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ASCEND ACOUTICS Sierra Tower quad-driver 3-way Speakers w/RAAL Tweeter Upgrade

$ 1319.99

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Connectivity: Wired
  • Model: Sierra Towers
  • Brand: Ascend Acoustics
  • Type: Floorstanding Speakers
  • Condition: FULLY TESTED - SOLD AS A PAIR IN SATIN DARK CHERRY FINISH - WITH RAAL TWEETER UPGRADE - INCLUDES ORIGINAL BOX/PACKING, SPEC SHEET, GRILLES, BASES

    Description

    PREOWNED - 00 LIST! - FULLY TESTED - SOLD AS A PAIR IN SATIN DARK CHERRY FINISH -
    WITH RAAL TWEETER UPGRADE - INCLUDES ORIGINAL BOX/PACKING, SPEC SHEET, GRILLES, BASES
    As fascinating as that is, all the technology in the world is pointless unless it produces real-world results. So how do the new Towers sound?
    In a word,
    spectacular
    .
    In more than one word, the Sierra Towers seriously kick out the jams. They take every aspect of the Sierra-1's sound and turn it up a notch...delivering a weighty, front-row presentation that begs to be cranked up loud. From top to bottom:
    The Sierra-1 has a slightly honeyed top-end that I've always loved. However for the Towers, Dave had a different goal for the treble: to make it as accurate as possible. The new NrT tweeter accomplishes this with ease, with highs that are natural and extended without any sense of being overly smoothed or sweetened. The good news is that they are not the slightest bit tizzy or strident either, and are never fatiguing... even during long listening sessions. The Towers score a direct hit for those who want their highs clean and candidly revealing.
    The Towers' midrange is remarkable. While I never had any problem with the mids on the Sierra-1, it never really called attention to itself. The midrange on the Towers, on the other hand, is a main event. It projects out in to the room at you, with the same kind of palpable impact that I'm used to hearing only in the bass. Inner detail is fantastic even on large-ensemble recordings, and they are free from distortion and retain a hefty amount of dynamic headroom when played at spirited levels.
    The overall tonality of the bass isn't much different on the Towers than it is on the Sierra-1 (and that's a good thing). The Towers play lower, test tones were audible to the mid- to high-20s in my room, but the real improvements were in the loss of distortion and physical feel of the music. Unlike any stand-mounted monitor, the Towers can move enough air to vibrate your chest, and do it without introducing congestion during intricate musical passages. You can improve the visceral impact of any speaker with the addition of a good subwoofer, but it's certainly not required for enjoyable listening on the Towers. I turned my subwoofer off for the entire review period, and never missed it.
    Bona Fide Rockers
    If I've ever heard a set of speakers built from the ground up to rock, the Ascend Towers are it. Every group I threw at them: Zeppelin, Metallica, Tool, and AC/DC to name but a few; rocked, thrashed, crunched, and grooved exactly the way I wanted them too. Everything about them seems optimized for head-banging, eye-blinking impact, and I gave them every opportunity. Of course, "real" audiophiles will tell you that rock 'n' roll recordings don't make for very good loudspeaker test material. I say that the
    only
    good test material is the music that you most often listen to, and a speaker that can't deliver the goods from Van Halen or Opeth has no place in my audio system.
    Still, those same "real" audiophiles will go on to say that there is no better test for a loudspeaker  than recordings of full-size symphony orchestras, and they have a good point. A symphony orchestra consists of about 100 people, each vibrating the air in their own way (by string, reed, or long-wound metal pipe), plus a couple guys (and they usually are guys) playing drums bigger than any known speaker drivers. It is no small feat to take all that and deliver it through a few vibrating cones, which is exactly what we expect our speakers to do.
    I thought the Towers would do a respectable job with concert music... I played the same 1959 recording of Saint-Saëns' Symphony #3 that impressed me on the Sierra-1 (Charles Munch and the Chicago Symphony, RCA Living Stereo SACD), and found on the Towers it has an even larger sense of scale and a weightier bottom end. Later on in the review period a friend of mine brought over
    A Copland Celebration, Vol. 1
    , featuring Aaron Copland himself conducting the London Symphony Orchestra in his own "Fanfare for the Common Man". It was breathtaking, with the enormous brass section coming at us from well beyond the speakers. More modern than Copland, I have a recording of Gil Shaham and the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra performing Arvo Pärt's "Tabula Rasa"...the first movement has a prepared piano recorded with a very close microphone, when it's struck the Towers presented it like a hand grenade going off.
    I've been listening to a lot of electronic music these days, which turns out to be very challenging speaker evaluation material as well. Electronic music can be created produced directly to tape, with no natural, real-world limitations on frequency or dynamic range...pure sonic punishment for a loudspeaker. One particularly impressive artist I've found recently is Lyonel Bauchet. A film/TV/radio composer based in Paris, Lyonel is also one of finest practitioners of the Buchla synthesizer on the planet. My favorite album of his so far is
    Buchla Tunes Vol. 2
    , available as a download (or for free listening) at
    lyonel.bandcamp.com
    (he has no physical releases that I know of). Opening with the beautiful "Pavane K4816" and progressing through the abstract, outer-space jam "Uninvited Guest" to the funky, polyrhythmic workout "Just Read the Instructions" and the spare, percussive "Nihongo Pulse Balloons", Lyonel covers a lot of sonic territory here, much of it not of this earth. This is one of those recordings that you simply strap yourself in and let the Towers take for a ride.
    A lot of the fun of having a new set of speakers around (or any component for that matter) is rediscovering old favorites... playing those chestnuts from your record collection you know (or thought you knew) so well, and hear again for the first time their charms from a different sonic perspective. There is something to that... I think we listen differently when we're evaluating a new component and it does cause us to hear things anew. I think that is a lot of what motivates audiophiles to continually upgrade their systems. I had a slightly different experience this time around; it was actually discovering an old favorite that I'd never really heard before at all. I had recently installed a new phono cartridge on my turntable when the Sierra Towers arrived, and one setup guide I found online said to use female vocals as a reference when setting tracking force, so I dug out a copy of Donna Summer's
    On the Radio: Greatest Hits, Vols. 1-2
    that I had picked up in a Craigslist lot a few years ago. Summer sounded fine, but what really grabbed me was Giorgio Morodor's propulsive synthesizers on the dance floor epic "I Feel Love"...the Towers' outstanding mids brought enough energy out of this track to get everyone in the house moving.
    Thousand Trick Pony
    I know I'm going on about the Sierra Towers' volume capability and facility with bombastic music... it is what I look for in a loudspeaker. There are plenty of speakers that excel at musical intimacy (e.g. single-driver speakers, the classic BBC LS3/5A, etc.), but playing clean, loud, distortion-free music is more difficult engineering feat, and the Towers pass the test with aplomb. I wanted to find out what they could do with a wider variety of source material, so I turned to a quieter set of recordings to find out.
    First up was
    Temptation
    , Holly Cole's 1995 release of Tom Waits' covers. This album has a lot of very subtle, close-mic’ed performances, and one of the best is her heartbreaking take on "I Don't Want to Grow Up". It consists of nothing more than a bass line, a few scattered piano notes, and Cole's vocals sung just barely above a whisper, but the Towers delivered it with nuance and a truckload of emotional power.
    Further proof that the Towers do not require full-tilt volume levels to be enthralling came late in the review period, when ECM released
    The Well
    , the new album by understated Norwegian pianist Tord Gustavsen. While Gustavsen's mid-tempo tunes are markedly creepier than the vapid new age music of the '80s and '90s that it brings to mind, it's still melodic and accessible, and the Towers evoked a variety of emotions out of it... from the gospel-tinged "Circling" to the haunting set-closer, "Inside".
    The Well
    is the first complete album Gustavsen has recorded with a quartet, and Tore Brunborg's tenor saxophone was gorgeously rendered by the Towers' rich midrange.
    It Is Still A Sierra
    Besides their physical characteristics, the Sierra Towers share another important trait with their stand-mounted cousins: they are incredibly easy to drive. Both speakers in the Sierra line were deliberately designed with an impedance curve that is nearly flat through most of it's range. On top of that, the Towers are 89db efficient (anechoic), or about 1/8 of a turn on my volume knob more efficient than the Sierra-1. It doesn't require a whole lot of watts to get the Towers really cooking, and it is something that most any solid state amplifier (and probably some tubes) could do without breaking a sweat.
    Conclusion And Buying Advice
    The base level Sierra Towers (with a Black Matte finish) are 98.00, and shipping to anywhere in the continental United States is a flat rate of , so for comparison's sake, let's call them 00 speakers. In the audio industry in general, 00 isn't much for a pair of full-range floorstanders. In fact it is cheap enough, unfortunately, to run the risk of not being taken seriously. All too often the floorstanders that you find in this price range are a mess... sloppily constructed wastes of time with boomy bass and annoying cabinet resonances. The ones that aren't a mess are often single-drivers, transmission lines, or other horn-loaded cabinets, and I won't deny that these have their own charms. However, they typically don't play full-range (where you don't even
    want
    a subwoofer) with the kind of muscular presentation provided by the Sierra Towers. Based on what I've seen recently, speakers that deliver the same type of musical performance as the Towers are more commonly found in the 00 to 00 range.
    A lot of words to say that, while the Sierra Towers aren't cheap, they are an amazing value. If 00 is in your price range, they should definitely be on your short list. However, even if you're looking at spending a lot more than 00, I'd still recommend giving the Towers a listen... I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.
    Ultimately, the Sierra Towers are what I would call a music lovers' speaker. Now, I've never met an audiophile that was not a music lover also, but I've met a good deal more music lovers who are not audiophiles...they may or may not have nice equipment at home, but they don't make a hobby out of upgrading their audio systems. These are the kind of people who get far more excited over discovering a new local band or uncovering a rare bootleg than they do finding the latest tweak that they can "hear a difference". I'd recommend the Towers to anyone, but especially hardcore music lovers... "set it and forget it" types who don't mind spending a little more for something great, but also don't expect to replace it for ten or twenty years, if ever. I feel the same way about the Towers that I felt about the Sierra-1 years ago... they could satisfy for a lifetime, and could be the last speakers you ever buy.
    Associated Equipment
    Marantz SA8003 SACD Player
    Music Hall DAC25.3 USB DAC
    Parasound Model 2100 Preamplifier
    Parasound Model 2125 Amplifier
    Listening room is approximately 13 feet wide and 25 feet long.
    Acoustic treatments include wall-wall carpet, curtains, and a large overstuffed sofa.
    Midrange Woofer: 1 5.25” mineral-filled polypropylene cone woofer featuring an underhung voice coil with neodymium magnet system, vented pole-piece, vented spider and aluminum phase plug.
    Specifications
    Type: Four driver floorstanding loudspeaker
    Tweeter: 1 exclusive NrT 26mm high-definition soft dome tweeter w/integrated elastomer wave guide. Axially magnetized neodymium ring magnet with large damping chamber and fully underhung voice coil, wide surround and low-viscosity magnetic fluid cooling. Fully manufactured by SEAS of Norway.
    Woofer: 2 Proprietary 5.25” long throw mineral-filled polypropylene cone woofers. Features non-resonant cast aluminum frame, copper shorting rings, low-inductance motor assembly, vented pole-piece and vented spider.
    Typical In-Room Frequency Response: 34 Hz to 27 kHz (±3dB)
    In-Room Sensitivity: 92dB @ 2.83v / 1 meter
    Frequency Response (Anechoic): 41 Hz to 28 kHz (±3dB)
    Sensitivity (Anechoic): 89dB/W/m
    Minimum Impedance: 4 ohms
    Minimum Recommended Power: 25 watts
    Maximum Continuous Power (unclipped peaks): 300 watts
    Cabinet: Exclusive V-LAM construction featuring vertically laminated bamboo. Bass reflex via flared rear port tube. Isolated sealed internal midrange chamber.
    Dimensions (grilles off): 43 x 7.5 x 10.5 (HxWxD in inches)
    Weight: 44 lbs each
    Connectors: Two gold plated all metal five way binding posts.
    Warranty: 7 year parts and labor