[adapted from 1996 Stereophile Guide to Home Theater (SGHT) article]
Genelec is a Finnish firm that has been making professional studio monitor
loudspeakers since 1978 and has been gaining solid ground in the U.S. recently.
In fact, any one who spends much time in recording studios will instantly recognize
the company’s 1030A powered monitor; this diminutive speaker has become a familiar
sight atop recording consoles in facilities both large and small.
What exactly is a monitor loud speaker? The term obviously impresses many
consumers, considering how routinely it is attached to products that professionals
wouldn’t touch with a 10-foot pole. (In fact, if a product is labeled “professional,”
it’s as good as a guarantee that it isn’t. Pro products aren’t called that;
they just are.)
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Model 1030A 2 powered speaker
Driver complement one 6.25" woofer, one 075" metal dome tweeter
frequency response: +0/-3 d8 from 52Hz to 20 kHz
Maximum sinewave output at 1 meter 99 d8 sustained, 1 d short-term inputs.
10,000 ohms balanced Rear-panel controls: sensitivity, tweeter level, bass
tilt, bass rolloff, AC power
Dimension ' 125" x 7.875" x 9.5" (HxWxD) Weight 15 lbs.
Power consumption: 20W idle, 100W full power
Ser.#s: 2670, 2671,2682, 2683,51 83M
Price $1279 ea.
Model 1092A subwoofer
Two 8" woofers in slot-loaded reflex enclosure
Frequency response: ± 2.5 dB from 33 to 50 Hz
Maximum sinewave output: 15 dB short-tern Inputs: 10,000 ohms balanced
Rear panel controls sensitivity, bass rolloff, phase, AC power
Dimensions: 24.5" x 12 5" x 20" (HxWxD) Weight 66 lbs.
Ser# 280
Price: $2499 Total system cost $8894
Genelec, Inc.
42 Peck Ave.
Wayland, MA
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Broadly speaking, a monitor loud speaker is any speaker that’s used to judge
the quality of commercial-grade audio, from recordings to radio and TV broadcasts.
But the term has additional implications: Because sound is a professional’s
livelihood, and downtime is profitless time, a monitor’s reliability is of
supreme importance. And because rock bands (which account for more than 90
of all studio time) demand “live” playback levels, studio monitors must be
able to deliver deafening volume levels without folding up in the stretch.
On the other hand, since re cording engineers and their clients tend to be
both hearing-impaired (see “deafening” above) and oblivious to the subtleties
of high-end audio, studio monitors tend to be singularly lacking in the very
refinements that critical audiophiles demand. Thus, the term “monitor” can
be a compliment or a pejorative de pending on who says it.
The popularity of Genelec monitors here reflects a trend in professional
circles toward “powered” speakers, that is, speakers with a power amplifier
built directly into the speaker cabinet. Except for subwoofers, this trend
has yet to trickle down to the consumer market, which is unfortunate. It
turns out that speaker manufacturers may actually know more about what kind
of amplifier best suits their speakers than any manufacturer of amplifiers.
There are many advantages to integrating the amp directly into the speaker.
The amplifier can be designed to deliver as much power to the speakers as
needed to meet their output-level specs, but not enough to damage them. No
compromises need be made in order to adapt the amplifier to a wide variety
of loudspeaker brands. The crossover network can be an active electronic
type, and can be precisely tailored to the needs of the drivers, with minimal
loss of efficiency or amplifier damping. A high degree of amplifier design
refinement can be achieved at lower cost than is required by a brute- force
approach to universal compatibility. (A beefy high-end amplifier will need
its high current capability for only a handful of loudspeakers; it is wasted
on the others.)
Genelecs all around
Unlike Home THX systems, where the front speakers are controlled-dispersion
(narrow vertical, broad lateral) monopoles and the surrounds are fig ure-8
dipoles, the Genelec Home Theater System uses identical, wide- dispersion
monopoles all the way ‘round. This means you can listen to them while seated
or standing without any drastic change in the sound. (If you’re out of the
vertical axis of a THX speaker the high end goes down the tube.) It’s still
a good idea to tilt the speakers up or down toward ear height, but the angle
is much less critical.
The 1030A, which comprises 5/ of Genelec’s “basic” home-theater system,
was originally designed as a near-field monitor for use in recording studios.
(“Near field” means the speakers are placed close to the engineer’s ears,
so he or she will hear only the direct sound from the speakers and not the
reflected sound of the room they’re in.) In order to sound farther away than
they actually are, near-field monitors usually have a less prominent midrange
than floor-standing monitors, which often sound aggressively forward even
from six feet away.
Each 1030A is hi-amplified and has its own electronic crossover. The internal
amplifiers are (of course) solid state, and judging by how cool they are
after three hours of use, they aren’t Class A. They are shock-mounted to
isolate them from vibrations of the speaker enclosure, and there are back-panel
controls for tweeter level (most effective at the highest frequencies), bass
tilt (including one boost setting), and bass rolloff, each in 2 dB steps.
That may sound like a pretty coarse adjustment step, but in reality when
something sounds whacked out, a small amount of adjustment is usually not
what’s needed.
You can make these speakers sound almost any way you want. You can also
make them sound like hell if you’re not well acquainted with the sound of
live music, so my advice is to leave all of them set to Flat unless you have
an objective means of measuring what they’re doing in your room, such as
a real-time frequency analyzer. After messing with all three controls for
a few days early into my tests, I realized I’d ended up with them right where
they started: at Flat. I never looked back.
The 1030A’s metal dome tweeter is recessed in a shallow horn which, though
symmetrical in appearance, is claimed to have different horizontal and vertical
dispersion characteristics. A small label at the front indicates the proper
orientation, and this is easily changed (if, for example, you need to put
the center speaker on its side) by re moving four front-panel screws. Imaging
is supposed to be at its best when the tweeter is properly oriented, but
frankly, I couldn’t hear any difference.
The 1092A subwoofer, which also houses its own built-in amplifiers as well
as electronic crossovers for the five upper-range speakers, has two narrow
openings at the back: A front- loading slot for the woofers and a reflex
port for the rear wave. All the input receptacles are balanced XLR types,
but adapters are provided for single-ended sources. (At least, they were
supplied with my system.)
Installation and setup
A Genelec engineer flew in to install the system, using a probe mike and
a portable time-energy-frequency analyzer that looked much like the MLSSA
system used by Stereophile to perform speaker measurements. ‘When he was
done, the on-screen curve was impressive and so, initially, was the sound.
The recommended way of setting the subwoofer phase was rather clever: You
feed an 85 Hz (the crossover frequency) warble tone or pink-noise band to
the system and switch the sub to 180 degrees, which is reverse polar- icy.
This causes a dip in the level of the test tone. You then toggle the 90-
degree switch on and off and note which setting increases the amount of the
dip, indicating maximum cancellation at crossover. You leave it at that setting
and flip off the 180 switch, which then yields maximum smoothness through
the crossover region. Simple, and it works.
Other equipment used in connection with this review included a Pioneer Elite
CLD-99 laserdisc player, a MicroMega T-DAC digital-to-analog converter, a
Lexicon CP-3 Plus surround decoder, my trusty Sony DTC 2000E5 DAT recorder,
a SOTA Cosmos turntable with vacuum hold down, The Well Tempered Arm, an
Ortofon SL-3000 cartridge and its mating step- up transformer, an AmPro 2000
video projector and DWIN LD-2 line doubler; and a Stewart 6-foot (diagonal)
screen. Audio interconnects were Monster M-l000s, and the long cables from
the Lexicon to the Genelecs were Kimbers with RCA plugs at the input end
and XLRs at the speakers (with pin 3 grounded.)
Software included a handful 0 recent blockbuster laserdiscs, a DAT collection
of soundtrack excerpts, some old and new stereo LPs, and some of Steven Stone’s
and my live- performance DATs of symphonic and chamber-music works.
Lending an ear
Okay, how did the system sound? Everyone knows metal-dome tweeters sound
awful, and I kept trying to hear the Genelecs messing up at the high end,
but in all truthfulness, I couldn’t. In fact, the high end from the Genelecs
stomped on every Home THX system I’ve heard. It was gorgeously smooth, detailed,
and very open—all qualities that have been lacking from the THX systems I’ve
reviewed.
String tone—about which I am very picky because I hear so much of it live—was
impressively real. All string instruments produce intense and highly complex
overtones, and have a strikingly unique sonic signature that I have never
heard reproduced well. For instance, loud massed violins usually glitter
like polished steel, and are either muted and dull at the top or overlaid
with hashy crud. The Genelecs were good enough that I could come home from
a concert (or a recording session), listen to well—recorded strings, and
convince myself that there was more than a passing similarity.
The midrange was essentially free from any colorations, but was a little
reticent for a professional monitor (these are near-field speakers, remember).
They were, however, much less laid-back than many high-end speakers; musical
timbres were only slightly darkened, which took some of the blat off big
brass sounds and some of the aliveness from all sound, but most instruments
were quite convincingly reproduced. These speakers are probably as good a
compromise as I’ve heard between the intelligibility requirements of soundtracks
and the euphonic “musicality” demanded by high-end audiophiles. The 1030As
are ideal candidates for an all-in-one home entertainment system.
They threw a very wide soundstage, with precise imaging and very good reproduction
of depth. Resolution was between very good and excellent, which puts them
right up there with the average high-end separates system.
There were some imperfections, however. Although I never actually heard
them overload, they tended to become rather hard and strained-sounding at
high listening levels, and soundstage depth diminished notice ably. They
did not handle really big sounds with the effortless ease of a THX system,
and seemed to slightly compress dynamic range. Instead of getting goose bumps
when the whole orchestra cut loose, I found myself tensing up. I can hear
some readers saying, “Of course, he’s hearing those damned metal tweeters.”
I don’t think so. I’ve heard the same high-level brightness from paper and
plastic cones. And some of the smoothest, airiest, most effortless sounding
tweeters I’ve heard were the Titanium ones in the JBL 250Ti system.
My initial enthusiasm about the Genelec system’s bass started to wane in
about a week. I don’t know whether the system changed or whether it just
took me that long to hear a problem that was there all along, but that great
low end I remembered from my first listen became intolerably heavy and loose,
particularly at listening levels approaching the THX reference. Some recent
laserdiscs were positively suffocating, and I found myself having the worst
acoustic feedback problems from LP that I’ve encountered for many years.
I’ll spare you the details of my efforts to tame it. Suffice it to say the
best solution turned out to be rolling off the low end, which exacted a price
in the deep bass while pretty much curbing the excess, but not entirely.
For reasons I can’t quite understand, I was never able to get smooth bass
from the subwoofer. It was all there, as a walk around the room with a sound
meter showed, but it seemed that no matter where I placed the subwoofer,
the listening area always suffered from rather substantial dips at 65 and
43 Hz and a rise at 35. Anywhere outside the listening area, the response
was much smoother. This would seem to suggest a placement problem, but it
is one I have not encountered with any other subwoofer, and no other room
position seemed to improve matters at all. (It may have related to the fact
that I had always used the other subwoofers in pairs, while I had only a
single Genelec. Off-center placement of a pair excites different sets of
standing waves, so one tends to fill the holes in the other.)
There was also a slight and intractable hum from the 1030As when using the
subwoofer’s built-in cross over with unbalanced inputs, apparent y due to
a ground loop. (There are six interconnects between the surround decoder
and the subwoofer module.) This was only audible from close to the speakers,
but as soon as I noticed it, I kept thinking I heard it from the listening
seat even if I didn’t. Driving the 1030As from the Lexicon’s crossover eliminated
the hum.
Using the sub’s crossover posed another minor problem, too. When configured
for that arrangement, a Pro Logic decoder’s circulating pink-noise test signal
omits the subwoofer signal, which makes it impossible to meter the subwoofer
level with the internal test signal. (I had to use the Low- and Middle-decade
test tones from Stereophile Test CD 3 to do it.)
Conclusions
Although I applauded the coming of Home THX because consumer audio was sadly
in need of some performance standards, I must confess that I’ve been disappointed
with the THX sound I’ve heard to date. While all THX systems are likely to
be better set up for home theater than their anarchistic brethren, and most
of them have quite extraordinary naturalness and realism, no THX system I
have heard has had anywhere near the suavity and resolution of a good run-
of-the-mill high-end system. This may change when a recognized leader in
high-end loudspeakers signs on to the program, but meanwhile, I spend my
THX listening admiring what it does well and suffocating at the lack of any
real hear-right-into-the-group inner detail and upper-octave openness. The
Genelec home-theater system has more of both these things than any THX system
I’ve heard.
But the subwoofer is definitely its weakest link. As I said, this might
be because I only used one, but the fact is, the bass had a tendency to billow
when pushed hard, and did little more at other times than add some impressively
deep and rumbly foundation to the system’s far superior upper range.
Unlike most home-theater satellite speakers, the 1030A is actually de signed
for full-range use. It can handle the full range of bass frequencies at its
rated output without risk of damage or overload, and its range extends to
a respectable 50 Hz when it isn’t being crossed-over to a sub. (This sounds
a lot deeper than you might imagine!) For this reason, the speaker is an
ideal starting point for building toward a full surround system in easier-to-afford
increments. You can add one, then two surrounds to a stereo pair, and finally
a center if your listening area is wide. The subwoofer is a last option,
but I’d suggest trying a pair of them before passing judgment on one. You
may do better with Genelec’s larger subs, or a pair from another manufacturer.
Incidentally, I got a chuckle out of the Genelec’s slogan, aimed of course
at recording engineers: “Your business is audio--don’t play with toys.” To
which I might add, “If you’re serious about your hobby, don’t skimp on loudspeakers.”
The Genelec home-theater system may be one of the easiest ways to buy into
a full-blown surround system, but it sure doesn’t sound cheap. Aside from
my reservations about the subwoofer, this is a system that excels on music
as well as film soundtracks.
Recommended, but at what level? By home-theater standards, I’d rate these
as definitely middle B. By high- end audio standards, a low B or, more likely,
high C.
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Genelec 1030A:
Measurements
The little Genelec impressed me from the get go with the neutrality of its
Sound. I was not surprised, therefore, when I measured its on axis response
to find that it was basically flat, though a slight excess of energy (1 dB)
could be seen in she low treble (This tends to r veal problems in a recording
-- a useful thing in a studio monitor) There was a hint that the midrange
was slightly shelved down, which would tie in with JGH auditioning comments
The I 030A's bass is surprisingly extended for such a small speak an The
near field measurement indicated that it remains flat down to lust below
60 Hz, below which it drops like a stone to prevent the woofer from bottoming
out.
(The bass alignment appears to be 6th-order, something that is relatively
easy to achieve with an active design.) The Genelecs horizontal dispersion
was wide and quite evenly balanced, correlating with the good imaging, though
there was a slight lack of off axis energy at the top of the woofer's passband
compared with the tweeter Vertically, you should sit with your ears pretty
much on the tweeter axis to avoid a hollow coloration due so a lack of energy
in the crossover region. I didn't find the tweeter's dispersion to be significantly
different in the two planes.
The speaker isn't time-coherent: the tweeter is connected with inverted
acoustic polarity, the woofer with positive polarity and the tweeter's output
arrives at the ear before that of the woofer, thought not to any audibly
significant extent The associated cumulative spectral-decay or "waterfall
plot" showed a very clean initial decay, with just a bit of low-level
hash present in the low treble.
The cabinet proved to be reasonably free from panel resonances, though all
surfaces vibrated relatively strongly at the port tuning frequency of 60
Hz. The side panels also had a couple of nodes present between 350 Hz and
450 Hz. These are probably too high in frequency to be the cause of any midrange
coloration, however.
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[adapted from 1996 Stereophile Guide to Home Theater (SGHT) article] |