2 (yeah I know, they are very different) models. I'm looking on the used market and I want a killer deal for around $1500 to $2000 US used (erm, around $4000 to $6000 at retail price I guess). I want a full range speaker that can offer detailed highs, liquid mids and abysmal bass. That can be enjoyed at low levels but also at high (ground shaking?) levels. I know that at this price range I can't find a perfect speaker but I want to do a major step up from my Polk RTA11TL speakers (around $1000 early 90s). I listen to all sort of music (from Bach to Metal) and might consider to build a home theater from there...later.

I will power them accordingly (200w-300w) after having choosen my main speakers. And should move to a bigger place in the next years so these factors are of less importance for now. As for my other upstream components since I intend to swap them for better at some point.

I would like advises from peoples who have heard these two speakers, and what pros and cons you have noticed between these two. If you want to suggest me another model that you think is even better (for the same budget) fell free to do so.

Thanx for all inputs.

note: I have already read all the reviews I could find on the net about these 2 models and have a lot of infos on the NHT 3.3, but I dont have as much infos on the Mirage M1Si and no idea if there is one that is really better than the other...

Jolan
jolan
i've never heard the mirages.

i owned the 3.3's briefly, and for the prices they go for they are w/o a doubt some of the best values out there. i thought they compared very favorably w/ merlin vsm-ms, and WP6s (of which i have owned both). they do need the tweeter tamed (tube preamp, Cu cabling) and a good size room for woofer integration, and they can be wonderful.
Hello; I have a pair of M1-Si- My amp is 400 watts @ 4 ohms. If you want the very most of these babies should have 400-500 watts 4ohms or a 500 watt Bryson have(8 ohms I think)! to really get them cranked up!!!
I see this is and old thread, but even today - the NHT 3.3's are really great speakers. To me they are among the classics (like PSB Goldi) that will always sound excellent and defy the gravity of progress in speaker design.