Alumine Five of Stenheim
Stenheim is a relatively late entrant to the high-end speaker field. It was founded in 2010 by a collective of mainly ex-Goldmund engineers, and its products have inherited an unmistakable aesthetic and, to a lesser extent, sonic DNA, although it was a significantly evolved character that was to emerge in the shape of the debut model, the compact, two-way Alumine Two. It’s a developmental divergence that has continued and, if anything, accelerated with the emergence of each subsequent product. The latest Stenheim speakers, developed under the auspices of new owner Jean-Pascal Panchard, definitely have their own, unambiguous identity, both visually and musically.
I’ve been seriously looking forward to the arrival of the Alumine Five. Previous experience with the brand has included impressive exposure to the various versions of the enormous and enormously impressive Ultime Reference models, as well as a brief but highly rewarding flirtation with the stand-mounted Alumine Two in my own system. The possibility of combining the sense of musical articulation, enthusiasm and communication I experienced from the Alumine Two, with more than a hint of the clarity, scale and authority so effortlessly delivered by the Reference models, all in a package that, if not exactly affordable, at least isn’t completely out of the question, makes the Alumine Five a distinctly interesting proposition.
Yet, confronted with the Alumine Five in the flesh, there’s little to hint at the extraordinary promise lurking within. Resolutely rectangular in true Stenheim style, the Five’s aluminum cabinet, with its plate-to-plate construction, stands just 48" tall, 15" deep and presents a broad 11" face to the world, dimensions based on golden-ratio numbers. The front baffle is split by a physical break between the upper midrange-treble enclosure and the lower bass cabinet, independently ported by the laminated full-width slots above and below, a physical separation that is mirrored by the contrasting inlaid strips that help visually break up the one-piece side panels. The regular lines, smooth surfaces, flawless matte finish and lack of visible fixings could easily result in a bland, almost featureless appearance. But those trim strips and the offset midrange and treble drivers do just enough to give the Five a subtle hint of individual style without resorting to the sort of gauche and ostentatious flourishes that so often pass as design.
The result is a refreshingly clean, classical appearance that will blend seamlessly with a range of different decors. Despite the lack of grilles (although they are available as an option, does anybody really spend this kind of money on a speaker and then compromise the performance by fitting covers?), the beautifully profiled baffle and absence of visible fixings makes for a genuinely neat, finished appearance that matches the superb surface finish on the cabinet. The end result just looks right, in a way that makes you wonder why you’d want grilles anyway.
The first hint of its potent sonic capabilities comes when you try to pick it up. Each comparatively compact cabinet tips the scales at 220 pounds. That’s a grunt-inducing, two-man lift. Now, take a look at the figures for bandwidth and sensitivity, and an in-room response that digs down as far as 28Hz combined with 94dB efficiency should raise your eyebrows, especially given the compact cabinet dimensions. Which brings us to the first experiential disconnect: boxes this size shouldn’t produce this much bass or do it so easily. Nor should they weigh so much -- although therein lies the clue to this particular conundrum. When it comes to bass extension, it’s not the external dimensions of the box that matter, but its internal volume. Just like the Crystal Cable Minissimo, a thin-wall cabinet makes for a much larger internal volume than the external dimensions might suggest -- especially if we apply the expectations of more conventional wood-based construction. Throw in the sheer weight of the aluminum panels and the combination of mass and physical dimensions would subconsciously suggest massively thick walls -- and a correspondingly limited internal volume. Instead, what we have here is a deceptively large volume, which, combined with the inertia of the heavy cabinet and the mechanical stability provided by the material, makes for an effective mechanical reference for driver movement, meaning that more of the energy your amplifier sticks into the speaker comes out as sound and (at least in theory) it will be more precisely rendered.
So far, not very much that’s new. It’s not like Stenheim (or Magico, or YG Acoustics) has exclusivity when it comes to aluminum cabinets. But what does make Stenheim different is the unique material they use in damping their cabinet panels. Of course, the separate enclosures and the internal baffles they demand make for an inherently heavily braced structure, but look inside a dismantled Alumine Five and you’ll find strategically placed pads stuck to the cabinet walls. These three-layer, self-adhesive pads combine a heavy damping layer (adjacent to the cabinet wall itself) with added foam and impervious layers, allowing the low-volume pads to influence both the mechanical behavior of the cabinet itself and the enclosed volume. It’s an interesting solution because it manages to overcome the weakness so often audible in simple, braced aluminum cabinets (the all-too-recognizable resonant signature of the material itself) while maximizing the benefits (large volume and rigidity) by obviating the need to stuff the internal space full of wadding or long-haired wool. In fact, if the Stenheims were stood behind a sonically transparent curtain, you’d be hard-pressed to recognize the music as emanating from an aluminum cabinet at all. The absence of the bleached, grainy or lean colorations, the lack of sterile, mechanistic reproduction, is one big half of the Stenheim story, living, breathing proof that it’s not what you use but how you use it that counts.
The other half is down to the drive units, and after the cabinets, those come as quite a surprise, both the lineup and the chosen materials. In stark contrast to the use of the latest, precision CNC techniques, complex damping pads and finishing options, the Alumine Five's drivers are as traditional as they come, with a coated silk-dome tweeter and pulp or laminated paper midrange and bass drivers. The cone drivers use textile double-roll surrounds and massive magnets more normally found in pro-audio applications, and while Stenheim doesn’t build its own drivers, the company works closely with its chosen supplier (PHL, definitely not one of the usual suspects) to specify the electrical parameters, mechanical characteristics and precise details of the surface coating.
The use of such lightweight cone materials and large motors aids the system efficiency, while a hybrid second-order/Linkwitz-Riley crossover, the result of extended listening and evolution, ensures phase coherence and excellent out-of-band attenuation and makes for easy non-reactive load characteristics, despite the three-way topology. The other aspect of the driver lineup that might be considered slightly unusual is the use of a large-diameter (6 1/2") midrange unit -- although less so since Vandersteen’s patent on the approach lapsed some years ago, resulting in a rash of companies suddenly exploring the possibilities of the topology.
Perhaps more important, in the case of the Alumine Five, it means that you are getting the tweeter and midrange drivers from the Ultime Reference series speakers, teamed here with a pair of 10" woofers but without the benefit of a super tweeter. Even so, Stenheim quotes bandwidth out to 35kHz, which should suffice for most purposes. The review speakers arrived with the optional second set of terminals installed, allowing for biwiring or, more significantly, biamping, an upgrade opportunity that makes this an option you should take. If, in the meantime, you are single-wiring the speakers, make sure you factor in a set of jumpers that match your speaker cables: the Alumine Five's overall sense of musical coherence makes the benefits especially obvious. Likewise, good wiring practice is essential, both in terms of cable dressing and diagonal connection (red to midrange/treble, black to bass, with jumpers arranged accordingly).
Aside from the speaker's substantial weight, the parallel sides and flat surfaces of the four-square cabinet make setting up the Fives an absolute joy. Precise, repeatable, angular adjustments are easily achieved, while changes in attitude are just as straightforward, helped by the beautifully profiled stainless-steel spiked feet and deeply cupped footers. Both the cones and their locking rings have nice, large ports to take the supplied pry bars, but it’s worth greasing the threads before installation. One other thing to watch out for: the spikes are seriously (refreshingly) sharp -- sharp enough to penetrate a thick rug and score the floor below, so be careful where you stand the speakers once the feet are installed. Final positioning disposed the speakers on a broad front with minimal toe-in. When it came to dialing in their considerable musical energy, the most critical factor proved to be height off the ground, with tiny adjustments of the spikes making profound differences to the weight and pace of the presentation. Likewise, equal weighting of the four spikes was crucial to a proper sense of grounded weight and dynamic authority.
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Price: $60,000 per pair.
Warranty: Five years parts and labor.
(Source: The Audio Beat)
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...Continue ReadingWhy are we born?
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Question: what are we born for?
Answer: I think there are as many answers to this big questions as the number of people on earth. or maybe more than the number of people in this world because one person would have changed the answer many times. Me too.
If you ask when I was younger, I would answer one thing. I was younger, I would answer another thing or ask when I was older, I might answer another thing. But I asked. Now, I would like to answer what I could think of now.
The day that I gave you to listen makes me think about "Ashram 4" the process of Hindu life which divided into 4 STEPS:
1) The Virgin (age of education). The meaning of life in this age is to learn through both life experience and knowledge in the classroom to work.
2) Cuddle (Reigns). The meaning of life at this age is to build a place in the world. Answer yourself who I am. What career should I do. Find a partner, have a family, build stability for life and love.
3) yesterday (who sacrificed the house) the meaning of life at this age has changed from " collecting " to " Lalay " when the family starts to be stable, it's time to practice the mind. Learn to be happy from " release " Instead of "hugging"
4) Sanyasi (Doing Dharma). The meaning of life is to do the salvation to the cuddle th of life.
Ashram 4 may look like academic criteria. But if you look carefully, I think the sequence of life is really like that. The change of life needs in life changes according to the body and hormones within us.
In the age of hormones, we are excited about everything. The world looks new. It's nice to pick up. It's nice to own.
When I come to young, it's the age that I want to have. I want to collect things. It's a lot of suffering. Because I want to be very disappointed. I need stability. But I learned that there is nothing stable in this world. I collect things that I want to be satisfied Plus, young hormones in the body that gradually diminimize their heart.
When I have almost everything I ever wanted, I found that I am not happy. So I slowly tell myself that - eh or the answer is not about the outside of the body, but it's about training. So I start traveling inside. The mind seeks answers from training. Heart instead of concubine
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Therefore, the answer to the question, " why are we born " changes by day, time and circumstances in life. But no matter what age, I think there is one answer that we can always answer every day, age and situation. That is " we were born to love and Being loved "
The meaning of this answer is that we are born to associate with other people in the world. We are born to be part of the world and all things.
We are born to know that something is holding us alive. Trees, butterflies, clouds, distilled into water for us to drink. There is a chef cooking for us. There is a tailor making clothes for us to wear. The reason that raised me, my father drove us to school. There is a teacher to teach me. I have friends waiting for fun. There are people who love to cheer me up. There are many things that hold our lives.
We are born to recognize these connections.
Touch, perceive, indulge, and be part of all things that are assembled as our lives.
Meanwhile, we are also part of things and people. We are children of parents, brother, brother, friends of friends, husband of husband, husband of husband, husband, doctor, doctor, a passenger of motorcycle. The camera of the person who asked us to take a picture. We are the source of the carbon dioxide of trees. The one who affects ice that the north pole white bear is lying around. The one who helps not throw trash into the sea for fish in the sea. No need to eat plastic bags choking. What else. What's more. The world.
We are born to recognize these connections.
Touch, perceive, indulge and be the best part of other things and others.
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If we speak Buddhist, we are born to break the ego or divided thoughts, " this is me. That's you " or " this is me. That's the world " but we spend life and training the mind to see the fact that the real life is not. " ego " is " sleeping cuddle ta " is invisible, but not emptiness. We are invisible because we are connected to other things. Others live in one flesh.
And that is the one connected love.
In one corner, we are born to give love and in the other end we are born to receive love.
If you feel this "love" no matter what age, we are, we will have a kind heart and feel the kindness that others have for us and see that we are all human beings who suffer, full of love, greedy, angry.
With this cuddle th world, we do not feel alone, lonely, not cut ourselves off from the world and others. We will find a connection and redeem. Ask ourselves how our existence is useful to others and other things.
If you want to find meaning for your own life, a satisfying answer may not be because it's the end. The happiness that we find to fulfill our lives. We will be bored of it one day and find a new answer. Let's come to put in a leaking hole of craving. Lifetime of life
If we only think about ourselves, one day that we have everything but we are not happy, it may reach the point where there is no answer to breathe. But if we have a life that is connected to others, we will always mean something else.
So we exist for others and other things that are connected.
Of course we can't feel this all the time because human nature always twitches us to think about ourselves first. Protect ourselves. Exploit for ourselves. That's normal. I am too.
And that would be the homework of life that nature has given us about 80 years to practice and purify the mind to feel the clean feeling of being part with everything and lay down the heaviness of carrying "ego" And cravings to concubine who we are.
Have you ever stood on the mountain or on the beach quietly and went away? Have you ever looked up at the night sky with stars in the sky?
In a state of silence that we don't want to occupy mountains, sea and stars, there will be one time we disappear. We will be happy.
Because we are giving love and receiving love from all things.Translated