established now that dead flat 20 kHz treble

response in your room is an unpleasant expe-

rience. I’m not sure if that’s because 20 kHz flat

is just too much treble or too much distorted

treble. I find that treble distortions are the

most pernicious throughout the entire chain from recordings

to speakers. The Salon’s treble seems well balanced as a part

of the musical whole. I do, though, hear slight treble limita-

tions within the highest harmonic structures of instruments.

But I wouldn’t want more treble extension if it meant that

I had to sacrifice even one other positive characteristic of the

Salon. The Salon seems almost uniquely well crafted to repro-

duce musical timbres. It has the best balance of tonality and

character of any speaker I have ever used. In this regard, it is

our noble warrior against the ancient enemy.

The Salon is a four-way design with crossover points at

125 Hz, 450 Hz, and 2.2 kHz. All crossovers are fourth order

Linkwitz-Riley. Three 8-inch mica/carbon-filled polymer dome

woofers handle the range below 125 Hz. These woofers are

said to extend the Salon’s bass response to a minus 10dB

point at 17 Hz. The midbass driver, which actually handles the

upper bass through lower midrange, is a 6.5-inch driver of the

same composition as the woofers. The midrange driver is a 4-

inch titanium dome. The Salon has two tweeters. One, which

is more robustly built of an aluminum alloy, fires forward

while the other fires back, to provide ambient fill in the high-

er frequencies. Except for the tweeters, the Salon drivers are

designed and made within the Harman International house

(likewise for the 15-inch woofer in the Sub-15).

The design brief for the drivers included the ability to han-

dle high peak amplitudes without compression. This was nec-

essary to achieve the Revel design team’s (led by Kevin

Voecks) objectives, since they wanted a speaker that would

not change tonal character on dynamic peaks.

Nearly every aspect of the Salon’s design and perfor-

mance can be related to Revel’s primary objective – to pro-

duce a speaker as timbrally accurate in the listening room as

it is in the lab. To that end, Revel embarked on an extensive

research effort to quantify in-room speaker behavior and

incorporate its findings in its speaker designs. The typical lis-

tening room undermines many speaker designs, which boast

nonpareil frequency response when measured anechoically.

Typically, the upper bass and lower midrange are suppressed,

exaggerating the upper midrange and lower treble content. To

combat this, Revel developed a model of what a typical lis-

tening room does to a loudspeaker’s frequency response.

It is ironic how so many of the virtues we prize in sound –

midrange openness, soundstage depth, and detail resolution –

are exaggerated by the colorations created by the room-loud-

speaker interface. Many might regard these characteristics as

indicators of “transparency,” since they artificially open up

the soundstage and highlight the transient details of images.

In this context, the Salon can come as a bit of a shock. It

sounds fuller than many other loudspeakers. Further, its

sound is more up front spatially (not timbrally) and it doesn’t

seem, at first listen, to resolve as much information. It doesn’t

take long, though, to realize that the Salon is telling a higher

truth. In contrast with most other speakers, it is capable of

rendering timbres that are more fully saturated. That is,

instrumental timbres sound more authoritative and more

complex. There is a legitimate weight to the sound of instru-

ments through the Salon that is natural sounding and intoxi-

cating. Consider, for example, the ride cymbal front and cen-

ter at the start of the Conspiracy Theory soundtrack [TVT

8130-2]. Through the Salons, it is possible to hear the sus-

tained fundamental in the instrument’s metal while the sizzle

rides cleanly in the overtones. There is richness here that is

often missing, and yet the textural aspect of the instrument’s

timbre is not lost (as it would be with another rich sounding

type of component – the single-ended triode amplifier). I sus-

pect that the Revel’s ability to project power into the room in

the lower midrange through upper bass is directly related to

its wonderful way with timbres. Don’t forget that this is the

region where most fundamentals reside. Reduce the strength

of the fundamentals and lower harmonics in a note and the

result will be washed out timbre.

There are a number of loudspeakers based on the legacy

of Allison’s work in room acoustics that reproduce timbre

much like the Revel. While I haven’t heard all of these, my

impression is that the Revel distinguishes itself by maintain-

ing its tonal balance more evenly at all loudness levels. Dur-

ing major dynamic peaks, the Salons don’t compress nearly as

much as most speakers I have heard. Thus, their tonality

doesn’t change. Moreover, the treble distortion is truly mini-

mal during such peaks – movie lovers will drop to their knees

to thank Revel.

Actually, mentioning the single-ended triode amplifier

makes me wonder – did music lovers turn to that flawed

device in an effort to restore the timbral richness that was

lost in their rooms by many loudspeakers? If so, the solid-

state amplifier is going to experience a perception makeover

when paired with the Salon, because listeners will be able to

enjoy solid-state control with timbral accuracy. I have, with

a wide variety of solid-state amps (the BEL 1001 Mk IV, the

Proceed HPA 3, and the Conrad-Johnson Design MF-5600).

You will want to use a sizable solid-state amp with the Salon.

Its sensitivity is moderate at 86 dB with 2.83 volts input and

its minimum impedance is 3 ohms (nominal: 6 ohms). This

isn’t a hideous load, but a robustly designed solid-state

amplifier with low output impedance will pay dividends. Do

not assume, though, that the Salon is imposing a pleasant-

sounding distortion through the lower midrange that makes

these different amplifiers all sound alike – the Salon can dif-

ferentiate the sound of amplifiers and source components

quite easily. In this respect it is a reviewer’s dream – reveal-

ing sound that is also a delight to hear.

When optimally set up, the Salons easily reached into

the 20 Hz region, producing clean bass information that I

could feel in my chest. It clearly delineated the plethora of

big instruments on Conspiracy Theory. The Salon sports a

bass control that allows the listener to reduce or boost the

bass in the region around 50 Hz. This proved helpful in my

room, as I was able to reduce the effect of the 50 Hz node

(take that! cursed Room).

Although the Salon’s balance through the lower and

middle frequencies seems to bring images forward, it still

produces a remarkable soundstage with stunning resolution

in the field of depth. This soundstaging performance is

unique among the direct-radiating dynamic-coil designs I

have experienced. Many direct radiators produce pinpoint

images within a smaller, sharply defined soundstage. In con-

trast, the presentation of dipole radiators is more open.

Dipole images, depending on the design, can range from

well-focused (though typically not as tightly focused as a

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Image 35
Sony G90 manual Our noble warrior against the ancient enemy, Likewise for the 15-inch woofer in the Sub-15