| Cerwin-Vega XLS-215 Floorstanding Loudspeaker Review |
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| Home Theater Loudspeakers Floorstanding Loudspeakers | ||||
| Written by Augie Bettencourt | ||||
| Wednesday, 01 December 2010 | ||||
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Cerwin-Vega was founded in 1954 by Gene Czerwinski, then a young aerospace engineer. Why start a loudspeaker company? First and foremost a music fan, Gene’s goal was to reproduce the live musical experience. His design philosophy was based on high-efficiency drivers, durability, and “value for money products.” For over 50 years, the name Cerwin-Vega has been synonymous with excellence in every area of the audio experience, and has built a reputation in the pro audio, car audio and home theater world of building high-performance, high- value speakers. Cerwin-Vega offers several different speaker lines across a broad price spectrum and the XLS Series is one of their best, replacing the older CLS Series with improved performance and specifications. With a moniker of “The LOUD Speaker Company,” Cerwin-Vega’s design goal is providing everything you need for a live concert or cinema experience at home, so the speaker line includes loudspeakers, center channel speakers and subwoofers. Features and Design: ![]() Set-up: I started by setting the XLS-215 tower speakers where so many others have sat before in my listening room. I placed the speakers four feet from the back wall, and three feet from the side walls with the speakers slightly toed-in. I then moved them around a bit to confirm speaker placement was optimal. The XLS-6C center speaker was placed on a stand where I also place all other center speakers. Once I had them adjusted, I let them play for about 20 hours before doing any critical listening. On hand for the review was the OPPO BDP-83, Sony BDP-S1000ES Blu-ray players and Sony PS3 for A/V sources. Also on hand for the video display was the Sony VPL-VW85 projector connected with a 35ft, M1000 HDTV HDMI Monster Cable. For part of the review the video connections were made through a Denon AVP-A1HDC1 A/V processor for video switching and audio processing. Each time Monster Cable M1000 HDTV HDMI cables were used for video connections, Cardas Audio Golden Reference speaker and interconnect cables, and Monster Cable 600sw and Monoprice subwoofer cables. All the cables worked perfectly and had no problems. Other associated equipment used for the review was the Sunfire TGA 7400 amplifier, Krell Evolution 403 amplifier and Buttkicker LFE Kit. Music Listening: ![]() Next-up was Dave Matthews Band’s Busted Stuff, choosing the song Digging a Ditch, which I had used for my recent review of the wonderful sounding Paradigm Signature S8 v.3 speakers. Matthews’ voice had a very natural, open quality, and the XLS-215 speakers imaged very well. Although the high frequencies lacked some refinement I’ve heard from much more expensive speakers, the sound was always smooth and never grainy sounding, even at deafening volume levels. This is an amazing accomplishment for a speaker in this price range. Carlos Santana’s has always been a favorite, so next I picked the Shaman CD. The song from the same CD, “Sideways,” has become my favorite song from this disc. Its recording quality is excellent with great soundstage width and depth, but unfortunately it’s the only blues song on the CD. When listening to this song, Citizen Cope’s voice was firmly planted deep in the middle of the soundstage with Carlos Santana’s guitar playing off to the left side. The XLS-215 speakers have great ability to create an ambient feel for the recording studio with a natural and airy sense of space. They placed all the performers and instruments very well with glorious midrange quality. Because of their high sensitivity, they required little amplifier power to achieve extreme volume levels with deep, powerful bass. Yes, they do play “LOUD.” |
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