View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
Jenn[_2_] Jenn[_2_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,752
Default The Linkwitz Lab Orion

In article
,
Boon wrote:

On May 12, 7:07?pm, Bret L wrote:
?I've heard a couple different Orion installations, with very
different amps, in different rooms. They are not exactly my thing, but
they certainly are a remarkable design. They do certain things
extremely well.

?The "mainstream" (sic) high end audio industry (sic) likes to pretend
they do not exist.

?They are far superior in terms of what they do presentationwise to
many of the popular high end saloon speaker brands. Since they are not
a saloon vendable product and Linkwitz does not buy full page ads in
Stereopile this presents an issue for the high end press.

?I don't own an Orion installation, and I have no plans to do so in
the near future. I personally prefer the articulation and delineation
of a god horn setup, and although I readily acknowledge the
superiority of electronic crossovers and multi-amping, I am content so
far with the passive crossover network driven by a halfway decent tube
amplifier. ?But the Orions and Linkwitz lab certainly have proven to
be a good revelator of high end bull****.


Maybe, maybe not. Linkwitz is a good designer and has a great track
record, but the prices he charges for a finished pair of Orions is
hardly a good value. If Scott was able to build them for next to
nothing, then he could have done a lot worse.

Now Nelson Pass' First Watt "kitchen table" amps are truly interesting
designs that sound great...and he charges fair prices for them. I
reviewed the F3, and it offered all of the sonic benefits of a great
SET amp without the hassles and idiosyncracies. I wouldn't mind owning
one in the near future.


I visited Pass' place in Reno while I lived there. He's a very
interesting man.