|
Flat Panels
Rear-Projection TV Front Projectors Receivers HT in a Box Speakers Recently Added
Video Displays
All In One HT
Speakers
Sources
Electronics
Other Hardware
Custom Install
Software
HT Gamer Hook Me Up HT Talks To Boot Camp Advice From the Experts Shane Buettner Mark Fleischmann Audio/Video News CES 2008 CEDIA 2007 HE 2007 CES 2007 CEDIA 2006 Dealer Locator AV Links HT Galleries Cable Resources Hi-Rez Audio A/V Glossary Contact Us Customer Service Advertiser Index New Subscription Digital HT Renew Give a Gift Sub Services Flatscreen TVs LCD TVs Plasma TVs HDTV AV Receivers Home Theater in a Box Digital Projectors DLP Projectors Video Projectors Surround Sound Dolby 5.1 |
Crystal Acoustics TX-D12 Speaker System
All the THX in China. First-generation THX blossomed in the high-end sphere. The first companies to make THX-certified speakers were already making great ones, with or without certification. Even now, the list of THX speaker makers reads like an industry honor roll. That list is now one name longer.
The hardworking Greek native who owns Crystal Acoustics has spent the past few years preparing factories in China to make THX-certified (and other) speakers. The THX-Center, the THX-Dipole, and the two subs in the TX-D12 system have been certified THX Selectthat is, for rooms of up to 2,000 cubic feet. The system comes with your choice of subs: either the 12-inch THX-12SUB reviewed here or the 10-inch THX-10SUB. The TX-FS front tower speaker is designed to be used with THX Select subwoofers, according to its carton, but it does not include the THX logo on its rear nameplate. "This is not a THX-certified product," the carton adds in teeny type. According to THX, an early version of the TX-FS was submitted for certification but wasn't certified. To soft pedal this point would be unjust to the manufacturers who have worked hard to get THX certification for every speaker model sold within a set. There is, however, a THX-F3 speaker whose certification is pending but likely, according to both THX and Crystal Acoustics. It has three woofers and two ports on the front baffle, as opposed to the two woofers and no ports on the tower reviewed here.
Up Against the Wall
The other speakers have points of interest. Only one woofer sits at the front of the THX-Center, although two ports flank it. The THX-Dipole has a tweeter on either side but limits itself to one woofer and one port, both on the front surface. Rated sensitivity is all over the place, ranging from a very high 93 decibels for the front L/R, to 90 dB for the center, to 88 dB for the rear. There's one more thing I haven't mentioned, although the photo may already have piqued your interest. The tweeters in the front left, center, and right speakers ride in a separate aluminum housing on top of the enclosure. This design feature, rarely seen outside the pricey stuff, always has a major impact on sound. Whether you prefer the result is a matter of taste.
Time for Listening and Experimentation
My packed room perimeter makes near-wall placement well-nigh impossibleat least with floorstanding speakers and in relation to the front-projection screenso I looked for alternatives. One thing that helped a little was tweeter tweaking. Crystal's top-riding tweeters are hinged and can turn 45 degrees in either direction. This enabled me to toe in the woofers toward the middle of the sofa while aiming the tweeters at the sides of the sofa, effectively reducing on-axis exposure in the sweet spot. I also turned the tweeters outward, toward the corners of the room, but, while all of this was great fun, it didn't quite give me the consistency I craved. Finally, I arrived at a less than elegant solution. My Rotel RSX-1065 receiver is not THX certified but does borrow an idea from THXa cinema re-equalization setting. When I switched it on, the strong metallic midrange changed character to something more calming and comfortable at emotionally fulfilling volume levels. Aside from some occasional A/B-ing, I left the re-EQ on for both movies and music.
Mad Toys and Englishmen
With movies, the front speakers enabled steady side-to-side pans. Front-to-back imaging was not quite as strongpresumably because Crystal has designed the dipole surrounds to be more diffusive. Still, the climactic car-chase scene of Toy Story sent dizzy-whizzing sounds into every corner of the soundfield, and I was suitably entertained. Punctuating the intense flashback sequences in The Jacket, with Adrien Brody, were split-second clusters of vicious slashing sounds that tore so rapidly through the soundfield that I barely registered their direction. With less up-front directionality in a vaguer set of speakers, these sounds would have blended better but shocked less. I felt unnerved, as the filmmaker intended. "Senses Working Overtime," from XTC's English Settlement, brought everything I needed the speakers to achieve into focus. The re-EQ circuit kept Terry Chambers' tambourine from jumping out of the front left speaker and grabbing me by the throat. (I don't like it when tambourines do that.) EQ-ing cost me a little ambience and moved Andy Partridge's vocals back a couple of inches but also enlarged the soundstage. I stopped worrying about the sub's relatively modest amp when I heard Colin Moulding's bass line come bounding out of it. My last concern was the 100-Hz crossover. With large speakers, I usually prefer the customary THX crossover of 80 Hz, but that took some of the velvety vocal beauty out of Nick Drake's Made to Love Magic. Crystal allows up to 120 Hz, but that was too dark and heavynot only for Drake's resonant voice but for the lower strings of his acoustic guitar. I got the best results at 100 Hz, and, because I kept the sub just to the right of the center speaker, these two channels held together well.
Can You Top This?
* Mark Fleischmann is the author of Practical Home Theater, available through www.quietriverpress.com.
Highlights
Article Continues: At A Glance & Ratings »
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

