- #SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS DRIVER#
- #SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS MANUAL#
- #SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS PLUS#
- #SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS SERIES#
Source: Will love a bit more bass and attack to the sound. That's roughly a little more than half the price of a pair of.
#SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS PLUS#
Source: Buying the sonus faber domus grand pianos, plus sub, centre and rears was one of them for me.
#SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS SERIES#
Source: Sonus faber domus series speaker system these listings are based on the manufacturer's stated specs Brzmienie domusów nie ma śladów syntetyczności, jest w nim wiele z.
![sonus faber grand piano domus sonus faber grand piano domus](https://www.njuskalo.hr/image-w920x690/zvucnici/sonus-faber-grand-piano-domus-slika-93979787.jpg)
Sonus Faber Grand Piano Domus from 1, ring radiator midrange (size in inches, type): Our site gives you recommendations for downloading video that fits your interests. The sonus faber concerto domus is a slightly more compact version of the grand piano designed for use in smaller interior spaces. Sonus faber wizards describe their creations as instruments rather than speakers. According to the accompanying literature, a great deal of attention has been paid to the long-throw motor design to ensure linear behavior, particularly in the transition between forward and rear motion.Sonus Faber Grand Piano Domus.
#SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS DRIVER#
So, to add stiffness to the cone and optimize high-frequency dispersion, the 7" driver is fitted with a concave brass phase plug. While a two-way design with gentle slope filters gives you the advantages of simplicity, it also means the woofer is operating outside its ideal bandwidth, and is being asked to deliver the goods well into the treble. A 7" passive radiator with a textured cone surface controls the bass backwave. The Grand Piano is a two-way design utilizing a 7" acrylic-treated paper-cone woofer designed to SF's specs by SEAS, crossed over at 2.3kHz via a first-order (6dB/octave) filter to a ¾" silk-domed, ferrofluid-cooled SEAS tweeter. They're screwed in and glued, the goal being to reduce the low-frequency acoustic influence of the large, flat side panels on the drivers. The side panels, fabricated from 1"-thick contoured MDF and finished in gloss-black lacquer, are acoustically decoupled by the folded-over leatherette. To cut costs, the Concerto line uses a simpler design structure that calls for an ultra-rigid MDF top, bottom, front, and back to be built first, then covered in black leatherette. And, of course, it makes an impressive interior-decorating statement.
![sonus faber grand piano domus sonus faber grand piano domus](https://i.servimg.com/u/f94/19/33/85/38/img_2141.jpg)
Sonus uses solid wood, but by slicing it up, "jointing" it, and gluing the pieces together in vertical slats, stiffness is increased and resonances are broken up. That's why most speakers are made of far stiffer and less expensive MDF. Why are the cabinets so constructed? Because using solid wood would create seriously nasty resonances. I think it's more company "color" than anything else, though the cabinets of the expensive Sonus models differ from most others in that they're built from solid, seasoned (dried two years in a kiln) wooden staves, or slats, which are chosen one by one "so as to control the harmonic structure of the resonances." I'm not sure how one does such choosing merely by looking at a slat of wood, but it means both beauty and expense: each chosen stave must be clamped and hot-glued to the next, and finally hand-sanded and varnished like a fine violin. Is that an admission that its baffles "sing"-something no speaker designer with whom I'm familiar would advertise? I don't think so. Rather, the company sees the speaker baffle as "an instrument which amplifies sound, not merely a container of sonic power with technically approved dimensions." According to Sonus Faber's product literature, a love of violin making inspired the woodworking excellence-and not merely for its physical beauty. The Grand Piano is the top of Sonus Faber's "affordable" Concerto series (see Martin Colloms' review of the Concerto in the January 1998 Stereophile), and the company's first and only floorstanding speaker.
#SONUS FABER GRAND PIANO DOMUS MANUAL#
One thing I did learn: the company's incredibly sexist! The Grand Piano's owner's manual begins "Dear Sir." Puh-leeze!
![sonus faber grand piano domus sonus faber grand piano domus](https://i.servimg.com/u/f23/16/43/72/52/p6091411.jpg)
And I'm glad I didn't, both because my months with the Concerto Grand Piano were musically satisfying, and because it gave me an opportunity to learn more about Franco Serblin's company and why he opts for all that fancy wood. How could I say no to a review opportunity? So here's a pair of Sonus Fabers that stand on their own two feet, are graceful-looking but not "wooded out" to the max, and, at $3500/pair, would seem to be reasonably priced. Plus, you're paying a premium for the magnificent woodworking and exquisite design-something I wasn't into, since I live with my stereo in a basement office/workshop/listening room some (who shall remain nameless) refer to as the "habitat for inhumanity." And then you have to put them on costly stands. What I've never liked was the US price: too high. I've never heard a pair of the Italian Sonus Faber speakers I didn't like.