Martin Logan “Source” Hybrid-Electrostatic Loudspeaker

Prairie Home Companion

Products in this article:"Source" Hybrid-Electrostatic Loudspeaker

Throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, the MartinLogan Curvilinear Line Source (CLS) full-range electrostatic was my reference loudspeaker, and although I’ve since gone on to other things, the CLS remains one of the purest and most transparent transducers I’ve heard. This was a speaker that made the old cliché about opening a window on the orchestra come true— everything in earshot of the CLS was clear and distinct and incredibly finely detailed. The trouble was it was also a bit bleached, thin, and cool. The CLS’s extraordinary transparency came at the cost of suckout in the bass and the power range of the lower mids. Although this balance seemed to increase resolution (rather in the way a spare pen-and-ink drawing can look more finely detailed than a lush oil painting of the same subject), it also reduced lifelike density of tone color, body, and sock. The problem with timbres, coupled with the CLS’s inability to reproduce powerful dynamics in the low end, is one reason why Martin Logan eventually abandoned its full-range ’stat for the ’stat/cone hybrids that are its specialty.1 However, while the weight and color of cones do solve timbre problems, as well as adding oomph in the bass, hybrids come with their own price in coherence. Let’s face it: A cone is a cone and a ’stat is a ’stat, and whenever the twain have met in the past, there has always been an audible seam between them. To me trading off leanish coherence for rich incoherence has always seemed a poor deal. So, while looking forward to hearing MartinLogan’s latest—the $1995 Source electrostatic hybrid—I also suspected that the mating of cone and ’stat wouldn’t be my sonic dream-date. Boy, was I wrong.

Might as well get this out of the way: The Source is the most impressive hybrid loudspeaker I’ve auditioned—an astonishingly successful blend of what I once thought were essentially incompatible technologies—and, with a couple of provisos (see below), one of the two most lifelike full-range loudspeakers I’ve heard for under-$2k. What makes the Source’s success even more astonishing, over and above its quite affordable price, is the way it boxes other audio verities squarely on their ears. For instance, the Source doesn’t just use an 8" cone; it uses an 8" paper cone in a ported box that, while serviceable, is—how shall I put this?—less-than-Magico quality. On top of this, it crosses its cone over to the electrostatic panel at 470Hz—just a little above middle A, the note the oboe sounds when the orchestra tunes up. All of which makes the Source not only a surprise but also a bit of a miracle.

better than ten years, but it is now obvious that, while I was sleeping, a good deal of ingenious engineering work was being done out there on the prairies of Lawrence, Kansas. For one thing, ML’s electrostatic panel, though still “curved” to improve horizontal dispersion and off-axis listening (though it doesn’t really improve either much), is now framed in aircraft-grade aluminum-alloy rather than good old pine, increasing the rigidity of the panels and shielding them more effectively from resonances generated by the movement of the electrostat’s diaphragm and the cone woofer. For another, the panels themselves have been updated. The ultra-low-mass PET (polyethylene terathylate) diaphragms are now coated with an electro-conductive material that is said to adhere better and improve impedance characteristics, while the stators have been made stiffer and their perforations smaller and more numerous, roughly doubling the area of exposed diaphragm and, thereby, increasing output and efficiency. For a third, the latest crossovers are superior. MartinLogan has developed a proprietary crossover topology, called (for reasons not immediately apparent) “Vojtko,” that is said to lower distortion and provide more seamless driver integration—and call me Vojtko if it doesn’t do just that very thing.

How does the Source sound? In a word, terrific. This is one very quick, very high resolution, surprisingly robust, wideband, and coherent loudspeaker, capable of making select voices and instruments sound as you-are-there “real” as some multi-thousand-dollar Big Boys. If you haven’t heard a MartinLogan electrostat in awhile, you kind of forget just how astonishingly lifelike they can be. Despite the fact that all ’stats use the same basic drive system, panels from different companies sound as substantially different as dynamic loudspeakers from different companies. Logans are fast, fast, fast—and transparent, as in “clear, pure, uncolored.” Hearing plucked guitars or violins played back on CLSes always made everything else, even other ’stats, sound slightly stuck in the mud. It’s no different with the Source. Only the Source is far more realistically dense in tone color and far more full-bodied and three-dimensional than the old CLS.

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