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This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and 1st March February 2012

 

Latest post 05-04-2011 5:16 AM by John. 18 replies.
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  • 04-25-2011 7:01 PM

    Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    How would beolab 9 compare to b&w range? I currently own P5 headphones and they are really nice. Better then b&o stuff in my opinion. 

  • 04-25-2011 7:15 PM In reply to

    • Evan
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Welcome to BeoWorld Mkondratov!

    The current B&O headphones are regarded as nothing special, even by a majority of BeoWorlders. I have a pair of A8 earphones (listening to them right now!) and actually like them. I always love listening to the P5 whenever I go into the Apple store (they must have nearly 10 demonstration pairs!)

    The topic of loudspeakers (B&O vs. B&W) hasn't really been debated here, at least for as long as I've been around. It is interesting to think about, things like the tweeters; the Lab 9 has ALT and the 801D (I feel the 801D is more applicable to the Lab 9) has its diamond super tweeter and both are 3-way speakers. But looking deeper, they start to separate, passive vs. active etc... I'm sure there is a comparo somewhere...

    I have precisely zero experience with B&W loudspeakers, so I may be full of it Laughing

    Evan

     

  • 04-26-2011 3:16 AM In reply to

    • Alex
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Apples and Oranges sonically.

    The B&Ws focus more on time-domain distortion (transparency, resolution etc...) while the BeoLabs are more about tonality, off-axis response etc...

    I wouldn't really want to say one is better than the other, although the 802D really is especially superb...

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  • 04-29-2011 2:14 AM In reply to

    • akoro
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    BeoLab 9 has more to offer in bass. It is better than any B&W that I have heard of (15", 2x12" and 2x10" models included) in resolution and accuracy.

    Some B&W's might have better midrange but overall BeoLab 9 is just better in my opinion.

    I like to listen to Kraftwerk and other electronic music and with that kind of music that has expression in low bass notes BeoLab 9 and 5 are superior compared to allmost any passive speaker.
  • 04-29-2011 4:29 AM In reply to

    • jc
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    The A8's are very good in my opinion, not much bass as being a headphone it is a very small speaker, but very clear and same "tonal" quality as the other B&o speakers.

  • 04-29-2011 7:45 AM In reply to

    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Hello Alex - It's funny my name is also Alex.

    Anyway I will like to comment on your view that B&W is more focused on time-domain distortion as compared to Beolabs. If you look at the measurements of Beolab5s you will realize there that it has a perfect time response. It is far easier and way more affordable to correct alignment problems of speaker units with low level signals or under the digital domain, the latter being the simplest. So it is safe to assume that the Beolab 9s have an edge over the B&Ws in terms of time-domain distortion with the inclusion of the fact that B&O uses paper and cloth materials for speaker diaphragms which are superior to the diamond or the metal materials in terms of self damping/ time distortion. The fact that the Beolab 9s are sloped at an angle too place a part.

    B&O has a reputation of sounding crisp and incessant in the higher registers whereas B&W speakers favor neutrality but is notorious for the lack of integration between the different speaker units that are made of vastly different materials. 

    Simply put B&W is for hi-fi lovers and B&O is for music lovers. 

  • 04-29-2011 12:22 PM In reply to

    • Alex
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    The BeoLab 9 is not DSP based, the crossovers involved are fairly straightforward/conventional for an active speaker, although they do include some dynamic EQing depending I believe. There is not time alignment going on, although you are of course correct that the drivers themselves are physically aligned. In terms of transient response, I would expect the BeoLabs to outperform the B&Ws as you say, but in terms of decay, harmonic and non-harmonic distortion levels, the B&Ws would trump the BeoLabs due to their cabinet construction, especially in the lowest bass registers where the BeoLab 9 enclosure can begin to break up a little.

    You're right about the driver integration though, the BeoLabs are a lot smoother tonally across their bandwidth than the B&Ws!

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  • 04-29-2011 2:05 PM In reply to

    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    The problem with the B&W is that you will probably never have enough power (huge boat anchor power amp's!!) to drive them to deliver timing and dynamics like the BL9.

    Put simply,with BL9 you listen to the music and with B&W you think about making it better whilst listening to the music!

    I have only had experience with Revel speakers and in a direct comparison to BL9 the sound is quite flat and closed in at the top end,the detail is nowhere near on any type of string and the BL9 generally brings out the best in the recording and everything sounds 'right' and you constantly hear new things.

     

  • 04-29-2011 7:30 PM In reply to

    • Evan
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    The sooner I get some proper BeoLabs the better.

    Evan

     

  • 04-29-2011 9:29 PM In reply to

    • Alex
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    DirtyDiana:

    The problem with the B&W is that you will probably never have enough power (huge boat anchor power amp's!!) to drive them to deliver timing and dynamics like the BL9.

    The B&Ws are overall more efficient than the BeoLab 9s. Drop 400w of power into an 802D and you will make much more noise than a BeoLab 9 ever will.

     

    IMO comparing passive speakers to active speakers in terms of what it takes to get them driven is kind of irrelavent. It's like saying you have to put a much bigger engine in a Cessna than in a Peugeot 106 to get it up to 100mph...

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  • 05-02-2011 12:57 AM In reply to

    • John
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Alex:

    Apples and Oranges sonically.

    The B&Ws focus more on time-domain distortion (transparency, resolution etc...) while the BeoLabs are more about tonality, off-axis response etc...

    I wouldn't really want to say one is better than the other, although the 802D really is especially superb...

     

    I'd generally agree.  

    This is an interesting thread to follow, as whilst I've been a B&W fan for many years, I've also become a fan of B&O's ALT speakers in particular - the Lab 3's, 9's, and of course the 5's.

    From a design perspective there are considerable differences.  

    Active v's passive amplification/operation is the main one; however the benefits of the B&O active design with onboard electronics extend beyond the advantages of merely active crossovers, to thermal protection for the drivers, Adaptive Bass Linearisation, Room adaption re the bass output tailored for different placement options, and of course the Acoustic Lenses Technology.

    By comparison, and as a passive design, the B&W's are much more conventional electronically; however the cabinets and driver design are arguably state of the art.  The Matrix cabinet construction is arguably as good as it gets for an essentially wooden box loudspeaker design re the lower bass cabinet with respect to rigidity and vanishingly low cabinet readout, and the separate marlin head for the midrange driver on the top models is again ultra rigid and ultra low distortion as regards cabinet 'readout' and absorbing unwanted rear radiation from the midrange driver itself.

    The drivers themselves are all proprietary to B&W, and again arguably state of the art.  The bass drivers feature 'Rohacell' - essentially a hard polystyrene core, laminated in carbon fibre - B&W claim a 10db reduction of unwanted rear sound radiation coming back out through the driver compared to 'conventional' paper/kevlar drivers.  The midrange is a FST or Fixed suspension Transducer - there is no conventional rubber roll surround to feed back standing waves into the cone as per conventional drivers - the cone edge is simply terminated on a compressed foam surround.  The tweeter features a Vapour deposited manufactured diamond cone that allows tweeter breakup to be pushed well outside the audio band.  Additionally the tweeter and midrange drivers are all mechanically decoupled from the deleterious effects of modulation via cabinet vibration from the bass enclosure and from each other by Iosgel - a gel like substance enclosed in rubber and used as an insulator between drivers and cabinets.

    B&W have published white papers on their design features, and I have briefly summarised the main ones them here.  Certainly unless there are design specifications to the contrary available from B&O, I would opinion that as far as design features are concerned, the B&O ALT designs are likely ahead as regards active amplification and control electronics, plus of course the unique and proprietary ALT lenses, but the B&W designs are ahead on driver and cabinet design.  B&O do not state whose OEM drivers they use and are likely bought in perhaps off the shelf, or maybe custom made to their designs - does anyone know who makes the drivers for Lab 9's and 5's and of what materials they are made of for instance?  

    B&O state their cabinet design/materials for the Lab 9 and Lab 5 as being of a composite material - reviews call it plastic, but composite as a descriptive term covers many materials, and again whilst this allows them to move away from conventional cabinet forms oft dictated by wood products, whether there are any acoustic advantages in designing in composite materials is an unknown in lieu of white papers or other technical information from B&O.  

    I have been told by a dealer that in the Lab 5 B&O use similar techniques to B&W re the isogel isolation of mechanical modulation effects from the cabinets being transmitted to the drivers, but I have no technical resources available to be able to verify this, so it may have merely been invention on the part of the dealer.  Does anyone have a definitive answer to this?

    All in all then, from a design viewpoint, cabinet and driver design appears to favour B&W, with electronics, active amplification and the ALT lenses favouring the B&O.  That leaves us with measurement and listening..... which I am sure there are many here who could contribute much more relevant information than myself....

    Best Regards

    John.... 

    No-one ever regretted buying quality.

  • 05-02-2011 4:48 AM In reply to

    • Alex
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Beoboiinoz:

    I'd generally agree.  

    This is an interesting thread to follow, as whilst I've been a B&W fan for many years, I've also become a fan of B&O's ALT speakers in particular - the Lab 3's, 9's, and of course the 5's.

    From a design perspective there are considerable differences.  

    ...

    All in all then, from a design viewpoint, cabinet and driver design appears to favour B&W, with electronics, active amplification and the ALT lenses favouring the B&O.  That leaves us with measurement and listening..... which I am sure there are many here who could contribute much more relevant information than myself....

    Best Regards

    John.... 

     

    A good post - and yes B&W's driver technology really is superb! The Diamond tweeters really do what they say on the tin!

     

    And btw, don't worry John, I haven't forgotten your email, it's just quite long and taking me a while to come up with a good response! Laughing

     

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  • 05-02-2011 9:36 AM In reply to

    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Good point,but a collegue of mine recently placed a 700W Pass X350.5 with his 802D and still did not get the result he expected on many fronts in an average size living room.It is rare to find a BL9/5 owner seeking out more of the same and most are just happy with them which speaks volumes.

    The other issue is the cost to performance ratio,the timbral accuracy achieved with ALT is pretty hard to match for the relatively small outlay.The 802D are over 10k and then theres the rest of it so really it is a 20k set up versus sub 10k set up.

    There really is no point comparing because it all comes down to personal preference.

     

     

  • 05-02-2011 9:56 AM In reply to

    • kawo
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    As a previous owner of the B&W 802 and now the BL5 I can say both a fantastic loudspeakers! However, in my room setup the BL5 is able to perform closer to their limits than the 802 due the Bass adjustment. The 802 just had to much of it...

    From my expierence I like the lows of the BL5 more than  the 802, the mids better with the 802 but the hights especially with the D version are (at least for me) a little bit to much.

    In my new house the BL5 are the better package for me , if I still would have a room to accommodate the 802 I think would not have sold them.

     

    _________________________________________________________________________

    BV4-50, Beosystem 3, Beolab 5, Beolab 3, BV3-32, BV1, BS9000, Beolab 4, Beolab 2000, Beo4 Cinema

  • 05-03-2011 5:37 AM In reply to

    • John
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    wonderfulelectric:

    B&O uses paper and cloth materials for speaker diaphragms which are superior to the diamond or the metal materials in terms of self damping/ time distortion. The fact that the Beolab 9s are sloped at an angle too place a part.

    B&O has a reputation of sounding crisp and incessant in the higher registers whereas B&W speakers favor neutrality but is notorious for the lack of integration between the different speaker units that are made of vastly different materials. 

     

    Good post Alex.

    I am under the understanding that B&O uses silk dome tweeters in the Lab 3, 9 & 5 - but have no knowledge of whether they are an in-house or OEM device, and if so who they are made by - perhaps dynaudio or scanspeak?  I am unaware of the driver materials for the bass or midrange, but paper is certainly a traditional, if conventional in the 21st century, favourite - again I wonder if they are in-house or OEM drivers and again who might make them.

    In the 800 series B&W are using their own proprietary drivers - Rohacell for the bass drivers, Kevlar for the midrange and vapour deposited, manufactured diamond domes for the tweeters.  Are these materials inferior to paper and cloth re self damping/time distortion? - I would've thought the newer materials might(?) be better, but have no facts to support an argument either way.

    I'd agree that the Lab 9's would have physical time alignment via the cabinet slope, and would think the rounded shape much better than a flat wooden/MDF baffle as regards standing waves/reflections to colour the sound.

    I have extensively listened to the previous Nautilus 802 and would agree entirely as to your comments about the sound lacking integration and coherence between the drivers.  However, the latest 800 series would appear to be somewhat better going from reviews; personally I've only heard up to the new 803d as far as the new diamond tweeter models of the range, and thought it much better at integration and coherence/timing than the previous Nautilus 802.

    If you have any knowledge as to who makes the drivers for the Lab 3's, 9's and 5's I'd be very interested in that info.

    Best Regards

     

    John... 

     

    No-one ever regretted buying quality.

  • 05-03-2011 6:02 AM In reply to

    • John
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    DirtyDiana:

    Good point,but a collegue of mine recently placed a 700W Pass X350.5 with his 802D and still did not get the result he expected on many fronts in an average size living room.It is rare to find a BL9/5 owner seeking out more of the same and most are just happy with them which speaks volumes.

    The other issue is the cost to performance ratio,the timbral accuracy achieved with ALT is pretty hard to match for the relatively small outlay.The 802D are over 10k and then theres the rest of it so really it is a 20k set up versus sub 10k set up.

    There really is no point comparing because it all comes down to personal preference.

     

     

     

    One of the drawbacks undoubtedly of the 800 series, is that they reputedly require a lot of current to drive them to get the best out of them.  

    That means adding commensurately to the cost as a finished speaker/amplifier combination as you clearly point out.  Here in Australia, the 804d is A$12,000.00 and the 803d is A$16,000.00 - both straddling the B&O Lab 9 at A$13,500.00.  

    If one was to stretch to 802d's you'd need A$25,000.00 and for the flagship 800d, A$37,000.00 - again straddling a B&O Lab 5 at A$30,000.00.

    Of course, if you want the best out of them, the importer and retailer would strongly recommend the likes of Classe CA-M600 monoblocks at A$11,500.00 each, which means an pair of 802d's is going to set you back circa A$48,000.00 if you want to pair them with the 'best' amplification for example.  This is one of the reasons why, IMHO I feel the B&O Lab 5's, despite their formidable cost, are a relative performance bargain in the world of specialist so called high end HiFi.

    "There really is no point comparing because it all comes down to personal preference"

    I gave this quite a bit of thought, because whilst in principle I agree as regards living in the practical real word, the purist and idealist in me wants to know what is the best speaker between two arguably formidable range of speakers - the B&O ALT Lab series v's the B&W 800 series - by design and engineering details, and measurement and audio assessment, - where the bottom line is which speaker gets closest to the most accurate reproduction of an original musical event - i.e the original tenet of Hifi - the closest approach to the original sound.

    Whether we will be able to discuss all the objective details here such as to reach any sort of conclusion is a difficult one though..... 

    Best Regards

     

    John.... 

     

    No-one ever regretted buying quality.

  • 05-03-2011 10:33 AM In reply to

    • Dave
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Beoboiinoz:

     

    I gave this quite a bit of thought, because whilst in principle I agree as regards living in the practical real word, the purist and idealist in me wants to know what is the best speaker between two arguably formidable range of speakers - the B&O ALT Lab series v's the B&W 800 series - by design and engineering details, and measurement and audio assessment, - where the bottom line is which speaker gets closest to the most accurate reproduction of an original musical event - i.e the original tenet of Hifi - the closest approach to the original sound.

    Whether we will be able to discuss all the objective details here such as to reach any sort of conclusion is a difficult one though..... 

    Best Regards

     

    John.... 

     

    Yes yes yes! I agree with this, very diplomatic of you. My opinion is going to be Beolab 5. When the eyes are closed, i have not heard any other speaker sound so real like BL5.

    “Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of intelligent effort.”

    Your health and well-being comes first and fore-most.

     

     

  • 05-03-2011 11:42 AM In reply to

    • mbee
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    Interesting debate, but I must admit that I join the "apples vs oranges" team : comparing a pair of active speaker to a pair of passive speaker is very difficult.

    With Beolab 9, if you don't win sonically (not so sure...), you are certain that you get the best from them at every volume due to active amplification tailor-made to the speakers and, maybe as important, active crossovers. What amplifier would you pair with a pair of 800? And even if it's a superb Classe  monoblock, it may sound incredibly great at a specified volume, but become flat at a lower volume...

    So... You may get a better sound with a 800 series, but you will spend a lot of time and money to get it.

  • 05-04-2011 5:16 AM In reply to

    • John
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    Re: Beolab 9 vs B&W 802d - 805d

    mbee:
    With Beolab 9, if you don't win sonically (not so sure...), you are certain that you get the best from them at every volume due to active amplification tailor-made to the speakers and, maybe as important, active crossovers.

    There is little doubt that technically speaking, active beats passive, all other things being equal.  

    Personally however, I doubt that a Beolab 9 is likely to 'outdo' an B&W 802d - for that I think you'd likely need to be looking at a Lab 5; however I would think that the Lab 9 would be more than competitive with either the B&W 804D or its slightly bigger brother, the 803D.

    Alex has mentioned that he knew of a customer who preferred an Beolab 3 to an B&W 804 - whether that was the latest diamond model though I am not sure.... perhaps he could comment?

    Best Regards

    John... 

    No-one ever regretted buying quality.

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