Martin Logan Dynamo 700 vs. REL T5


Has anyone heard both of these subs? I have the Dynamo 700 and have been very impressed. A friend of mine is planning to get one as well, but I saw that the REL T5 is available at Music Direct for $499 which is a few hundred under the ML and I've noted that REL is highly respected for subwoofer on this forum.

The Dynamo is a 300 watt (600 watt peak) 10 inch, and the REL T5 appears to be a 125 watt 8 inch.

Will it have similar punch for home theater? Specs are not the whole store, but at least I know what we have in the Martin Logan.

My friend will be using his subs to go with Focal 807v large bookshelf speakers so I was interested in the high level inputs that appear to be very seperate from the low level .1 input.

Any thoughts?
mceljo
Thanks, I'll try to look for it if I get a chance. With a baby due any day, or minute, my chances to get out are very limited.

I did call a Magnolia Hi Fi that's close enough for my friend to stop by for a listen and confirmed that they have both subs in the showroom.

The salesman's opinion was that the REL T5 was a little bit cleaner and a better choice in a small stereo setup, but that the Dynamo 700 was unmatched in it's price range for any home theater use. When asked what else he'd have available for demo in the price range he mentioned Definitive Technology, but said that he thought the Dynamo was the best. Hopefully, my friend will have a chance this weekend to stop by and find out for himself.
I think you need atleast a 12inch sub for hometheater use, unless your room is small.
I don't consider my listening room small because it has a very high ceiling, but the 10 inch Dynamo 700 has more than enough for home theater. I have the volume on it turned most of the way down and can still make things move at the appropriate times.

When I purchased it I considered getting the larger 12 inch Dynamo 1000, but now can't imagine why I'd want or need anything more. I wasn't expecting it to have as much power as it does. It's only downside is that it needs to weigh more or be strapped to the floor. I finally converted it to the forward firing configuration because it was vibrating my laminate flooring and moving around. Putting it on spikes actually make it much worse.

If I used it for two channel listening, I'm sure there are more musical subwoofers available but I really have no complaints.