A few months ago a friend sent a pic of a pair of speakers he was buying and I saw, on the back, a pair of Quad ESL 57s. I started enquiring and after a few negotiations I bartered them for a McIntosh preamp (that I had also acquired in an exchange) that was ready to be sold. They are in pretty decent cosmetic condition and in stunning operating condition.
The Quads are, to me, a magnificent example of industrial design from the late 50s. You could decorate a house around these (how about a second house, hmm, a beach house?).
They are famous for their transparency and midrange. Supposedly very picky about amplification with an impedance curve going down to 0.5 ohm that some solid state amps see as a short (with the following fireworks show) and that is not benign to SET amps. On the other hand if you feed them with more than 25 watts the internal panels arch and you can kill them.
I tried them with all types of the amps supposed to be good with them: solid state and push pull amps. They seemed to do some things very nice but with every try I would get tired quickily. Very fast and transparent but not musical. So I was about to call the experiment a failure, mark the "already tried" checkbox in my exotic audio list and put them for sale.
But yesterday I decided to try the no-no. I connected them to a pair of Paramours. I decided to give them a break for the first test so I rolled a tape of Cello Suites (JSB by Starker, just amazing) and voil
The Quads are, to me, a magnificent example of industrial design from the late 50s. You could decorate a house around these (how about a second house, hmm, a beach house?).
They are famous for their transparency and midrange. Supposedly very picky about amplification with an impedance curve going down to 0.5 ohm that some solid state amps see as a short (with the following fireworks show) and that is not benign to SET amps. On the other hand if you feed them with more than 25 watts the internal panels arch and you can kill them.
I tried them with all types of the amps supposed to be good with them: solid state and push pull amps. They seemed to do some things very nice but with every try I would get tired quickily. Very fast and transparent but not musical. So I was about to call the experiment a failure, mark the "already tried" checkbox in my exotic audio list and put them for sale.
But yesterday I decided to try the no-no. I connected them to a pair of Paramours. I decided to give them a break for the first test so I rolled a tape of Cello Suites (JSB by Starker, just amazing) and voil