ENJOY
THE MUSIC.COM June 2006
Reference
3A
Veena Loudspeaker
A Window Full Of Colors
Review
By Ron Nagle
Resurrection
Only
by serendipity did I find this place as I walked
in I knew I was privy to something out of the
ordinary. It was graced with music clean and open
without artifact it had continuity and ease that
my ears told me shouldn't be coming out of a box.
As a matter of fact it reminded me of my Quad
ESL 63 electrostatic speakers. I guess I must
have developed a pretty thick skin over the years
because this near instant affinity thing hardly
ever happens to me any more and so it was totally
unexpected. This happenstance hearing only heightened
my already over active curiosity for all things
audio. And so I sat and listened to the Veena
(This name is an Indian term for instruments that
are similar to the Sitar) a small slim tower doing
something seamlessly I don't remember what the
music was, but I knew I wanted them. The presiding
principle in attendance was a man named Tash Goka
he is the distributor of the speaker and he proved
to be a font of knowledge. He explained that the
speaker of old I remembered was the MM (Midi Master)
from 3A.
The
original company name is derived from the words
Applied Acoustic Arts. The original company was
started an astounding 47 years ago and in the
world of all things audio this is quite remarkable.
Most of the original development work for these
speakers was done by the now retired Daniel DeHay
in France. At one point some years past the rights
to the name were sold to a company who would use
the name to produce a very inferior line of speakers.
Mr. Goka related to me a tale of resurrection
when Daniel DeHay bought back the name and reputation
of the company. Now this was some 14 years ago
and he did this even though it was driving him
to the brink of bankruptcy. He also pointedly
informed me that they always had a North American
presence and some of their newer models have even
won "Product Of The Year" awards. Right
now it is Mr. Goka and Divergent Technology located
in Kitchener Ontario who are the manufactures.
Their products are sold to distributors in all
corners of the globe.
L'objet
d'article
As
you begin to learn the ethic of this design it
reaffirms the purist approach most certainly for
it has the simplicity of a straight line. But
let me not get to far ahead it merits a more detailed
description instead. Standing 36.5-inch high in
appearance it is a slim tower with the front baffle
slanted backward to time align the two drivers.
Internally the speaker enclosure has a top to
bottom vertical brace along with additional horizontal
bracing. The interior surfaces are damped with
a 0.75-inch thick bi-component felted material
attached with a latex adhesive. There is a 2.25-inch
port on the back panel above two pairs of WBT
style plastic covered speaker binding posts connected
together with Cardas copper jumpers. I understand
that EC (European Community) safety standards
mandate insulated metal connectors for safety
reasons. But still I'm old fashioned I prefer
bare metal binding posts. Those original U.S.
style connectors would allow me to get a wrench
on them so I could really crank them down tight.
Reference
3A Veena LoudspeakerThe speakers sit on three
little projecting aluminum outrigger supports
called pods that have adjustable carpet piercing
spikes. My samples are finished with an attractive
satin dark cherry stain over Maple wood and Medium
Density Fiberboard (MDF). You can purchase these
speakers in natural maple or opt for High Gloss
black piano black but at a premium price of $3295
a pair. The speakers are a matched pair my serial
numbers are V1503 R and V1503 L the last letter
indicating right or left side. Resisting a trend
to fabricate speaker's way out west and by that
I mean really far out west like in China. This
company rather than opt for getting the most bang
for their buck has chosen instead to maintain
quality control over their speakers. This necessitates
that they custom build their own unique midrange
drivers. I can't count how many times I have heard
this same claim from other speaker manufactures.
Most of the time they make an inconsequential
change to a driver and it often does not sound
any better than the stock driver. Now heads up
here, what is coming next in this narrative is
the secret of this speaker's superior sound. The
following description leads me to wonder why doesn't
every one just stop screwing around and get back
to basics.
Internally
this two-driver speaker has no crossover! The
midrange driver is directly connected to the output
of the power amplifier! Between the midrange and
tweeter there is a custom flat plate parallel
oil and paper low inductance capacitor but that's
it. And as a result the Veena has vanishing Inductance
and no transient time domain issues. Still the
entire speaker remains a very manageable near
constant 8-Ohm load. Understand that In order
to pull off this very neat little trick you have
to use precision drivers that are essentially
self-limiting and self-dampening and function
only within very specific parameters. In this
design the speaker driver itself is essentially
part of the crossover. The Reference 3A company
employs one man in Kitchener, Ontario whose only
job is to hand build this midrange driver. The
tweeters look fairly conventional they use matched
1-inch soft dome silver coil SEAS drivers. But
it is the 7-inch midrange that grabs my attention.
It has a woven carbon fiber "Hyper exponential"
cone supported by what they call an "Edge
Hole" rubber rolled surround. In the center
instead of a conventional phase plug I see an
unconventional looking phase device. This is in
fact a black colored inert solid plastic cylinder.
This phase cylinder thing projects a little more
than one inch out from the center but it is not
visibly connected to the speaker cone. And last
but certainly not least I must not fail to inform
you that the Veena is brand new as of its 2006
CES debut.
Set
Up
I
usually start a set up the same way; I placed
the Veena speakers on the short 11.66-foot wall
of my rectangular room. The Speakers are placed
at two points of an equilateral triangle with
my listening position at the third point. After
you dial in the center soundstage by adjusting
the spacing between the speakers you integrate
the bass response by moving the speakers position
relative to the rear wall. I think that they sounded
best in my room with the speakers 42 inches out
from the rear wall with spacing of 50 inches separating
them. At this position I employed the Rives Audio
test CD this disc has built in error correction
specifically intended for use with a Radio Shack
SPL meter. I progressed through the test bands
and at band 35, which is equivalent to 40Hz. I
was able to measure what I consider usable bass
output. I had almost finalized the speaker position
when much to my surprise I found that I had them
set them up backwards.
How
so? Well the soft dome tweeters are not on center
they are offset to one side of the front baffle.
You should start out with the grill cloth removed
which obviously I did not do. The instructions
in the owner's manual tell you to position the
speakers with the tweeters at the left side and
right outside edges. I would think that since
the tweeters are the primary source of ambient
information and image placement they would have
to be placed nearer the center stage. But In fact
the Veena's image even better with the tweeters
farther apart and facing straight ahead. This
is all very significant and unusual audiopals
because it cannot be done unless you exercise
mastery over phase and dispersion. Another more
simplistic way to say the same thing is that you
need to integrate and control timing and radiation
patterns.
Aural
Aspects
You
would think that a very good speaker would be
easy to write about, but that is not always the
case and that is exactly what is happening now.
What you will hear from the Veena is a frequency
spanning coherence that sounds consonant with
the source. Another way to capture this concept
is to say the speakers within their range are
transparent to the source. I would like to reiterate
at this point that my evaluation reference is
and has been the sound of the human voice. I have
several reference discs that I invariably fall
back on. One of these is the album Time and Tide
sung by Basia Trzetrzelewska [Epic EK 40767].
It is a complicated wide range studio mix that
contains a wealth of aural clues. The first track
on the disc is "Promises." It starts
out with Basia singing from deep in the center
stage. As she intones the title word Promises
her voice moves closer to fill the center of the
sound stage. The effect is similar to a camera
lens as it zooms in to enlarge an image. I listen
intently for the double sibilant sounds in the
word promises repeated throughout the song. It
is subtle but you should be able to clearly hear
a breathy sibilant sound that distinguishes it
from the sound of escaping steam.
Another
disc that I think can illustrate the strengths
of the Veena speakers is a wonderful version of
"You Were Always On My Mind" by Willy
Nelson. This is the very first track on this CD.
The name of the album is Yours Always it is on
a Sony label catalog listing is CD A21562. I hesitate
to mention this recording because I was given
a copy of a copy of a compilation circulating
among local Audiophiles, Like the Basia disc this
is a wonderfully engineered and detailed studio
mix with transient speed and studio ambience that
highlights the resolving ability of these speakers.
At two minutes and forty seconds into this cut
there is a brief faint sound of a person in the
distant background whistling along with the melody.
Meanwhile Willy's vocal resides front and center
in all his nasal glory amidst the glisten of steel
guitar strings. Backup vocals are etched and clearly
delineated and recede in layers from the immediate
left center stage. In a strange and unexpected
way the metallic reverberation of the guitar strings
complements the country twang of Willy's voice.
This
next recording I would dearly like to tell you
about it is my latest fave disc discovery. It
is by artist Eva Cassidy, now therein lays a tale
and as usual I've come upon this recording and
this artist a bit late. Eva Cassidy passed away
Nov. 1, 1996 at age 33 from cancer but her wonderful
albums live on after her. Her voice and her phrasing
have a haunting purity that lingers on in my memory.
I only recently found her album Songbird [Blix
Street G210045]. This recording is a compilation
derived from 3 previous albums and was released
2 years after her passing. I must have heard this
recording a half dozen times at audiophile gatherings
and audio demos before I ever laid hands on the
actual disc. I found this album misplaced in the
folk section of my music store. But it actually
is an eclectic mix of pop and gospel cuts. The
very first track is the one that got to me it
is called Fields of Gold. You will hear only two
guitars the first is Eva accompanying herself
on acoustic guitar with Keith Grimes backing on
electric guitar. It is a wonderfully balanced
composition that perfectly illustrates the sincere
emotional purity of her voice. This song lets
you near her and you hear her with every audible
breath and wet sibilant sound. If Eva's voice
doesn't touch something inside of you than I suggest
that you have someone standing nearby with a defibulator.
The Veena speakers seem to be a perfect accompaniment
for Eva Cassidy both are conduits of a kind of
musical purity free of affectation.
The
studio-induced ambience of all three of these
recordings suffuses the performances with a pleasant
transparent space expanding quality; this is most
certainly a testament to the integration and extension
of the Veena SEAS tweeter. There remains only
one thing more to do and that is too give the
Veena mid-woofs a work out.
If
you wanted to test the speakers lower mid and
low frequency tonal integration than there is
no better test than to play Adagio d' Albinoni
as performed by Gary Karr and Harmon Lewis. This
originally came out on the Japanese Firebird label
but it is now available via the Cisco Music catalog
[GCD8003] from Acoustic Sounds. Recorded in a
cavernous Japanese cathedral, Karr's centuries-old
Amati bass fiddle is accompanied by a large and
sonorous pipe organ. The lowest register of the
organ in combination with the Amati string bass
energizes this stone walled enclosure and supports
long period rolling waves of reverberation. If
ever there was a test of lower frequency musical
sustain than this is it. You can clearly hear
the warmth and organic wooden resonance of the
Amati bass calling with a mournful sigh. The organ
sounds simultaneously with a deep organ pedal
note and you hear a repeating bass sound like
a beating heart echoing within the stonewalls.
Cut to the chase, I have never heard this heart
rending lament portrayed more naturally than this.
Again if you cannot feel the emotional intensity
of this music than I suggest you call 911. Understand
that the Veena speakers are not full range in
the strictest meaning of the phrase. But then
my small room cannot cleanly support very deep
bass. The natural bottom end extension of the
Veena speakers is all I would ever need.
Coda
Does
your mind fill in musical notes in the silence
between passages? Can you see a rainbow in a musical
composition? Than you most probably have Synesthesia
and there is know known cure. But if you can see
colors in sound than maybe you are not so very
bad off. Rather like perfect pitch it is a rare
ability only a very few are privy too. The Veena
speakers provide a window full of colors for these
fortunate few. There are times I am given something
to review and it turns out it is something I would
rather not do. But this time I found something
I wanted and so I went after it because I wanted
to share it with you. And so if for a moment I
can suspend my disbelief I will transcend time
and space and become one with the music. Grant
me this than I will ask for nothing more that
is the audiophile, Sine Qua non.
I
must thank Enjoy the Music.com® because they
give me the freedom to follow my muse.
Associated
Equipment
Michael
Yee Audio PA 3 power amplifier, Hafler 500 power
amplifier, Audio Research SP-9 Mark 3 preamplifier,
Source, Marantz DV8400 Universal CD player, Magnum
Dynalab FT101a tuner, DH Labs Reference 1, Audioquest
8TC and Esoteric Ultrapath speaker cables. Interconnects:
DH Labs Silver Revelation 1.5 meter, Wire World
Eclipse 2, 3meters. Line conditioners: Richard
Gray RGPC Sub Station, Alpha Core balanced isolation
transformer, Audio Power, Enhancer 1. Michael
Green Room Tunes. Argent Acoustic Lenses, and
home made sound absorbent foam wall Panels.
Semper
Hi-Fi
What
follows is the standardized rating system. Understand
that soundstage parameters are scaled down to
fit the size of the speakers.
|
Tonality
|
5
Stars
|
| Sub-bass
(10Hz - 60Hz) |
2
Stars
|
| Mid-bass
(80Hz - 200Hz) |
4
Stars
|
| Midrange
(200Hz - 3,000Hz) |
5
Stars
|
| High-frequencies
(3,000Hz on up) |
5
Stars
|
| Attack |
4
Stars
|
|
Decay
|
4
Stars
|
| Inner
Resolution |
5
Stars
|
| Soundscape
width front |
4
Stars
|
| Soundscape
width rear |
4
Stars
|
| Soundscape
depth behind speakers |
4
Stars
|
| Soundscape
extension into the room |
4
Stars
|
| Imaging |
5
Stars
|
| Fit
and Finish |
3
Stars
|
| Self
Noise |
N/A
|
| Value
for the Money |
4
Stars
|
Specifications
Type:
Two-way full range floorstanding loudspeaker
Drivers:
1-inch silk soft dome silver coil SEAS tweeter
and 7-inch carbon-fiber midrange/woofer
Frequency
Responncse: 42Hz to 20kHz (+/-3dB)
Efficiency:
89dB/W/m
Impedance:
8 Ohms nominal
Maximum
Power: 120 Watts, RMS
Dimensions:
8.5 x 13.5 x 36.5 (WxDxH in inches)
Weight:
35 Lbs.
Price:
$2,999

Company
Information
Divergent
Technologies Inc.
324 Fredrick Street
Kitchener Ontario
N2H 2N9 Canada
Voice:
(519) 749-1565
Fax: (519) 749-1565
E-mail: info@reference3a.com
Website: http://www.reference3a.com/