There are some that love the sound of these speakers and truly enjoy them and that's what the hobby is all about. If you enjoy the music that comes out of them and it makes you happy......then money well spent. I owned the Harbeth 40.1's and sold them in 5 months. Please see my thread if you want from years ago on why I didn't like these speakers. The responses I got from my post ranged from ; the cables you used ere wrong, you had the wrong electronics, the room wasn't right for the Harbeth's......etc, etc. My thinking and it is of my opinion and school of thought that if it is a truly good speaker , it will sound good no matter what cables, what electronics or room that they are in, they could and should sound even better if the upstream variables that I have were well thought out and addressed. Mr. Shaw knows what he is doing ; they were just not a speaker for me.
What Is So Special About Harbeth?
SLike probably all of you, I just received notice from Audiogon of a 20% discount on Harbeth XD. I clicked on the tab and found that the sale price is about $2700. I have read so many glowing comments here about Harbeth — as if just saying the name is the password for entering aural nirvana. I admit, I haven’t listened to Harbeth speakers. But looking at these, they just look like smallish bookshelf speakers. I’m not questioning how good others say these speakers are, but HOW do they do it out of an ordinary-looking box?
Is it the wood? Is it the bracing? Is it the crossover components? Is it the cone material? What is the reason why these Harbeth’s are such gems compared to other bookshelf speakers? What is it about the construction or technology that makes these speakers a deal at $2700 on sale versus the $800, 900 or $1,000 that others normally cost? What is the secret that makes audiophiles thrill to get such a costly bargain?
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- 167 posts total
- 167 posts total