
I suppose I have nothing to lose for taking the plunge (except maybe my toe if I drop the things), but I ask your advice regardless, just in case they are particularly terrible and this is a complete waste of time.
#Kef coda 2 series#
Whats the difference between the three series 2. The flats quite small but I dont mind forking out a little more if the quality is better. I cant quite work out which to go for, the Coda, Cresta or the Q Series. I suppose they both predate the internet's ubiquity. Kef CI130QR/160QR for the in-ceiling speakers and then I need two floor standing and a centre speaker with a subwoofer.
#Kef coda 2 drivers#
However, I knew nothing about audio back then and ended up blowing one of the bass drivers and rendering them useless. I was blown away by the sound produced by these and used them every day with much enjoyment. Well, they do both feature on a WhatHifi 'greatest speakers of all time' list, not that this really means much. Hi all, A few years back I managed to secure a pair of coda 7s for £40 here in the UK.

Instead, I looked both speakers up online. I know my first port of call should be an A/B test, but the trouble is I'd need to get two enormous boxes down a ladder (they're in an attic) and I am feeling a bit lazy for that right now. The other day, I was offered a pair of Kef Coda II's, and I wondered whether they were any good. At low to moderate volumes, various resonances dominate the listening experience. I am currently using a pair of Tannoy Mercury M1 bookshelf speakers, and I don't really like them. Coda 8 plays all modern styles well, chamber classics - not bad.Just a quick post to ask whether any of you have any information (even anecdotal evidence) about the performance of the a pair of speakers someone has offered me, along with some background. Stereo space is stable (not depend on a listener's position), stage has depth, presence effect is convincing. Tops are "calm", quite accurate at any volume, but seem to be not very expressive, you probably want more freshness. Juiciness of MIDs lends certain variety: with a good fullness and intelligibility high vocal still seems to be too bright if you listen to it at high volume level and the role of basses subjectively decreases in overall balance of sound. The KEF Coda 8 speakers features the KEF B160 (SP1372) woofer and the KEF SP1354 tweeter. Relief double-bass is an elastic axis of jazz passages. Matched pair of KEF Coda 8 (SP3194) speakers with the original speaker grills. Drum low-frequency instruments are elaborated correctly, although in a slightly decreased scale. Slightly hard intonations in the voice of Coda 8 define its "taste preferences": modern dynamical music, rock-n-roll.


High accuracy of low sound with the great dynamical potential brings the value of permissible deficit of deep bass to nothing. KEF Coda 9.2 - Hi-Fi Database (Mobile) - Floorstanding Speakers. We can definitely say many warm words about the bass of Coda 8.

Although the body of Coda 8 doesn't seem to be too rigid, worry about extra overtones takes a back seat in the face of powerful, with light lacquered diaphragm of woofer - and it's not for nothing. More sensitive system, as a rule, illuminates an image deeper in dynamical sense, keeping for listener silent details in the array of loud sound. Kef Coda 7 Bookshelf Speakers Perfect working condition, been lying in storage One speakers woofer was. The speaker systems of Coda series, produced by the famous British KEF, differ not only by unusual location of drivers, but also by high sensitivity.
