Integrated amp for Totem Sttaff


Hello all. I am new to the site but have been ravenously reading reviews and posts the last few weeks. I am in the proccess of replacing my 20 year old Boston A 400's with the Sttafs....Now my dilemma.I am currently running a Denon 2106 and have found a helpful dealer selling...Naim, Creek, Sim, Cambridge, Arcam. I am seriously considering jumping in the deep end of the audio pool and get a new power source as well to match....My problem..The dealer is a 3 hr drive away so auditioning the Totems and the matching amps is possible, im hoping your experince may help me have a better starting point if im to drive that far....I know other brands are out there, but I dont have access to viewing them, let alone buying them. Im hoping $ 1,500 cdn will put me in a good spot to get the most from the Totems...Thanks in advance.
mxwizard
Re: Their only redeeming product is the Rainmaker for their prices

I can't believe some of the comments I'm reading here. The Totems are awesome, and easily better than many products at similar prices. There is not a single bad model in the line. They very in their "flavor" a bit between models but they all are definately Totems. I can listen blindfolded and tell you if a speaker is a Totem or not. They certainly have a signature sound. It is one that I ultimately love as well as many other people. I've listened to much more expensive speakers, and said to myself, "they sound good... but their missing something that the Totems have", a certain "life" that the Totems breathe into music.

I've had much time to listen to all the speakers mentioned in this post, with varying electronics. The Sttafs contrary to what someone else posted are the easiest speakers to drive in the Totem line. They sound amazing for thier price to boot. One of my friends actually said that they sound better than his own Martin Logan Summits, an over 10K speaker! There is a certain magic to the way an extremely simple two-way speaker with a high grade crossover can present the music. I own the Hawks myself, in a system that every other component costs significantly more. (my previous speakers were about $5,000, but the Hawks are much better) I auditioned probably about 40 different speakers before I settled on them, and even then it was between the Hawks and another pair of Totems. The Totems were simply better.

The comment about HiVi drivers is completely nonsensical. What you will see in the Totem line, is that unlike other companies who "sell out" and use drivers from all one manufacturer in all of thier designs to save cost, Totem chooses whatever driver fits the demands of the product that they are building THE BEST. If Vince thought that another driver would have worked better in the Forest, he would have used it guarunteed! The HiVi is an excellent driver with a 3" voicecoil and an extrordinarily long throw for a 6 1/2" woofer. This is one reason that the Forest can have such amazing bass extension for a small two-way. Just because HiVi doesn't gouge on their prices, now the entire speaker becomes undesirable? Well, I say if you think you know better, than why not build one yourself? Trust me it isn't as easy as it looks, I've tried. Also, even with HiVi woofers, and all your own labor and parts procurement, it will still cost you more and most likely sound worse.

One thing you'll find, is that upon first glance the Totems do seem expensive, maybe because of how small they are or how simple they look ect. Some people just can't see forking out that kind of cash for something that's so "small". I've heard people say; "but you could get so much MORE speaker for that kind of money" without ever even listening. If "more speaker" was what mattered most, then I could have bought pretty much every speaker Radio Shack has to offer and chained them all together in a room full of drivers for the price I paid for my Hawks but it would have sucked.

No matter what people will say, the looks of a speaker still play a very important role about how people will percieve their "sound" or "Value". Totems, while attractive and very wife friendly, are smaller and seen as not very serious by many people. It's ashame that that makes the decision for many people. I can't tell you how many times someone's posted to upgrade my speakers on my system and how my electronics are way beyond my speakers ect. But, they have not heard my system! It will blow your mind. If you closed your eyes and pretended my speaker was a pinyata you couldn't find it with a stick if you tried, all that you would find are musicians and instruments. It's that good. IMHO :)
Cayin Audio 265ai...best kept secret on the market! http://www.hometheaterhifi.com/volume_11_1/cayin-265ai-integrated-amplifer-3-2004.html
09-09-08: Hifisoundguy
Cayin Audio 265ai...best kept secret on the market!
What happened to your enthusiasm for the Onkyo A-9555?
Mr Audiobroke:-))

Of course, beauty is in the eyes of the beholders so I am not going to make any comment on that. Our perceived value are simply different.

Regarding your definition of cheap speakers, I think I could still get good sound without having to spend a few kilo bucks for a pair of speakers. PSB Alpha B1 sold for less than $299 per pair (almost as low as Radio Shack speakers) will beat the Totem Mite, twice the price of the PSB Alpha B1, hands down in its high, mid range, and bass definition. I did A/B auditioned these at a local dealer, both driven by a budget NAD amp C325 BEE.

I could give you a few more examples of overpriced models that Totem made.

Mite $750 per pair vs Usher S520 $450 per pair. Usher would win hands down (high, mid, bass definition, and bass extension) I did A/B them at my local Totem dealer that also carried Usher as well. Score Usher 4 Mite 0

I don't understand why Totem still sells the Mite. They are more expensive than the Usher and the level of sonic performance is nowhere near. Likewise, the Mite would stand no chance against the Dynaudio Audience 42 (they are sold at the same competitive price range)

Dynaudio Focus 140 $2K per pair vs Totem Model 1 $2.3K per pair. Dynaudio Focus edged the Model 1 on high and bass definition and extension. The Model 1 is better than the Dynaudio Focus 140 but only with the mid range.
Score Dynaudio 3.0 Totem Model 1 1.5

Silverline Prelude $1.3K per pair vs Totem The One 3.5K per pair. No need to go there since the Silverline Prelude is listed in Stereophile's Budget Components and the Totem The One is not.

I used to own the Rainmakers/Model 1 and currently own a Storm so I could say that I am somewhat familiar with Totem speakers.

I do not know what your definition of "sell out" was so I am not going to comment on that. That would be "business practice" and has nothing to do with audio sir:-))

Kind regards
Don't mean to hi jack the thread here. Sorry Gs:-))

You can check with yout local Totem dealers and they will tell you how many times that the Arro and the Rainmaker outsell the Model 1 and Forest. Like everyone else, I was looking for a good deal and they are always giving me discount on the Model 1, the Forest, and the Mani 2 but not a chance that I would get a discount on the Rainmaker or the Arro even though I am their repeated customers.

I thought that you listen to music with your ears and not your eyes:-))

Kind regards