Floor standing loudspeakers Divine Acoustics ELECTRA 2 Price (in Poland): 3600 zł (pair) Manufacturer: Divine Acoustics Contact: Piotr Gałkowski | 46-040 Ozimek ul. Sikorskiego 29 / 11 | skrytka pocztowa 22 tel.: (77) 465 32 59 | tel. kom.: 784 187 814 e-mail: divineacoustics@gmail.com www: www.divineacoustics.com Country of origin: Poland Text: Wojciech Pacuła Photographs: Wojciech Pacuła | Divine Acoustics Translation: Krzysztof Kalinkowski |
The Polish company Divine Acoustics makes loudspeakers different than others around them. Instead of classic cuboid with narrow front and significant depth, we get flat, very shallow loudspeakers with a quite wide front baffle, similar to a construction with an open baffle. Some time ago it was a requirement, especially due to an open construction of most loudspeakers, today open baffle is used sporadically – it is worth to mention the model Reference R 909 from Jamo, the unusual Gradient Helsiniki 1.5, or – to some extent – my Harbeth M40.1. The model Electra 2 Divine Acoustics is different – this is a bass-reflex loudspeaker, with the drivers closed in a certain volume. With the mentioned models it shares the electric parameters, like the high and leveled impedance (8Ω), sensible sensitivity (88dB) and a general ease of driving them – it is not by coincidence, that the company tells in the technical data, that a 3W power amplifier is sufficient to drive the Electra 2. So we will see, how those loudspeakers sound with my 6W Leben CS-300 XS [Custom Version]. The constructor and owner of DA, Mr. Piotr Galkowski writes, that the set send for testing comes from the current production, but in the next production run new wire terminals will be used – they will be of higher quality. The change is due to a request of one of the distributors. And then he writes: “I am sending you also a picture of the cross-over, because the loudspeakers cannot be taken apart”. From the construction side, beside the cabinet, the Electra 2 seem to be quite classic – those are floor standing loudspeakers, two-way with the bass-reflex port firing to the floor. We know the company already, because in 2008 we tested the first version of the model Proxima (No. 52, August 2008, test HERE). I liked the loudspeakers so much, that they received the Award of the Year 2008 of “High Fidelity”. The loudspeaker is made using two drivers – the tweeter is a soft dome with 20mm diameter and a woofer with 130mm diameter and a very light (9g) diaphragm. Both drivers have the bolts masked with an MDF element covered with leather. There is a lot about leather, but this is a part of the concept of masking the resonances to a maximum extent – this is why the plinth is bolted via… leather and a layer of cork. The tweeter is mounted from the back with a long bolt – something used most prominently by Monitor Audio to make the cabinet more rigid (the name of this solution is “single bolt through”; please look at the test of the model Bronze BX6 HERE). To date we tested:
A selection of recordings used in the test:
Japanese versions of the discs are available at CD Japan. It turned out, that in short period of time I tested three, completely different loudspeakers, belonging to a quite – in the end – similar price level: Castle Howard 3, DLS M60 and now the Divine Acoustics Electra 2. Each of those loudspeakers is completely different and using them as an example we can follow strategies of manufacturers and their effects. OK, first things said. As you can see, the Electra 2 do not play with a saturated, massive sound. Their bass quickly stops reaching us. But it has something, that most other loudspeakers do not have – it sounds as if it would work in a closed cabinet, without its flaws. I did not take the Castle and DLS for comparison by coincidence – in both constructions the problems of loading the woofer were circumvented, and the boom of the bass reflex port is not audible in them. But only the Electra 2 show, that there is still something there, that this volume, this “massaging” – all this is a result of coloring a part of the sound spectrum. This is audible more in the Castle, less in the DLS, but still. The Polish loudspeakers are much more clean – this is really high quality of the sound, somewhat limited, I will tell about that in a moment, but allowing for comfortable listening to all kinds of music and enjoy lots of details and flavors, lost elsewhere. |
One of the most important characteristics of the Electra 2 is very high resolution. It makes the biggest impression with discs, which are seemingly not related to each other: recordings with an acoustic guitar in the main role, like Red Rock Journeys Ralf Illenberger and What’s it All About Pat Metheny, electronics recordings like Téo&Téa Jarre, and old recordings with vocal – for example Hush-A-Bye Carol Sloane. In all those examples the sound was very natural, it did not annoy with anything, attention was concentrated on the music, and not on the medium, and the way of reproduction involved us in the event rather than leaving us aside. Not by saturation, those loudspeakers cannot do that the way more expensive ones do, but by the lack of coloring, very good integration of the drivers and the fact, that the cabinet was not audible. And those are probably the most important elements of this sound. The midrange – like I wrote by Sloan – is clear and very even, so we get a good insight in what was recorded. This was confirmed by the listening to the disc UnCovered of the group Audiofeels. Like I said, the lowest bass is not the domain of the Electra 2 and it would be best to support them by a good subwoofer. We would then get everything what is bet there, and also some flesh. But also in the range of human voice the loudspeakers handle everything without problems. Because when the lowest vocal enters in the piece Sound of silence, something that always impresses, the Polish loudspeakers did not cut anything, they did not convert the bass to a baritone. On the other hand, in Nobody Home Pink Floyd (The Wall), with this low, punctual bass, moving from one loudspeaker to the other we could only hear its upper part and harmonics. Coherence, precision, dynamics – everything was very nice, but there was no talking about a low passage. It seems, that here it is all about even reproduction of the whole frequency range handled by the loudspeaker, not pretending that they can do something they can’t. The loudspeakers were placed in the place of my Harbeth M40.1, so about 80cm from the back wall (calculating from the back panel). They were placed on anti-vibration platforms Acoustic Revive RST-38. Beside the amplifier Soulution 710 (solid state, 2 x 210W/8Ω, 2 x 240W/4Ω, 2 x 480W/2Ω), the Leben CS-300 XS [Custom Version] (tube, 2 x 6W) and the Xindak MT-2 tested to “Audio” were used. DESCRIPTIONElectra 2 from Divine Acoustics is a two-way floor standing loudspeaker with a bass-reflex cabinet. It is vented with two ports firing to the floor. To keep equal distance to the floor the loudspeaker is mounted on a plinth, which stabilizes the speaker and on spikes. Like I mentioned before, this is not a standard cabinet, but rather a wide baffle, on which, not symmetrical, two drivers were mounted: a 20mm soft, dome tweeter with a double neodymium magnet and a 130mm woofer. The diaphragm of the tweeter was made from soft material and is protected by a mesh. The second speaker has a diaphragm from cellulose and also a protective mesh. The carcass was treated in a way, which was called BAD (Basket Accurate Dampening), which is about dampening its resonances. Technical data (according to manufacturer):
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