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CLEMENTS
107di
Greg Weaver, SoundStage! May 1998
(www.soundstage.com)
I love Halloween. I have
since my childhood. To me, October 31st heralds the official
arrival of fall, long my favorite of all the seasons. The
sensory spectacle provided by the annual seasonal transformation
in the northeastern United States starting in early October is
truly a multi-faceted experience not to be missed; the changing
of the leaves, the vivid, warm colors, the crisp and inviting
smells, the carnival of sounds, and don’t forget football.
What’s not to love? And what a holiday this magical season
brings. Anything can happen on Halloween. Anyone can show up at
your door and challenge you with that ageless phrase,
"Trick or treat?" Well, imagine the look on my face
last Halloween when Phil Clements, maestro at Clements
Loudspeakers, walked through my door with a quizzical smile on
his face looking for me.
What a conversation we had.
I was surprised to learn that back in the late ‘70s, Clements
had been the designer of a little speaker called the Phase
Research Model R. He was equally surprised to hear me rattle off
a complete description of the thing and its price. Yes, I
clearly remembered it as a speaker that performed well above its
price point. I still have one of the sales brochures in my
files. After about an hour’s discussion, I had a brief chance
to hear a pair of bookshelf speakers, the Clements 107di. With
barely a 15-minute audition I was convinced that if these
speakers sold for $600 they would be a bargain. I had
deliberately guessed a bit low because I expected I was being
set up. When Phil told me that these babies went for under $400
a pair, you could have just about knocked me over. I started the
arrangements for a formal review right then and there.
In mid February, with all
the hubbub of the Winter CES behind, products once again began
showing up at Chez Weaver. Among the early arrivals were these
little guys from Clements. The 107di (the "d" stands
for dynamic and the "i" stands for image) is the
middle sibling in the di series, with two little brothers each
above and below 107di’s price point. Nicely finished yet
unassuming black boxes, 16.5" tall by 9.5" wide and
11" deep, they were fitted with a pair of typical
plastic-nut five-way binding posts. The large 3" diameter
port was near the bottom rear of the speaker. Removing the
grille revealed the .75" polycarbonate ferrofluid-cooled
tweeter and the 6.5" poly-laminate mid-woofer, both of
which appear to be of Audax/Polydax lineage. Hmmm. Fairly
unassuming again. The grille was attached with four
ball-and-socket snaps and was covered with a fairly open-weave
black cloth. Although attractive enough in fit and finish for
their $390 retail price, with the exception of the ten-year
warranty, the speakers appeared to be pretty average.
Tricks
Over a decade ago, Phil
Clements read the results of a listening test that changed the
way he thought about speaker design. In the study, groups of
people were subjected to listening to the same speaker
complement with crossovers of varying designs. The speaker’s
cabinet, woofer, tweeter and crossover frequency remained
identical, but the slope, or rate, of the crossover point was
modified. The speakers were auditioned with 6dB-, 12dB-, 18dB-
and 24dB-per-octave filter networks. The results of the test
were quite interesting. Unanimously, the panel preferred the
first-order 6dB-per-octave crossover, also known as an
open-slope design, both in terms of providing a more
"natural" sound and a more realistic presentation of
the soundstage. The panel then chose, in order of sonic
preference, the 18dB, then the 24dB and finally the 12dB
crossovers. I’m not about to go into all the reasons why these
subjective results make sense technically. More interesting is
the story of how this one man chose to utilize the results to
develop a high-quality yet affordable line of loudspeakers.
The desire to use the 6dB
network was obvious given its inherent purity and the
overwhelming preference among listeners. It is the only filter
slope that electrically adds back to, or very near to,
"zero" phase shift through the crossover-frequency
region without the use of rigorous and destructive compensation.
All the other networks impose easily measurable, and as easily
audible, amounts of electrical phase shift in comparison to the
input signal. Even with careful compensation it is next to
impossible to retrieve the high degree of integrity inherent
with the single-pole filter.
Even though the steep-slope
filters tend to corrupt the original input signal by the huge
amounts of electrical phase shift they impose, they do have
several highly sought-after design benefits. One of the most
important of these is the preservation of bandwidth power. Since
the steeper-slope filters obviously mean a steeper roll off,
certainly much faster than the open-slope design, they provide,
with all else being equal, greater overall speaker sensitivity.
The extended, slowly reducing slope of single-pole filters is
typically not a good way to produce a terribly efficient
speaker. Check the published sensitivities of other well-known
champions of the open-slope crossover design, companies like
Celestion, Thiel, Vandersteen, Sonus Faber, and Dunlavy. Their
speakers are not known for their efficiency.
Other advantages derived
from steep-slope filters include greater driver protection and
increased detail, both of which are obviously highly desirable.
Unfortunately, to gain these desirable results at the price
point of the 107di, one typically has to impose high amounts of
electrical phase shift. That is exactly what Clements wanted to
avoid because it meant compromising the one thing that was
paramount in his design goal, signal integrity.
So how does one maintain
the integrity achievable with a first-order design and still
find a way to apply the benefits desirable from the higher-order
networks, and do it on a budget if possible? Based on the
results of that earlier listening test, Phil decided he would
like to see what he could do to impose no more than a
single-pole filter electrically. Yet for the sake of greater
resolution and dependability, he wanted to try to obtain final
acoustical slopes of 18dB per octave, since that was the slope
with the second-highest approval rating in the survey. If he
could develop a way of combining the single-pole electrical
slope for signal integrity along with the power preservation,
better dynamics, higher protection capability, greater detail
and cleanliness of the steeper slopes, he felt he would have a
winner.
If only 6dB were available
from the electrical filter, a single inductor in this case, then
what else could be applied to help add another 12dB and achieve
the desired 18dB total? Well, all drivers, at the end of their
bandwidths, have an inherent roll-off determined by things like
their size, mass, weight, materials, magnetic intensity, etc.
Knowing all that, and paying great attention to detail, you
could design a driver to roll-off at specific rates. So some, if
not all, of the additional slope rate might be achieved by
paying close attention to component driver design.
This control has to be
achieved at a specific rate within a limited acceptable
frequency range. If the bandwidth of the driver extends too far
in frequency response, then once again, steep electrical slopes
would be required to properly knock out unwanted bandwidth.
Although many factors must be taken into account, a desired
roll-off characteristic can be engineered into a driver.
Difficult as this is for one driver, this process becomes
exceedingly arduous to control with the addition of multiple
drivers, as would be necessary in a two- or three-way design.
All the other required design parameters of each different
driver to be incorporated into the final design will combine,
contribute, and limit certain ways to gain consistent slope
rates from the components themselves. Certain slopes at or
within the proper bandwidths could be counted on, but not always
at the same rate. Now what?
This meant that yet a third
element needed to be introduced, one that would get the desired
overall 18dB-per-octave acoustic slopes with different
components of varying characteristics, and do so consistently.
This third factor had to be the most variable when applied. The
perfect component was an impedance compensation network, which
ideally every speaker should utilize anyway. Since all voice
coil type drivers exhibit rising impedance caused by the voice
coils inductive reactance, one highly desirable purpose of such
networks, called "Zobels," is to equalize that rising
impedance. This allows for the presentation of a much more
friendly and consistent load to the amplifier. Add in that one
of its other benefits is its ability to knock out frequency
response at different points, variably in slope no less, and
you’ve got the final ingredient in Phil Clements’ super
crossover recipe.
Treats
I don’t believe in
critical evaluation of any product right out of the box, and the
107di was no exception. When you audition these guys for
yourself, make sure the pair you hear has been well run in. Some
of the "edge" begins to disappear after ten hours or
so, and at 60 or more hours of play, the speakers begin to show
off their stuff. My first audition of these little guys was with
my reference rig, and in this system even the interconnects and
speaker cables cost more than the speakers under evaluation
here. But what did they truly have to say for themselves? This
was one sure way to find out.
One of my long-time
standard evaluation records (that’s right, I said record) is
my Mobile Fidelity half-speed copy of Supertramp’s Crime of
the Century (Mobile Fidelity 1-005). There is a solo harp
(that’s a harmonica to those of you who find yourselves blues
challenged) in the opening cut playing very deeply at center
stage. As the tune progresses, there are numerous voices of
children scattered through the very back of the stage covering
nearly its entire width. There are a whole host of other things
stage left and right at varying depths. The harp was recreated
solidly where it belonged in the stage and had a wonderful
warmth about it. The voices were placed deeply and accurately
throughout the stage, as were the rest of the instruments in
this fairly challenging soundstage. Hmmm. These diminutive
speakers were beginning to hint at being considerably better
than average.
I was justly amazed with
what these little guys did with any Q-Sound effects they were
supplied. Every cue was perfectly located and quite tonally
correct. Moving to "Welcome to the Machine" from Pink
Floyd’s Wish You Were Here (Columbia Half Speed HC33453), the
weight of the "machine" was pretty convincingly
portrayed, if just a bit fat in nature. The ports, a whopping
3" in diameter, start to generate a real breeze around 60Hz
and continued to exhibit usable output as low as about 30Hz,
though down considerably in terms of sensitivity. And even
thought the little ports were moving air at a rate that would be
impressive in a small cooling fan, there was no chuff or port
noise whatsoever.
The piano from the "Fantaisie
- Impromptu" on Horowitz: The Last Recording (Sony SK
45818), though presented slightly smaller and more constricted
in three-dimensional space, was still nicely conveyed in terms
of the warmth, body and the magic of the performance. The timbre
and luster of the piano, which is one of the better attempts on
CD in my opinion, was presented accurately and with the kind of
"involvement" associated with the much higher-priced
spreads.
With the Seven Years In
Tibet soundtrack (Sony SK 60271), the 107di’s recreated a nice
impression of the heft of the lowest frequencies even though,
being bookshelf speakers, they could not truly excavate the
nethermost depths of the recording. The glimpse into the
soundstage was just a bit shallower than I would like, with a
bit more forward presentation than is realistic, but
devastatingly insightful. Yo-Yo Ma’s cello is surprisingly
detailed as are the rest of the midrange voices presented here.
There is a realistic interpretation of the upper frequencies
with just a hint of hardness in the loftiest registers that is
almost venial given the ease and vitality imparted through the
midrange.
OK, but what about the real
world? How likely is it that this speaker would be used in a
$20,000-plus system? Yeah, that’s what I thought you’d say.
Dropping the speakers into my office system (consisting of a
50Wpc receiver, a portable CD player, and regular old
interconnects and loudspeaker cables hitching everything
together) seemed to be the logical next step. The results were
unreal. Could it be that these speakers sounded even more
impressive in this more humble and likely application? Yup. Not
that they sounded better here than they had in my reference
room, but they sounded as good. They retained all of their
attributes, while their shortcomings seemed diminished. I had
expected them to shrink when placed in the lesser system. If
anything, the level of accomplishment actually grew. They took
the system to new heights. Again, the ppreciable tonal balance,
excellent staging and adroit bass heft delighted me with their
unwavering presence.
These little speakers are
very engaging, rendered a startling glimpse into the soundstage,
offered worthy mid-bass performance and had a convincingly
neutral tonal balance, even if tilted a bit toward the darker
side of neutral. My only complaints were pretty much what you
would expect in a speaker selling for twice, maybe even three
times, the price of the 107di. From the lower mids up they are a
bit on the opaque side of transparency. There is a bit of
hardness starting in the upper midrange and going on up, while
the midbass is a tad loose and exaggerated. Damnation you say?
Far from it. Remember the meager list price. The take
You know, I’ve been
around this game for about a quarter of a century and I cannot
name another loudspeaker manufacturer who puts this much thought
and technology into a speaker at this price point. Once you
crack the $1000 price range, yeah, maybe you expect to get this
kind of design and execution. But at under $400, the Clements
107di is an unheard-of and unbelievable achievement.
While it is true that these
little guys suffer from the same types of maladies as any
inexpensive bookshelf speaker, they do so to a significantly
lesser degree than anyone would have any right to expect given
their extremely modest selling price. With the Clements 107di,
your $400 buys you an extremely well-conceived and well-executed
product with tremendous clarity, focus, openness and tonal
truth. If your speaker budget is $650 or less, put these $390
standouts at the top of your short list.
CLEMENTS
206di
Lonnie Brownell, Stereophile, April 1997
"One thing you can
count on at a show like the WCES is that there will be speakers
on display. Lots of speakers. Every room had at least two, and
I'm here to tell you about some of the new and interesting ones
with real-world price tags.
One speaker with an
embarrassingly high value:price ratio was the 206di ($750) from
CLEMENTS, part of their 'dynamic image' series. This large,
two-way speaker provided a full if somewhat polite sound that
had me thinking it must go for bigger bucks."
CLEMENTS
206di
Bound for Sound, April 1997
"CLEMENTS 2-way,
3-driver, floorstanding loudspeaker for $750: People were saying
that I had to hear the speaker from CLEMENTS before the show was
over. And as is usually the case, the word on the streets was
right. The speaker is around 40" tall, about 8" wide
and 10" deep (approximations). It has two 6.5" woofers
and a 1" soft dome tweeter and was being driven by PS Audio
electronics. For the asking price of $750, the CLEMENTS, was a
sonic standout. Having the room-filling capabilities of speakers
much more expensive, the CLEMENTS had the tonal trueness of
speakers in the 2-3 thousand dollar range. For that reason
alone, people were guessing the price to be well above a
thousand dollars, only to have their guesstimates dashed out
when the true retail price was revealed. I admit that I was
impressed too by what I heard. One negative might have been the
upper bass that lacked some control, but when factored into the
entire equation, that seemed pretty trivial. A must audition for
the budget audiophile."
CLEMENTS
206di
Chuck Bruce, The AAS Journal, April 1997
"Another top performer
at a value was seen and heard from the new CLEMENTS 206, vented
two-way floor-standing dynamic loudspeaker with 1" fabric
dome tweeter and a pair of 6" poly drivers with impedance
compensation. The designer stating an easy to drive 90db
sensitivity, stable compensated 6-ohm impedance and solid 35Hz
bass response at $750 per pair! This ensemble represented
another one of the best buys at the show, with many attendees
making second visits to verify what they had heard at this price
point from a dedicated mid-west designer. Lateral, front and
rear imaging and sound staging was first rate as was off axis
listening, with excellent perceived time coherence and driver
blending due to a stated carefully engineered premium parts
crossover. Use of attractive black oak vinyl over 3/4" and
5/8" MDF instead of rare wood cabinetry keeps costs down.
Effectively sourced by PS Audio gear, 70 pre-amp, Lambda CD
drive and 200 delta power amp, this is an ensemble to watch. A
somewhat larger and higher priced model 306 features a pair of
8" double-active mid-woofers that also looks like a serious
challenger to the high-end. Quite Amazing.
Before I leave this
section, I must add the Audiostatic, Threshold, PSAudio,
SpeakerArt, Presence Audio and CLEMENTS rooms merited more than
one visit to see if I had heard it right the first time. Sure 'nuff,
follow-up visits confirmed these impressions. And the sound was
even better after a couple of days of warm-up and acclimating
the loudspeakers to the rooms."
CLEMENTS
206di
Mike Masztal, SoundStage!
(www.soundstage.com)
"If you've been
consistently reading SoundStage! and other audiophile
journals, you've undoubtedly noticed that the price tag
on certain pieces of equipment have been escalating. The
AudioNote Gaku-on sells for $245,00/pr., and an increasing
number of speakers are selling in the upper five-figure range.
The good news is while the price envelope seems to be expanding,
the performance envelope, in my opinion, is shrinking.
In last month's issue, I reviewed the Wisdom Audio Adrenaline.
It was an incredible speaker and for $25,000., it should be.
But I can't afford them. My whole system costs less than
one-half their price. How about something for
the other 99% of burgeoning audiophiles who have those
pesty other obligations like food, rent, utilities and the kids
shoes. Well, if value is an important consideration in your
hi-fi budget, read on.
During a recent visit to my
favorite audio shop, Audio Essence, Jim Kean, the owner, said I
had to listen to the new Clements speakers he had. The
Clements had received some rave reviews from some Atlanta Audio
Society friends who attended '97 CES, so I was anxious to hear
them. After an hour or so of excellent sound, I thought
SoundStage needs to review these. All it took
was a phone call to Phil Clements and the $850. Clements 206di
were in my car heading back to Atlanta.
My System:
Source: CAL Delta transport, Alpha DAC retubed with Brimar
CV4004 (my thanks to Kevin Deal for his assistance);
Pre-amp: Aranov LS-9000; Amps: Aranov LS-9100
monoblocks; Speakers: JM Labs Daline 3.1;
Interconnects: JPS Labs Superconductor;
Speaker wire: Nordost Super Flatline; Power
cables: JPS Labs and Camelot Sir Bors.
Listening room is 12' by 18' by 8.5', complimented by Corner
Tunes and home brewed room tunes.
The Design:
Phil Clements, best known as the designer of the Clements
RT-7 ribbon/dynamic hybrid from a few years back, has
launched a new line of affordable stereo and home theater
speakers. Phil has incorporated a number of
designs which account for the excellent performance of his
new speaker line. One unique and proprietary design parameter
involves both the drivers and the crossover engineering. A
6 db/octave minimum phase filter network and impedance
compensation network are employed to minimize or eliminate
electrical phase shift through the crossover region.
However, it is combined with specially designed woofers, such
that when combined with the above described filter network,
actual 18 db/octave acoustic filter slopes are achieved.
The advantages of the steeper slopes are increased sensitivity,
greater component power protection and increased overall sound
cleanliness and detail. The crossovers are hand
built and hard wired using mylar and polypropylene capacitors in
a bypass configuration. No printed circuit boards are
used. These features are usually found on speakers costing many
times that of the Clements, such as Sonus Faber, Theil, Dunlevy
and Vandersteen.
Typical impedance curves
for all Clements models from around 80 Hz to 20kHz range from
+/- 1/4 ohm to no more than +/- 5 ohms, as is the 206di.
This represents a very stable load to any amplifier.
For those with moderately priced amplifiers/receivers, the 206di
should be an excellent match as the 206di won't strain the amp's
power supply. I should also note that the entire
line of Clements speakers have essentially the same design
characteristics and are similarily voiced. An important
consideration for those assembling a stereo/home theater system.
The 206di measures
38" x 9.5" x 11" D and weigh 40 lbs each.
Driver configuration is a 2 way design consisting of a
pair of 6" woofers and a 1" tweeter in a D'Appolito
arrangement with a rear facing 4" port. One
pair of 5 way binding posts are mounted about 18 inches
from the bottom. Phil Clements also includes a heavy
duty set of spikes with the speakers to allow for stable
coupling to the floor.
Set-up:
Since these speakers were demos, no break-in period was
necessary. Setting the 206s up in the same place as
my Dalines, i.e., 24" from the rear wall and 33" from
the side walls overloaded the room and produced a thick atonal
bass and mid-bass that blurred the critical midrange.
Moving them out 34" from the rear wall cleared
up that problem. With the speakers pointing straight
ahead, there was a sight gap in the center soundstage.
Positioning with a very slight toe-in allowed the middle
soundstage to fill nicely. I preferred listening with the
grills off.
The Sound:
I first listened to my favorite CD, Ottmar Liebert's
"VIVA!". 63 min, 45 secs later, I was
quite enamoured with the sound. Enough fun stuff.
It was time for the Parris Island* discs. Steve
Tibbets "The Fall of Us All" (ECM 1527), has a
percussion section that would make Santana proud.
There are also some hard transients on that CD that not only
test an amplifier's guts, but also the ability of a speaker
demonstrate their dynamics. The 206s handled them very
well and they can also play very quiet passages while
maintaining low level detail. Their ability to
reproduce soundstage is very good. John McLaughlin's
"Live at the Royal Festival Hall" (JMT 834 436-2), is
an excellent example of what "ambience" and
"soundstage" is supposed to be. Using
Strunz and Farah's "Primal Magic" ( Mesa R2 79023),
the Clements showed their quickness by accurately playing the
32d note runs without blurring the sound. Orchestral music
does well without the various instruments blending into an
amorphous sound. Spatial relationships were stable as
evidenced on track 8, "Running From Mercy" on Ricki
Lee Jones "Traffic From Paradise" (CD Geffen 24602).
Piano and vocals are also
beautifully reproduced. Sarah McLachlan sounded like she
was in my room on cut 12' (a vocal/piano reprise of
"Possession") of her "Fumbling Toward
Ecstasy" (CD Arista 18725-2). I found no
sibilance on vocals of artists like Emmy Lou Harris or Loreen
McKennit. The Clements also handle good old rock and
roll with the punch we've all come to appreciate. "I'm a
Real Man" from Robben Ford and the Blue Line (GRP
STD-11020) never sounded so good. Bass
response was very good with a tonal correctness to the sound.
Compared to my Dalines, the Clements 206di have the
characteristic "box speaker" sound, but no more than
the other 99.99% of box speakers out there. They are also
not quite as transparent as the Dalines, but are a lot more
authoritative in the low end. All in all, the Clements are
pretty much on par with my Dalines. The difference being
the Daline's transparency and lack of 'boxiness' versus the
Clements' better low end.
Impressions:
My only concern with these speakers is their price. At $850.,
they're TOO CHEAP!!! The Clements 206di can
accomplish 95% of what my Dalines can (plus more bass) at
roughly half the cost! Quite an accomplishment
considering the Daline 3.1, in my opinion, perform far
beyond what one might expect from their $1400. price tag.
Unfortunately, there are a group of audiophiles who believe
there is an absolute correlation between price and performance
and probably won't give the Clements a listen.
While there is some truth to that belief, you cannot quantify
performance by the number of digits on the price tag.
I've learned that the hard way.
In summary, the Clements
206di is a steal at it's price and anyone with a speaker budget
of up to $2500. would do himself a disservice by not
auditioning the 206di. The potential savings can be
applied toward a new power cord for your CD player, better
interconnects, etc. These upgrades, in my opinion,
will offer more performance enhancement than spending an equal
amount on a different speaker. My congratulations to Phil
Clements for using his expertise to design a great speaker line
at reasonable cost. Hopefully, it will become
contagious."
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