Usless but interesting ....how many of you old timers started with original Large Advents?


It was actually my second "real" system...but it is simply historic how many people that love great audio systems and the music they allowed us to enjoy started or at one time owned the original Large Advents.  If there is to be a list of the most influential audio products of all time, the Large Advent would be at or near the top.  I guess another interesting question would be how many sets of these Large Advents are still in use.  My brother in law and my sister still have a set of Small Advents in use in their den. 
whatjd
My first set of speakers way back in time.  When I moved out of home, after college, my dad wouldn't let me take with me.  They sounded so good with his old Grundig reel to reel.

My younger brother has them now and still uses them.
Everyone had them back in the day.  We were into LOUD and they seldom broke, although a tweeter would go every now and then.

Stacked pairs were the cat's meow.  Interesting how today almost all high-end speakers are 6' tall.  Wonder where they got that idea (Magnepan) and how it is working out for them?

When I got my shop in 1973, I put a pair of Advents--thank you, Henry Kloss--you were the man back then!--on one of our good systems and got an instant education in how inaccurate they were when played next to our Tympani series of Maggies.

BUT, then I listened to EVERY OTHER SPEAKER in my shop and figured out that boxes were always going to be limiting to the music.  The electrostatics (Quads, RTR's (hybrid) and others were almost as good as the Maggies, but listening fatigue was fast and they were rather shrill and unbalanced to us.  The biggest joke and the one that had us laughing the most were the Bose 901 "direct reflecting" speakers.  They were removed from the store and returned the next day.  What a joke they were.

Anyway, education is a wonderful thing, and I had an opportunity not given to many as I had 30 different brands and various models in the shop.  The only boxes that were passable were the Fulton 80's and 100's.  I have not heard them in many years, but back then, they were several steps up from the Advents.

We loved the Advents in their day, and appreciated them at the time.  But you have to move on eventually, so glad we had them and glad they are gone now.

Cheers!
Large Advents were my first real speakers, mid 70's era. I blew a tweeter at some point in the 80'sand ended up with Polks somehow. Details are fuzzy. I held onto the Advents for years before selling the pair and the replacement tweeter about 8-10 years ago.
I love some of the age prejudice comments.  With the aging of the Boomers it seems like age prejudice is the "in" prejudice.  But we have to remember that Boomers are the only segment of our population that will age...all others are exempt. 
My first real audio system was built around a pair of the original large walnut Advents. I later added a second pair to have "stacked Advents". They were $250/pr back in  74-75, and were "fair traded" meaning that dealers were prohibited by Advent with selling them for less than that.