Well, I can't answer your question, but I did own Rogers Ls3/5a's that were purchased new in late 1978 or early 1979. I don't know what the ohm rating was but they only had a single pair of banana connections on the back. I regret ever selling them in 1985 and would love to have another pair today for the spare room, but proper setup would be hard to pull off. The bass was a little humpy and ragged and the highs were not nearly as good as the Reynauds that I have now, BUT it was the overall sound that I liked and I just ended up listening to the music and forgetting about the system when I had them. They sounded bad in large rooms, needed to be far from the front wall and mounted very high up to sound best. I had them on three cement blocks stacked end to end which would be about 45"+ off the floor. They didn't sound good with SS and even my Mac 30's couldn't push them very well in the room (which had very high ceilings). I ended up running them with Stereo 70's as mono blocks and later added two homebrew subwoofers with tube crossovers which were run by the Mac 30's (never tried the Roger's subwoofers). They needed all of this (not the subs though) to sound their best. The room was a good one (approx. 10' x 15') with slap plaster walls that curved into the ceiling, wood floors and a large wool rug, so I can't imagine that it was the room that was fussy. I also asked the same question as you a year ago when I was hot for another pair and was told that the early models were the best and that the Rogers JR-149's (the round tube shaped version) were even better. I had tried to purchase the JR-149's in the early 80's but was never able to locate a pair.
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- 10 posts total
- 10 posts total