Definitive Technology BP-2002, BP-2X, C/L/R 2002, C-2002, L-2002 Brochure

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Definitive Technology BP-2002 Speaker System
BP-2002 Main Speaker, C/L/R-2002 Center, BP-2X Surrounds
NEW BP-2002TL
NOW even more incredible
with 250-watt amp
to be entertained, to relax and focus on the music, not to have to hold my head precisely the same distance
By Brent Butterworth
“It was literally staggering!”
“…you’ll be blown away by the BP2002s and
demand
we that you go hear ‘em.”
Overall Rating
One of the best we’ve ever heard
A. A bracket on its
behind makes the
BP-2X easy to hang
on the wall.
B. The BP-2002 has a
significantly different
design than its sib-
ling, the BP-2000, but
its sound is similar.
I can’t understand why everyone’s so up in arms about downsizing. I’ll admit all this corporate layoff stuff has its bleak, depressing side, but for a guy who grew up ordering “husky”-size pants from the Sears catalog—and who certainly hasn’t gotten any smaller since then—the word downsizing always has a positive ring to it.
There’s one recent downsizing that we can be happy about: the new Definitive Technology BP­2002 speaker. Flush with the incredible suc­cess of last year’s BP-2000, which we’ve heard is cur­rently the best­selling speaker in the price range, Definitive decided to see if it could cre­ate a smaller version of the BP-2000, one that would
B
A
better fit apartments and smaller living rooms (not to mention small­er budgets).
The result is the BP-2002, which
looks almost identical to the BP-
“It’s very tight, very well-defined and very deep.”
it is: It uses a bipolar driver config­uration, with speaker drivers mounted on both the front and back panels of the speaker; and each speaker has its own built-in powered subwoofer.
Seems I’ve become something of a champion for the bipolar sound. That’s because most A/V writers judge gear by some sort of theoreti­cal benchmark of “accuracy” (as if they know what the hell a certain recording’s supposed to sound like in the first place), and many con­sider bipolar sound to be inherently inaccurate. I prefer to judge sound by simply how much I dig it. I want
“…the speakers sounded fantastic….”
C
“...the big, exciting bipolar sound is what
does it for me....”
from my stereo speakers so I can get pinpoint sonic imaging. And the big, exciting bipolar sound is what does it for me (especially on the purist, “accurate” stereo-miked recordings I’ve produced myself). The mix of the direct sound from the drivers in the front and reflected sound from the rear drivers makes both music and movies sound more spacious, and less like they’re coming from a set of speakers. The downside is that you don’t get the pinpoint sonic imaging that conventional, direct
radiating speakers provide. But you do get a much bigger sweet spot, so the speakers sound good from
one end of the couch to the
other.... I’m here to
tell you that I’ve eked more long­term pleasure out of bipolars than from any other
speaker I’ve used.
The BP-2000 used two midrange/ woofer drivers and
C. The C/L/R shares
the same tweeter
and mid/woofers as
the 2002, creating a
smooth sonic blend.
a single tweeter on each side; Definitive downsized the BP-2002 in part by laying off one of the mid/woofs. Thus, each side of
“...music and movies sound more spacious...”
a BP-2002 has one 5.25-inch poly-cone mid/woof and one 1-inch aluminum dome tweeter. The crossovers, which keep the high frequencies out of the woofer and the lows out of the tweeter, are set at slightly different frequencies for each half of the speaker to help even out the frequency response.
Another place Definitive chose to cut is the subwoofer—in each BP-2002, Definitive uses a 12-inch driver powered by a 125-watt amp, as compared to the BP­2000’s 15-inch driver and 300-watt amp. You can hook up the subs in a variety of ways. The back panel of each speaker has three sets of binding posts: one for the tweeters, one for the mid/woofs, and one for the sub. Nearby are two line-level inputs on RCA jacks, one for a conventional line­level input, and one designed for use with the subwoofer output on Dolby Digital processors. Even though using the line­level inputs can give you a sonic advan­tage, I found that simply running one set of speaker cables to the speaker and installing the provided jumpers between the three sets of binding posts was by far the easiest way to use the BP-2002s. Given that the speakers sounded fantastic this way, I didn’t sweat the hookup any further.
“The BP2002s definitely sounded the most to my liking….”
With such a significantly different design—and a cabinet that measures 7 inches shorter, 1.7 inches slimmer, and 2.2 inches shallower—you wouldn’t expect the BP-2002 to sound quite the same as the BP-2000. It doesn’t, although the two resemble each other sonically far more than they differ. We found that the BP-2002 actually sounds more open and spacious than the BP-2000, probably because the 2000’s twin mid/woofs produce a very tight vertical dispersion pattern. The BP-2000’s a bit more dynamic, with somewhat lower bass response and more ease at extremely high volumes, so I prefer it for movie soundtracks. But I think I actually like the
BP-2002 a little better for music.
Associate editor Brian Clark and I com­pared the BP-2002 with four other speakers we had on hand, including our reference NHT VT-2s, the Radias reviewed in this issue, and a pair of DCM TimeFrame 8.0s we just got in. The BP-2002s definitely sounded the most to my liking—although they produced a slight lower-treble empha­sis that made voices sound a little less smooth in the midrange than with the NHT and DCM models, the dynamics and spa­ciousness of the BP-2002’s sound were just staggering. And I’m not just saying that. It was literally staggering! When we played “Once I Wished a Tree Upside Down” from
“...I’ve eked more long­term pleasure out of bipolars than from any other speaker I’ve used.”
the Indian percussionist Trilok Gurtu’s Living Magic CD, a tune that offers perhaps the best sonic imaging I’ve ever heard, I was surprised enough that I bounced back against my seat. I’ve heard this tune on hundreds of speakers, but never to better effect than on the BP-2002s. And the bass is really, really outstanding, better than you get with most stand-alone subwoofers. It’s very tight, very well-defined, and very deep. Brian basically agreed with me, finding no problems worth complaining about, and raving about the big sweet spot.
To round the BP-2002s into a complete home theater system, Definitive offers the C/L/R-2002 center speaker (which they also sell as a main left/right speaker), and the BP-2X surround speaker.
The C/L/R’s designed to match the BP­2002 as closely as possible; it uses two of the BP-2002’s mid/woof drivers and one of
“…you do get a much bigger sweet spot.”
its tweeters. This way, you get an exception­ally smooth sonic blend, so that sounds change very little in timbre as they move from left to center to right. As you’d expect of a center speaker, it’s shielded so you can place it atop your TV without distorting the picture.
Like the BP-2002, the BP-2X is bipolar, so it has a woofer and tweeter on each of its two angled sides. The tweeters and woofers
mirror those used in the BP-2002 and C/L/R-2002. A bracket on the rear makes the BP-2X easy to hang on the wall, and it’s
“...the dynamics and spa­ciousness of the BP2002’s sound are just staggering.”
available in white or black. The bipolar design makes for a nice compromise between the super-spacious surround sound effect you get with THX-type dipolar sur­round speakers, and the precise sonic placement you get with direct-radiating sur­round speakers. Audio critics have begun to argue heatedly about whether dipoles or direct-radiators are better for Dolby Digital; in fact, senior editor Al Griffin and I com­pletely disagree (I love dipoles, while Al prefers to go direct). The BP-2X lets you play it safe with sound that’s more direc­tional than a dipole, but more spacious than a direct-radiator.
In our testing, we encounter a lot of dif-
ferent-sounding speakers, and hear a lot of
-“...the bass is really, really outstanding, better
than you get with most stand-alone subwoofers.”
differing opinions from our writers and edi­tors. This makes it impossible to say that you’re sure to love (or hate) a certain speak­er. But we’re at least as sure as we can ever remember being in saying this: We think you’ll be blown away by the BP-2002s, and demand that you go hear ’em!
Brent Butterworth
“I’ve heard this tune on hundreds of speakers, but never to better effect than on the BP2002s.”
11105 Valley Heights Dr., Baltimore, MD 21117 (410) 363-7148
Reprinted with permission from the November 1996 issue of CurtCo’s HOME THEATER. Copyright © 1996 by CurtCo Freedom Group. All Rights Reserved.
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