Definitive Technology SuperCube II, StudioCinema 350, StudioMonitor 350, C 2002, L 2002 Brochure & Specs

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test report
BY DANIEL KUMIN
Definitive Technology
StudioCinema 350 Home Theater System
SOUND & VISION
off the top cap and undo the grille, like a drawstring­pajama bottom, to reveal the drivers.) The C/L/R 2002 center speaker is substantially larger than its flankers. In fact, it’s about twice the size of two StudioMonitor 350s laid end to end and has two of the same woofers on either side of its tweeter.
For the surround speakers, Definitive reverted to form with the wedge-shaped BP1.2X, a bipolar design with a woofer and a tweeter on each of its angled faces. When mounted on (or near) the sidewalls, the speaker radiates sound toward the front, middle, and back of the room, creating a somewhat more diffuse sound field. Rounding out the bottom octaves is Def Tech’s newest subwoofer, the ridiculously tiny SuperCube II. This new-generation sub cheats the laws of physics and gets big bass from a “too­small” enclosure by using very-long-throw drivers,
advanced cabinet-venting techniques (dual passive radia­tors in this case), and an ultra-high-power amplifier with built-in equalization. The SuperCube II’s sophistication is evident on its control panel, too (photo below). There are no heat sinks thanks to its super-efficient, cool-running Class D amplifier. And there’s a complete set of connectors, including stereo input/output for both line- and speaker­level signals plus a single LFE (low-frequency effects) input for a receiver or processor’s sub output. Controls are unusually complete, too, with continuously variable knobs for level, both low-
and high-pass crossover, and phase. This rather rare high-pass control lets you ne-tune the bass that’s sent on to the satellites via the line-level outputs. There’s high-pass ltering on the speaker-level outputs, too, but it’s xed at 80 Hz.
I set up the StudioCinema system with the Monitor 350s
on the 28-inch-tall stands and the C/L/R 2002 on top of my
30-inch Princeton Graphics HDTV monitor. The BP1.2X surround speakers went on sidewall shelves just behind the listening position and about 6 feet off the oor.
ounded in 1990 when Sandy Gross left Polk Audio to start a speaker company with a different design philosophy, Definitive Technology quickly established a reputation for building tower speakers that deliver spacious, full-range sound at reasonable
prices. The big sound that denes Def Tech speakers is achieved using a bipolar conguration, with rear-ring, in-phase drivers added to the usual front­mounted drivers. When I rst set eyes on Def Tech’s compact StudioCinema 350 system, the question that came to mind was whether the company could pull off the same trick with much smaller monopole speakers.
In a departure from Def Techs tower tradition, the StudioCinema 350 is a subwoofer/satellite system built around a very small front left/right bookshelf speaker, the StudioMonitor 350. It’s a shade smaller all around than
a 12-pack of longnecks and has only a 5
1
/4-inch woofer, but the side-ring port is a passive radiator measuring a full 8 inches across. Like Def Techs tower speakers, the StudioMonitor 350 has wood end caps, in this case nished with an elegant piano-black lacquer, and a black knit grille that wraps around the four sides. (You can pop
“The results were little short of stunning ... a genuine
cinematic experience ... I was impressed”
“very high quality sound for music and movies”
“Played behind a curtain, the StudioMonitor 350s would convince even seasoned audiophiles they were listening to larger speakers”
“they sounded warm and full even on bass-rich pop music ... tonal balance through the critical midrange was nearly perfect”
F
on nearly all Def Tech speakers in my experience but without any of the midbass hype or treble dullness such adjectives may suggest. Tonal balance through the critical midrange was nearly perfect on my standard rota­tion of male and female vocals, falling just about midway between my two long-term reference speakers. I sensed a very slight rise in the upper-midrange presence region, but this was so mild, and so smooth and free from “honk” or hoot, as to be inconsequential. In fact, with movies it might well add to denition and clarity.
I thought I was past being wowed by small speakers that
deliver big sound, but I must admit I was
impressed by the StudioMonitor 350/SuperCube II combo. It played remarkably loud without obvious dynamic limits, and the pint-size sub performed amazingly well. Stereo imaging was tight, with an unusually solid center soloist projecting out in front of the soundstage.
Before ring up the complete StudioCinema system, I did my usual center-channel test to see how closely the C/L/R 2002 matched the pair of StudioMonitor 350s anking it. With mono voices as the source, the match was very close and better than with many center speakers Ive auditioned. Heard off-axis, the C/L/R 2002’s sound was a bit less clear and dened but, again, the tonal shift was a lot less pronounced than Ive heard from many other horizontally oriented center speakers. Of course, if you want a perfect match, you could use a single StudioMonitor 350 as a center speaker, provided your setup can accommodate it (the 350 is only about 4 inches taller that the C/L/R 2002 and costs $250 less).
Turning to movies, I popped
The Affair of the Necklace
DVD into my player. I’m a sucker for a good costume epic,
Denitive Technology advised me that the StudioMonitor 350 system as a whole was engineered to have the best sub­sat blend congured the way most consumers are likely to set things up when they rst tear off the packaging that
is, with an A/V receivers subwoofer output connected to the SuperCube II’s LFE input jack and with its bass man- agement set for “small” speakers all around, yielding the standard 80-Hz crossover. And Im happy to report that, monkey as I might with connection layouts and crossover settings, I could not improve on this arrangement.
Even though this is clearly a sub/sat system that’s meant to be used with a powered sub, I began by listening to stereo music with the StudioMonitor 350s alone after all, Def Tech refers to the diminutive speakers 8-inch passive radiator as a pressure-driven subwoofer”.
The results were little short of stunning. Played behind a curtain, the StudioMonitor 350s would convince even seasoned audiophiles that they were listening to larger speakers. They sounded warm and full even on bass-rich pop music like James Taylor’s
Hourglass. A pair of 350s would be perfect for a den or other small listening spaces, but for serious home theater youll want a subwoofer.
Fortunately, the SuperCube II is a corker. It blended seamlessly with the StudioMonitor 350s, extending the bottom end dramatically and delivering all the heft you could ask for on pop and classical music alike. Stereo music sounded powerful, warm, and seductively rich as it does
and they dont come much more sumptuous than this. (Or than Hillary Swank’s lips, for that matter.) The soundtrack to this pre-Revolutionary (the French one) historical romp depends on a wide variety of music, period and otherwise, and includes a huge palette of interior acoustics, with subtle and dramatic changes in ambience, echoing door slams, passing coach-and-fours, and lots more. The Def Tech system unfailingly followed these demands, projecting a focused, seamless sound eld that never once diverted my attention from the screen. Dialogue was crisp and clear, remaining effortlessly intelligible even at the barest whisper. The bipolar surrounds excelled in conveying all of the ambience, discrete effects, and surround-channel music this soundtrack had to deliver.
One thing
The Affair of the Necklace soundtrack does not offer a great deal of is big bass, so for that I pulled out a few serious torture tracks, including the 1998 remake of Godzilla. Forget about size: the tiny subwoofer held its own down to below 30Hz, and played loud to boot. In a direct comparison with my much larger and far more expensive 15-inch reference sub, the cube couldnt play as loud, but it put out enough bass for a genuine cinematic experience in my 3,000-cubic-foot studio. (And when asked to play excessively loud, the SuperCube II simply muted momentarily, instead of obviously distorting.)
In nal analysis, Denitive Technologys StudioCinema 350 is a very ne compact system among the best in this size class that Ive heard. If youre looking for small speakers that deliver big sound in real life as well as in advertising copy, you’ve found some.
11433 Cronridge Dr. • Owings Mills, MD 21117 • (410)363-7148
Visit us at www.definitivetech.com
The DVD of the costume epic The Affair of the Necklace offered a huge palette of sounds to challenge the Definitive Technology speakers.
A pair of 350s [by themselves] would be perfect for a den or other small listening spaces
the SuperCube II is a corker ... extend­ing the bottom end dramatically and delivering all the heft you could ask for
a focused, seamless sound eld ... dialogue was crisp and clear, remaining effortlessly intelligible even at the barest whisper
forget about size: the tiny subwoofer held its own down to below 30Hz, and played loud to boot
stunning ... a very ne compact system among the best in this size class
StudioMonitor C/L/R 2002 BP1.2X SuperCube II
350
(front L/R) (center) (surround) (subwoofer)
the biploar surrounds excelled in con­veying all the ambience, discrete effects and surround-channel music
HIGH POINTS
Very high-quality sound for music
and movies.
Superbly compact.
Nicely nished.
LOW POINTS
Not inexpensive.
Plain styling.
TWEETER 1-inch dome 1-inch dome two 1-inch domes
Excerpted from the StudioCinema 350 Test Report, Sound & Vision Magazine, November 2002.
WOOFER 5
1
/4
-inch cone two 5
1
/4
-inch cones two 4-inch cones 8-inch cone
ENCLOSURE ported (8-inch ported sealed ported (two 8-inch
passive radiator) passive radiators)
POWER ———1,250 watts
INPUTS AND multiway biwirable multiway multiway RCA line-level inputs OUTPUTS binding posts binding posts binding posts and outputs and LFE
input; multiway binding-
post speaker-level inputs and outputs
DIMENSIONS 7 x 10
5
/8
x 9
3
/8
21 x 6
3
/4
x 12 9
1
/4
x 10
1
/2
x 6 12 x 12
1
/4
x 12
(WxHxD) inches inches inches inches
WEIGHT 12 pounds 29 pounds 8 pounds 38 pounds
FINISH piano-black lacquer or piano-black lacquer or black woodgrain with piano-black lacquer or
golden cherry end caps, golden cherry end caps, black knit grille; or matte golden cherry end caps,
black knit wrap-around grille; black knit wrap- white with white grille black knit wrap-
or gloss white with white grille around grille around grille
PRICE $498 a pair $499 $350 a pair $899
Total $2,246 (or $249 a piece)
S&V
fast facts
MANUFACTURER Denitive Technology, Dept. S&V, 11433 Cronridge Dr., Owings Mills, MD 21117; www.denitivetech.com; 410-363-7148
Definitive Technology’s StudioCinema 350 System received the prestigious
Sound &
Vision Reviewer’s Choice Award
honoring
the years very best products.
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