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

Someone bought my Thiel 3.7s.



Fortunately the buyer is arranging pick up from my house, where they will be put on a pallet by the shipping company.



That has still of course left me with packing them in to their boxes. Wow...not easy! It took a loooong time just to get the first one in to it’s box, with some trial and error along the way. After hours, the top totally fitted and taped up madly, it turned out the bottom of the speaker wouldn’t quite fit all the way in to the box. Rob Gillum was very helpful in advising me through this issue to the right solution (which of course, my fault, meant unboxing the damned thing and re-doing everything).

I lost count of the number of times I muttered under my breath "Never another big speaker...never another big speaker...."

(That is, until, some other big speaker catches my eye. But I’m pretty sure this has cured me of getting another big ol’ heavy speaker, as wonderful sounding as the 3.7s have been).
boy do i understand that Prof:  and what is funny is that compared to a lot of what is out there now, even 3.7's are not that big or heavy. 

Quite true, Ron.
In fact, ironically the much smaller Joseph Perspective speakers I'm contemplating are almost as heave as the 3.7s (just over 80 lbs, vs 91 lbs for the 3.7s).



Joseph is one of the very few brands at this point i would consider for new speakers, along with the upcoming PS Audio speakers.  But since i just got the 3.7's and they are finally broken in (they sound great), i best quit looking around.
The 3.7s are kind of difficult to get in the boxes, I've done it twice I think.  They're only around 100 lbs, though.  I replaced a pair of B&W N802s with the 3.7s and I almost killed myself getting the B&Ws up the basement stairs.  My back was messed up for a couple of weeks.  I had to get them around a corner and those stairs have a big lip so every stair was hard.  

Now that I think about it I have a number of heavy speaker moving memories.  I've moved my Velodyne dd18 a number of times and that thing is unpleasant to carry.  I bought it as a demo from a closing tweeter when I was in my twenties.  I hadn't planned on buying anything but I went into the store to see if there were any screaming deals and there it was for 60% off.  I remember when the sales guy was helping me get it in my car I told him I paid the same amount for the sub that I did for the car.  You gotta have your priorities straight.  I carried it into the basement, out of the basement into an apartment, out of the apartment into another basement, out of the basement and up the stairs in another place.  Finally, down the stairs and into the back of the family room where it is now.  

Right after college when I was still living with my parents I bought an Infinity HPS1000 from ubid.  I carried that 100 lb thing up the fire escape to the third floor.  I was excited enough I probably could've done it with broken arms and legs.  I had always wanted ATCs but I was never willing to shell out the money for one of the big active three ways.  When a pair of 110s came up a few years back for an obscene price I jumped on them.  I picked them up at the distribution center with my infant in the minivan.  They loaded the pallet with a forklift.  I got home and I carried those ridiculously heavy things into the living room to try out.  A few months later I dragged them up the stairs to a bedroom that we used as a family room.  Then down the stairs and into the family room where they are now.


I bet a lot of us have stories of physical pain we've endured due to our attachment to hearing music reproduced well.