Thiel Audio Products PX05, MCS1 User Manual

Product Review
Thiel A u d i o
CS 2.4 / MCS1 / PowerPoint / SS2 / PX05
Home-Theater Speaker System
December 2004
By: Anthony DiMarco
anthony@hometheatersound.com
Coherent construction
Tight tolerances, flawless finishes, and hand-matched Amberwood veneers result in the elegant and sophisticated appearance of the CS2.4, MCS1, and SS2. Hyper-accurate CNC machines cut the MDF parts of each hand-assembled enclosure. The PowerPoint’s thick, alabaster-like ABS plastic shell is thermoformed, while its trapezoidal shape keeps the driver’s baffle as close to the wall as possible.
According to Thiel, their Coherent Source technology ensures perfect time and phase alignment between a speaker’s drivers. The CS2.4 and MCS1 use a 1" aluminum tweeter coincidently mounted to a
3.5" aluminum midrange cone. Jim Thiel prefers the term c o i n c i d e n t to coaxial because proper time alignment requires that a driver’s acoustic center outputs from the same geometric plane. While coaxial drivers share the same axis, coincident drivers share the same axis a n d plane. Thiel designs coincident drivers to be perfectly coherent across their frequency range. The drivers are coupled with a tuned mechanical suspension instead of a traditional crossover, which, Thiel maintains, avoids distortion.
What defines the perfect loudspeaker? Thiel Audio founder Jim T h i e l would say that a loudspeaker must possess a c c u r a c y, in the broadest sense of the term. In other words, a loudspeaker should have linear frequency response, low distortion, and perfect time and phase alignment, or c o h e r e n c e. Although many loudspeaker designers will cite low distortion and linear response as goals, very few consider time and phase alignment critical to the overall sound. Some believe the cost of implementing such technology far exceeds the payoff, while others think the human ear is insensitive to the difference between coherent and noncoherent loudspeakers.
Thiel’s website offers scientific data to the contrary. Their Coherent Source (CS) technology is one of the hallmarks of the Kentucky­based company’s design philosophy. Thiel Audio doesn’t appear to rely on pseudoscience or unsupported claims. The company claims to be driven by research and development steeped in physics and the scientific method.
Six Thiel speakers costing a total of $14,700 arrived on my doorstep. The MCS1 ($2300) and pairs of CS2.4s ($4400/pair) and PowerPoints ($1300 each) didn’t bear much of a family resemblance (until I looked at their drivers). The SS2 subwoofer ($4900) handled the low bass, and Thiel’s PX05 passive five-channel crossover ($500) tied everything together.
The bass frequencies must also remain in time and in phase with the midrange and tweeter outputs. Because different frequencies travel through air at the same velocity, the arrival times of individual drivers’ waveforms will be offset if their acoustic centers are not in the same vertical plane; the result, according to Thiel, is a poorly defined image. The CS2.4’s slanted baffle guarantees that the audio waveforms from the 3.5" coincident driver and the robust 8" aluminum woofer arrive at the listener’s ears at the same time. And the CS2.4’s first-order, phase-corrected crossover ensures that the waveforms arrive simultaneously at the listening position.
The MCS1 center speaker also uses a first-order, phase-correct c r o s s o v e r. However, this speaker’s flat baffle relies on two shallow,
6.5", polystyrene-reinforced aluminum woofers to keep low-frequency output in the same plane, and therefore time-aligned, with the coincident driver. The shallow woofers also allow the coincident driver to be flush-mounted to the baffle, thus reducing the effects of cabinet­edge diffraction on sound dispersion.
The PowerPoint surround speaker’s coincident driver is a 1" aluminum tweeter coupled to a 6.5" woofer cone. The driver’s dispersion emerges at 90 degrees to the center of the tweeter, which, together with the 45-degree baffle, directs output away from the adjoining wall. According to Thiel, this prevents signal cancellation in the critical midrange frequencies.
Although the SS2 subwoofer’s two 10" aluminum cones and compact, room-friendly enclosure look conventional for a subwoofer, the SS2 lacks the standard phase, gain, and crossover controls. Jim Thiel’s extensive research has convinced him that room boundaries and dynamic compression due to voice-coil heating are the two main things that
w w w . h o m e t h e a t e r s o u n d . c o m
© Schneider Publishing Inc.
PAGE 2
affect subwoofer performance; he claims that the crossover and phase controls available on most subs harm the subs’ f r e q u e n c y response and integration with a set of main speakers. T h i e l ’s SmartSub technology purportedly addresses all of these issues. A 1000W class-D amplifier supplies the grunt expected from a high­quality sub. The SS2 is designed to work with T h i e l ’s two-channel PX02 and five-channel PX05 passive crossovers, or the SI 1 Integrator electronic controller.
Coherent setup
The CS2.4’s four poorly glued floor-spike inserts and the PowerPoint’s easy-to-strip Sheetrock mounting anchors were the only problems I experienced during setup. Thiel’s Shari Graham had a bottle of adhesive on my doorstep the next day, and assured me that she would discuss my Sheetrock-anchor issue with their parts buyer. Such prompt attention reinforces the benefit of purchasing from a company of T h i e l ’ s dedication and experience: Unlike the functionaries who work for many faceless conglomerates, Ms. Graham is empowered to solve customer issues on the spot. I experienced the same high level of customer service from Thiel with a used pair of CS1.2s I bought years ago, before I began writing r e v i e w s .
I hooked up my Analysis Plus T1 spade lugs to the CS2.4s’ g o r g e o u s , well-spaced binding posts. The deeply knurled nuts easily clamped down on the meaty spades. I immediately noticed that the 3.5" drivers performed equally well horizontally and vertically off - a x i s . Many speakers with a separate tweeter and midrange lose high­frequency sparkle and clarity when listened to from an angle and not at ear height. Thiel’s 3.5" coincident driver did not have this problem. The CS2.4s were much easier to place than my CS1.2s had been. I was able to listen to music without sonic degradation while playing on the floor with my son.
The MCS1 center speaker produced the same sort of fantastic off­axis sound. I first mounted the 60-pound speaker to a T h i e l - s u p p l i e d Sound Anchor stand, but my wife and I agreed that the heavy steel stand took up too much floor space and clashed with the room’s décor. So we set the MCS1 on a piece of plywood atop our TV. The sound quality and tonal balance remained transparent—the MCS1 produced uniform frequency response no matter where I or it sat.
My living area has its share of sonic challenges. My couch sits up against a wall, which makes placement of surround speakers tricky. I sent digital photos of my room to Thiel, who recommended mounting the PowerPoints on the sidewall within a foot of the rear wall, pointed down toward my listening position. I placed the PowerPoints about 8" from the ceiling, which resulted in an open, nonlocalized surround fill. The SS2 subwoofer took its place at the far end of my couch, firing across the CS2.4s’ soundstage.
The SS2 has a single-ended RCA connection for LFE input and a balanced XLR connection for interfacing with the PX05 passive
crossover. Both connections also have a pass-through so multiple SS2s can be daisy-chained. The extremely well-built PX05 crossover takes high-level signals from either the speakers’ terminals or an a m p l i f i e r ’s output and modulates them into a single, balanced, line-level signal that feeds the SS2. Although the PX05’s binding posts are of very high quality, they’re too close together for spade lugs; banana plugs worked much better. The LFE signal came directly from my McCormack MAP-1 preamplifier’s subwoofer output.
The SS2 has a simple three-button LED interface. One button selects each of the sub’s two settings, while the others adjust the settings up or down. The first setting is for LFE level. The second goes to the heart of T h i e l ’s SmartSub design philosophy: boundary compensation . According to Thiel, the SS2’s microprocessor-controlled a n a l o g signal processing programs the distance between the sub and two surrounding walls, and cancels out the negative effects of a room’s boundaries on the bass response. It took me two minutes to measure and input the distances. What I heard after that was miraculous.
Coherent bliss
The Triplets of Belleville is a beautifully crafted animated film with a bittersweet storyline. The film is almost devoid of dialogue, relying instead on gestures and expression to define character and plot. The sound design exhibits the same stellar craftsmanship — detail, ambience, and unexpected dynamics abound. Chapters 6-8 drenched me in the sounds of rain, subtle taps, whispers, and the bark of an annoyed dog as a train rushes by. The Thiel system’s universally brilliant high- and mid-frequency reproduction rendered with energy and lush harmonic color this quirky world of a French cyclist and his protective Grandma.
I have heard other systems demonstrate a seamlessly consistent surround image, but I always get the sense that transducers are reproducing the image. The Thiels took this behavior to the next level by creating a 5.1 image that was so lucid, so composed, that I forgot that there were loudspeakers in the room. The six T h i e l speakers truly spoke with one voice.
I had no problem suspending my disbelief during the helicopter crash and subsequent shoot-out in chapters 9 and 10 of Black Hawk D o w n. The recently released Superbit version offers an excellent DTS mix that wraps around the listener and drives home the concussive, unpredictable experience of battle. Speakers that lack focus and control can lose their way with such heavily layered soundtracks. But the Thiels never sounded veiled, or lacked definition or impact. Loud, soft, or tightly packed — all sounds remained absolutely clear during even the most chaotic scenes.
The SACD of Peter Gabriel’s Up [Geffen 493388] is an excellent test of bass-management transparency. The voice, instruments, and bass are sent to discrete channels rather than being mixed to all, making it easy to pick up on any crossover inconsistencies. If the bass doesn’t seamlessly transition from a system’s main
w w w . h o m e t h e a t e r s o u n d . c o m
© Schneider Publishing Inc.
Loading...
+ 2 hidden pages