Hi there, thanks for your comment. Bowers very much allows speaker reviews. We reviewed the 703 (on Audiograde.uk) and will be reviewing the new range soon
the problem with marketing is that it doesn't mean much. if they had a frequency, distortion and dispersion graphs that might convince me it is a decent speaker.
I mean, if you're so interested in these? Why not find some owners and ask them? Go to a store and listen to them? Or are you one of these budget noob audiophiles who think graphs are everything?
@@Audfile graphs are very important to the engineers & audiophiles the problem is we like what we like & despite all others (audiophiles= football fans)
@mohammedsharokhan8097 the whole point. Not every speaker needs to measure the same way. You have to think the engineers know what they are doing and if they have achieved a sound that people *LOVE* despite the measurements, then let it roll. Plenty of flat speakers for the *everything must be perfectly flat for me to enjoy music* crowd. I mean, look at Klipsch Heritage, Cornwall, Horns, etc. They measure like shit, but wealthy audiophiles who have experience, mind you, LOVE THEM.
Man I wish I could afford these. The blues so good. Any millionaires want to help me out ? :)
Beautiful speakers,good sound but too much money for Made in China speakers
Sad Bowers and Wilkins doesn’t let people review their speakers...
Hi there, thanks for your comment. Bowers very much allows speaker reviews. We reviewed the 703 (on Audiograde.uk) and will be reviewing the new range soon
the problem with marketing is that it doesn't mean much. if they had a frequency, distortion and dispersion graphs that might convince me it is a decent speaker.
I mean, if you're so interested in these? Why not find some owners and ask them? Go to a store and listen to them? Or are you one of these budget noob audiophiles who think graphs are everything?
@@Audfile graphs are very important to the engineers & audiophiles the problem is we like what we like & despite all others (audiophiles= football fans)
@mohammedsharokhan8097 the whole point. Not every speaker needs to measure the same way. You have to think the engineers know what they are doing and if they have achieved a sound that people *LOVE* despite the measurements, then let it roll. Plenty of flat speakers for the *everything must be perfectly flat for me to enjoy music* crowd. I mean, look at Klipsch Heritage, Cornwall, Horns, etc. They measure like shit, but wealthy audiophiles who have experience, mind you, LOVE THEM.