GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

July 1, 2008

 

The Best So Far

Each December, we usually go through the list of products we’ve reviewed during the preceding year that have received GoodSound! Great Buy awards, and choose one of those products as our GoodSound! Product of the Year. This year, there’s a twist. Instead of one product, two will be selected: a loudspeaker, and an electronics item or accessory. We review so many products in any given year that it seems only fitting that more products get a chance at this prestigious award.

But the end of 2008 is still a long way off. Here at the midpoint of the year, we thought it appropriate to at least start thinking about what the frontrunners for the two 2008 Product of the Year awards might be. Of the seven components that have so far won Great Buy awards, here are the best:

In his review of the Axiom Audio M60 v2 loudspeaker, Philip Beaudette said, "The Axiom M60 v2 performs so far above its price that it might be the best speaker bargain today for under $1000/pair." Need we say more?

Perhaps a little. I’m not surprised that Philip liked the M60 v2 so much and found them such a bargain at $990 USD per pair. In 2001, we reviewed the M3Ti, the predecessor of Axiom’s current M3 v2 speaker. The M3Ti not only won a Great Buy award, it was also our Product of the Year for 2001. Since then, we’ve reviewed a number of Axiom products across the SoundStage! Network, and they always earn top marks for high value.

Another product that makes the cut is the Usher Audio Technology S-520 loudspeaker, which Thom Moon reviewed at the beginning of June: "The Usher S-520 is the small speaker to seriously consider." The S-520 costs $479/pair and, as with the M60 v2, I’m not at all surprised to see that it’s made the grade -- last year, Usher’s X-718 speaker was our Product of the Year. Like Axiom, Usher Audio Technology seems to have a knack for creating award-winning products.

On the electronics side, the Tangent CDP-50 CD player ($259), which Philip Beaudette reviewed in May, is a contender. Philip compared the CDP-50 to his own NAD C542 CD player, which costs about twice as much as the Tangent. When all was said and done, Philip said that they basically sounded the same. Given that the NAD is considered a high-value machine -- the main reason Philip owns one -- this makes the Tangent CDP-50 a topflight player that must be on the list at the end of the year.

Finally, there’s Blue Circle Audio’s USB Thingee, which Colin Smith reviewed in May. This is probably the biggest surprise of the year so far -- the USB Thingee is small, ugly as sin, and relatively inexpensive ($169-$189, depending on output configuration). When we first got one, we didn’t think it would amount to much. A "digital converter"? Who cares? But when we figured out all that it could do and how well it performed those tasks, we were more than impressed.

First and foremost, the Thingee converts the digital bitstream from a computer’s USB port to S/PDIF, TosLink, or AES/EBU. This lets you stream music files from your computer to a non-USB DAC (many new DACs have USB ports, but even DACs only a year or two old often don’t). The digital-conversion capability is handy enough, and many will be happy to buy a Thingee for that alone. But the Blue Circle also has a headphone jack and, what’s most impressive, a built-in DAC section of its own that sounds good. I mean, really good -- so good that it compares favorably with DACs costing many times more. Colin brought the Thingee over to my house, along with a laptop full of hard-drive-based music files, so that we could compare it to the many topnotch digital sources I had on hand. I was blown away by how well the Thingee held up against them all. This versatile device is a stone-cold bargain, whether or not you use all of its features.

Those are four frontrunners for 2008 . . . so far. We’re only halfway through the year, and the race is far from over. We have plenty more reviews to publish, and no doubt even more Great Buy awards will be given out before December rolls around. The very best may be still to come.

. . . Doug Schneider

E-mail comments to the editor@goodsound.com.


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