I bet a lot of people would. I remember meeting Ernie Lau in Hong Kong who had both the latest Sirius and the Clear Audio Statement (the full height one). And it seemed to me he kept a personal attachment to the Rockport and its magic.
After a few weeks of critical listening with the Orions, I believe they are the most extraordinary speakers I have ever owned or listened to. Trumpets, clarinets, flutes and other higher register instruments present with an unforced strain and clarity the likes of which I have never experienced before. The soundstage, imaging, noise floor and other measures of performance are noteworthy but the reason to buy these speakers is the high frequency performance. While the B&W 802D's were marvelous, the difference between them and these Orion's definitely justifies the price differential. Marvelous job by Rockport.
After a few weeks of critical listening with the Orions, I believe they are the most extraordinary speakers I have ever owned or listened to. Trumpets, clarinets, flutes and other higher register instruments present with an unforced strain and clarity the likes of which I have never experienced before. The soundstage, imaging, noise floor and other measures of performance are noteworthy but the reason to buy these speakers is the high frequency performance. While the B&W 802D's were marvelous, the difference between them and these Orion's definitely justifies the price differential. Marvelous job by Rockport.
After a few weeks of critical listening with the Orions, I believe they are the most extraordinary speakers I have ever owned or listened to. Trumpets, clarinets, flutes and other higher register instruments present with an unforced strain and clarity the likes of which I have never experienced before. The soundstage, imaging, noise floor and other measures of performance are noteworthy but the reason to buy these speakers is the high frequency performance. While the B&W 802D's were marvelous, the difference between them and these Orion's definitely justifies the price differential. Marvelous job by Rockport.
After a few weeks of critical listening with the Orions, I believe they are the most extraordinary speakers I have ever owned or listened to. Trumpets, clarinets, flutes and other higher register instruments present with an unforced strain and clarity the likes of which I have never experienced before. The soundstage, imaging, noise floor and other measures of performance are noteworthy but the reason to buy these speakers is the high frequency performance. While the B&W 802D's were marvelous, the difference between them and these Orion's definitely justifies the price differential. Marvelous job by Rockport.
Having admired your system for a long time, I always wondered about those 802Ds (as good as they are) in the context of the august company of the rest of your system. I have not heard the Orions, but know the Rockport line from its Merak Sheritan II thru Lyra and Arrakis II and could imagine how far the Orions are taking you and the rest of your system. Enjoy.
unfortunatelly not.
I was consideting to get newes and much cheaper Orion but streached my finances to get Lyra insted.
For those who question it , Just check used market . There was not a single Lyra ofered on the used market . ( hif Shark) . This is simply end game speaker.
Flagship name and price difference are for a very good reason.
After a few weeks of critical listening with the Orions, I believe they are the most extraordinary speakers I have ever owned or listened to. Trumpets, clarinets, flutes and other higher register instruments present with an unforced strain and clarity the likes of which I have never experienced before. The soundstage, imaging, noise floor and other measures of performance are noteworthy but the reason to buy these speakers is the high frequency performance. While the B&W 802D's were marvelous, the difference between them and these Orion's definitely justifies the price differential. Marvelous job by Rockport.
Awesome. During my audition at dealer's, the Orions sounded like electrostatic speakers but with weight behind the notes. I thought they were a bit much on the bright side, but that could be due to upstream equipment and cabling.
unfortunatelly not.
I was consideting to get newes and much cheaper Orion but streached my finances to get Lyra insted.
For those who question it , Just check used market . There was not a single Lyra ofered on the used market . ( hif Shark) . This is simply end game speaker.
Flagship name and price difference are for a very good reason.
I’ve listened to Lyra extensively and I own Orion. There are areas where Orion is superior. The bass. While Lyra is springier in the upper bass overall the Orions bass is better. The new tweeter and midrange are equal to the Lyras. The Lyras cabinet is a little quieter so you hear a little more detail . Please read RH’s TAS Orion review. He’s heard both. He said that Lyra might have more detail due to quieter cabinet but that Orion was more incisive. I agree. I could have bought either but chose Orion though I would say that overall the Lyra is slightly better but not 50k worth. Either is top notch. Two different flavors of excellence. Some would prefer one others would prefer the other. Glad you love them Cincy! I knew you would.
I’ve listened to Lyra extensively and I own Orion. There are areas where Orion is superior. The bass. While Lyra is springier in the upper bass overall the Orions bass is better. The new tweeter and midrange are equal to the Lyras. The Lyras cabinet is a little quieter so you hear a little more detail . Please read RH’s TAS Orion review. He’s heard both. He said that Lyra might have more detail due to quieter cabinet but that Orion was more incisive. I agree. I could have bought either but chose Orion though I would say that overall the Lyra is slightly better but not 50k worth. Either is top notch. Two different flavors of excellence. Some would prefer one others would prefer the other. Glad you love them Cincy! I knew you would.
I have had my Lyra's in two rooms, one 20w, 18h, 35l, now 15w, 10h, 18l (feet). Honestly, they sound great in both rooms, but I do prefer the smaller more intimate setting with listening position closer to the speakers.
I’ve listened to Lyra extensively and I own Orion. There are areas where Orion is superior. The bass. While Lyra is springier in the upper bass overall the Orions bass is better. The new tweeter and midrange are equal to the Lyras. The Lyras cabinet is a little quieter so you hear a little more detail . Please read RH’s TAS Orion review. He’s heard both. He said that Lyra might have more detail due to quieter cabinet but that Orion was more incisive. I agree. I could have bought either but chose Orion though I would say that overall the Lyra is slightly better but not 50k worth. Either is top notch. Two different flavors of excellence. Some would prefer one others would prefer the other. Glad you love them Cincy! I knew you would.
I think Lyra would sound great in any room that the Orion does. It has a larger internal volume and more driver surface area but the ideal room size has more to do with room modes affecting low frequency response and having room enough that SBIR isn’t an issue. I actually think that the Orion is more at risk in smaller rooms because of the 13 driver vs the Lyras 10s but it’s probably negligible.
unfortunatelly not.
I was consideting to get newes and much cheaper Orion but streached my finances to get Lyra insted.
For those who question it , Just check used market . There was not a single Lyra ofered on the used market . ( hif Shark) . This is simply end game speaker.
Flagship name and price difference are for a very good reason.