My Caladan Impressons


Ron Brenay’s video that introduced the Caladan speakers (by Clayton Shaw Audio Labs) created a lot of buzz and a lot of orders, but actual reviews have not yet come out. Since many are curious to know what they sound like, I thought I would share my impressions of the Caladans, which I’ve now had for over a month.

In a word: The Caladans are one of the most detailed and revealing speakers I have ever heard, and they do this without sounding analytical or harsh. And because they are an open baffle design, the sound is free of the resonances and aberrations of cabinets – a sound that’s hard to describe, but it has a clarity that can often be startling. These are truly special speakers at any price, but especially at their current low price-point.  

In terms of the overall sound, the Caladans are natural sounding, with very good tonality and imaging. I think I can safely say that these speakers add very little in the way of coloration. They will quickly reveal the personality of your amplifiers and upstream components.

They are honest in their presentation and very musical. In many ways they are reminiscent of a good electrostatic speaker (think Quad 57). The music completely detaches from the speakers and floats in the air with holographic images and excellent tonality. The soundstage is very wide and tall, as well as very deep and layered. The sound is also very quick and nimble – even the bass.  

The bass is certainly one of the best characteristics of the Caladans. It is full (not lean) yet still very detailed and textured. And it goes surprisingly deep. I have a pair of subs in my room, but didn’t give a moment’s consideration to using them, because I felt the quality and depth of the bass was so good, the subs weren’t needed and would probably even diminish the quality of the bass.

The mids are clean, detailed and very engaging. For me, the sweet spot of the Caladans is male vocals. I hear detail, nuance, and spot-on tonality, with zero artifacts or coloration. These qualities seem to be easier for most speakers to achieve in the higher frequencies with female vocals. The Caladans deliver brilliantly on female vocals as well. But unlike some speakers that seem to have a touch more coloration or less definition in the lower male frequencies, with the Caladans the male vocals are stunning, and don’t take a backseat to female vocals in any way. Leonard Cohen’s deepest rumblings are just as precisely defined and finely etched as any of the notes sung by Diana Krall two octaves higher. Male vocals are scary good.

The highs are lively and airy, but never harsh. Drums and cymbals sound real and resonant. They pop, snap, and sizzle with excellent dynamics.

In terms of flaws or weaknesses, I’m having a hard time coming up with anything. If you like a warm, richly colored sound, these may not be your cup of tea. But if you want to hear deep into the recording, with detail and resolution that is hard to match, you’ll love these speakers.

Be advised that these speakers benefit from some break-in time. They sound even better at 100 hours than they do out of the box. I especially like how they sound with tubes.

I am more than pleased with the sound of my Caladans, and on top of that, they are beautiful to look at (I went with the cherry wood). I apologize if this report sounds almost too good to be true, but I don’t know what else to say. I’m very impressed with the Caladans. I expect the reviewers will be as well.

wester17

The X3 morphed into the X4 which used smaller better woofs and way better parts.....then he upgraded the parts again and now you have an X4 that is really good......much better everything.  However, Spatial now has a new top of the line speaker, suppose to be even better.....at $11.5K.

I will be posting pics and info soon on my open baffle speaker that anyone can build for very little $.  Uses the same woofs as the Caladan but uses a $50 Planar that goes all the way down to 400hz......and it has NO crossover on it.  Won't play seriously loud without a cap (which you can add)....but, OH MY GOD, is this transparent.  Am tweaking it more over the next couple of weeks and will add pics and info on my website when it is more completed.   I will describe in full detail how to make this thing and even more wild versions.....like two 12s facing forward and two more facing the rear......and above a line source using 4 of these planars.....However, still less money for all that than a Caladan......and this would blow your mind!  No, this is not for sale.....just want to share info.

What is really so cool is that you can order all the parts today and in two weeks you can be listening to the finished speaker......no 6 month wait.....and I am pretty darn sure this is much better sound.......all for $1800 in parts (including wood, exotic footers, WBT binding posts, wire, etc.  $200 less money if you hardwire into it....eliminating the binding posts.

However, for a plug and play, the Caladan looks like a seriously good speaker.  And it has resale value....your own creation will not.  The Caladan is not the best speaker in the world.....you will be upgrading....he he.

So, no joy with Caladan delivery, now being told my 1/14 order wont happen until mid August. Prospective purchasers, beware as the web site  when l last looked had been changed to stating 90 days for new orders, clearly untrue at this point. 
 

I'm probably going to cancel my order.  I was told by Clayton in May that my late February order would probably ship mid to late July. Clayton should at least be upfront that there are still delays in production.  The group email he sent out made it seem that was not longer the case. 

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