GRAYSCALE
Befo re Calib ratio n
test reports
outstanding transparency in the mid to
high frequencies. This yields the kind of
treble that doesn’t sound at all bright, yet
is all t here: clear, quick, a nd extended,
and not in the least bit forward or sparkly.
Voices were un failingly even, balanced,
and, well, neutral. Most spea kers, even
high-end ones, “romance” the vocal range
with a subtle extra helping of warmth in
the 100- to 200-Hz octave, but not the Classias. This occasionally made them sound a
little “cool,” but it also encouraged close,
high-resolution listeni ng — the kind of
sound you hea r in a good recording-studio control room.
Something analogous seemed to be happening in the bottom octaves, too, where
the C336s delivered solid output to 40 Hz
or so, but w it h less of that penulti mateoctave response hump that enhances t he
impression of bass on so many speakers.
The overall effect on material like Richard
Thompson’s “Hide It Away” (from you? me?
us?) was intensely but effortlessly intimate,
without the tinge of low-end bloat that this
midbass-heav y track can often reveal.
On the multichannel front, Infinity’s layout demonstrated some welcome abilities.
The CC225 center speaker’s tonal match
to the C336s was excellent — not perfect,
but impressively close for a two-way horizontal design. For instance, comparisons
of TV and FM a nnouncers between single- and dual-speaker mono revealed only
modest shifts of vocal weig ht and “hoo,”
even among baritone m a le voic es. The
tonal stability wasn’t quite as good when
the center speaker was listened to off-axis,
but it was still well above average.
The C255ES s u r round sp eaker s per fo r med ad m irably i n b ot h d ipole and
bipole settings. They delivered plenty of
clea n level in my fa i rly large l isteni ng
room — even in dipole mode — and made
a tig ht enoug h tonal match to the C336s
in bipole position to please even t he most
demanding multichannel-music maven.
Gone Baby Gone is one of those 2-hour
films that demand full-bore, all-channels
excellence for on ly about 90 seconds —
but those 90 seconds are absolutely critical. The brief a ction inte rludes a r e a ll
the more shocking a nd powerful for t he
dynamic range t hey carry, and the Infinity suite delivered this with hea r t-stopping conviction. For t he rest of the film,
I was ent irely engrossed by its seamless
tapestry of dialogue, street-scene and inte-
rior ambience, and subtle musical score. Is
there any higher praise for a soundtrack or
a sound system?
Last but not least is the PSW310W sub,
which has an active 10-inch driver complemented by two 10-inch cones that serve
as passive radiators (ports, more or less).
It also incorporates Infinity’s RABOS single-band parametric EQ, which can help
to reduce a primary room resona nce. (A
kit that includes a test-tone CD and setup
graphing tools is a $ 60 option.)
The PSW310W didn’t get much of a workout from Gone Baby Gone, so I turned to a
handful of my favorite subwoofer torture
tests from classics like Godzilla a nd The
War of the Worlds. The verdict: impressive. The woof goes ad mir ably low with
substantial power, and it sounds clean and
tight all the way down. The ’zilla footfalls
lacked some of t he wall-bending 20 Hz of
my everyday sub (a 12-incher about twice
the Infinity’s price), but they had plenty of
slam just the same. It’s a solid sub — and
did I mention that it’s wireless?
BOTTOM LINE
Wit h t he Classia spe akers, Infin ity h as
managed to combine high sonic capabilities with striking appearance and respectable value. Visually, this system might not
sat isf y ever y taste (for the record, I dug
them), but for those to whom it s unconventional looks spe ak, it should appea l
st rongly. Be t ter yet, they ’l l also enj oy
sound that’s just as striking. S&V
INFINITYSYSTEMS.COM ::
516- 674-4463
Key Features
GRAYSCALE
Test Bench
the center speaker’s bass-totreble balance rises at slightly
less than 1 dB per octave, with
reasonably uniform directivity
up to ±30º. Both speakers’
mid/tweeter arrays emitted
fairly acute noises when given
our ramped test signals at frequencies below their specified
bass limit. The C255ES surround speaker displays the narrow bandwidth and irregularities typical of bidirectional
speakers. The PSW310W subwoofer has response up to
400 Hz when its crossover is
bypassed, making it useful for
pairing with small satellites.
The sub has relatively limited
dynamic capability and low-fre quency extension, but its
sound-pressure abilities are
uniformly distributed over its
bandwidth. — Tom Nousain e
Surround ■■ 135 Hz to 16.1 kHz ±6.7 dB
Subwoo fer ■■32 Hz to 130 Hz ±3.2 dB
L/R ■■51 Hz to 19.1 kHz ±3.7 dB
Cent er ■■156 Hz to 17 kHz ±3.9 dB
C336 ($1,798/pair)
:: 1-in tweeter ; 4-in midrange; (3) 6
1
⁄
2
-in
woofers ; 48
3
⁄
4
in high; 56 lb
CC225 ($ 499)
:: 1-in tweeter; (2) 5
1
⁄
4
-in woofers; 31
3
⁄
4
in wide; 16 lb
C255ES ($998/pair)
:: (2) 1-in tweeters ; (2) 5
1
⁄
4
-in woofers;
11
3
⁄
4
in high; 9 lb
PSW310W ($799)
:: 10-in woofer; (2) 10- in passive radiators ;
400-watt amplifier; 17
1
⁄
2
x 15 x 14 in;
50 lb
68 SEPT EMBER 2008 SO UN D & VI SI ON soundandvisionmag.com
Infinity Classia speaker system
The C336 tower’s measurements indicate a wide
floor bounce centered at 200 Hz, followed by narrow band irregularities beginning at 800 Hz. The
CC225 center displays a similar character at
higher frequencies, along with low-frequency
response that falls quickly below 400 Hz. Overall,
20 100 1k 10k 20k
hertz (Hz)
15
10
5
0
–5
–10
–15
decibe ls (dB)