Thiel Owners


Guys-

I just scored a sweet pair of CS 2.4SE loudspeakers. Anyone else currently or previously owned this model?
Owners of the CS 2.4 or CS 2.7 are free to chime in as well. Thiel are excellent w/ both tubed or solid-state gear!

Keep me posted & Happy Listening!
128x128jafant
Prof, I love it. Which model number? I need some long runs for house sound with CS 2 2s. 
Tom,

I used the Belden 5000 series Cable, 10-guage, from Blue Jeans cables:

https://www.bluejeanscable.com/store/speaker/index.htm

Though I've been a high-end audio nut much of my life, I'm not big on spending money for high end boutique cables, which makes me a bit unusual I guess in forums like these.  (Even though through my friends and contacts I have access to, and have listened to, some of the the most expensive cables in the world from Nordost and many others).

I like Blue Jeans cable because they are a no b.s. company, you can find measurement specs for the cable, etc.

I located my source equipment down the hall from my listening room so I had to run speaker cables under the floor to my speakers - about a 25 foot run or so.  The Blue-Jeans cables have excellent specs for long runs and I went with 10-guage, which is probably over-kill.  But what the heck.

As I said: I've heard some speakers I own with with these cables, and with the highest end Nordost, and...well...even for a super picky listener like me I'm happy where I spent my money :-)

As I've written about earlier in the thread I have to sell my 3.7s because they are just big enough to impede traffic flow in and out of my listening room.   Despite auditioning the newest-thing speakers out there, the 3.7s have been sooooo hard to replace because they just seem to effortlessly "do it all."


Prof, obviously you need a bigger room. Build to golden proportions at about 12'3 high x 20' x 32' with "vents" near the corners (windows or doors work) and you'll have a room like Thiel's listening / optimization room and you can keep your 3.7s and join the upgrade brigade for even more musical satisfaction. What's a second mortgage compared to such bliss?
Prof, . . . you can keep your 3.7s and join the upgrade brigade for even more musical satisfaction.
@prof Tom Thiel is learning much about the late model Thiel crossovers as well as how to improve parts quality for all the models he is now working on. You might hold onto those CS3.7s another year or so and try his upgrade when it becomes available. 
@beetlemania   

Q:I’ve never heard ATC. Maybe they’re onto something? But I’m skeptical. As Tom Thiel wrote, the steep filter lets you operate a driver in the range of pistonic behavior. This is *highly* desirable (and also requires diaphragm material up to the task). But this throws off phase coherence. There is no free lunch. If there were, all designers would hone in on the same design.

Thiel Audio placed phase and time coherence as a top priority. The downside is that the slow rolloff may not sufficiently suppress the inevitable break up modes. As I’ve written in this thread, I think Jim Thiel made some of the best drivers around. The diaphragms are light and rigid and the break up modes are out of the "main" region covered by each driver. Even at that, some may consider the break up modes insufficiently suppressed by a 6dB filter. Richard Vandersteen seems to have taken this even farther with his carbon/balsa drivers but you need some serious coin to move up to those. The carbon midrange is available only in the 5 Carbon ($30+K) and 7 models ($60+K). 

IMO, most of the newer Thiels get it right in terms of balancing phase alignment and pistonic behavior (I’ve heard CS2.4, 3.7 and 7.2 but not earlier models). My ears tell me so, and Soundstage’s measurements of the CS2.4 confirm "very low" distortion despite the 1st order filters. Nothing is perfect but I think Thiel gets you most of the way there and at an affordable price.

That said, if ATC or others have figured out how to maintain phase alignment while also optimizing pistonic behavior I’m happy to learn!
Yes ATC driver integration is perfect in phase. Active has huge advantages over passive - no lossy crossover and also far less intermodulation distortion as each transducer is driven by a separate amplifier. Top studios (where your music is produced)  have almost all been active for the past 25 years. So far this hasn’t tricked down to the high fidelity market much. Dealers substantially benefit from the need for complex, costly and powerful amplifiers necessitated by loading a power amplifier with several transducers and a lossy crossover (usually a highly variable impedance curve).

That said. Thiel is extremely good despite the limitations of a passive crossover.