| January 1, 2009 Ultra Audios Products of the Year
            for 2008: Reference 3A Grand Veena Loudspeakers and Weiss Minerva Digital-to-Analog
            Converter Reference 3A Grand Veena Loudspeakers  No ones stereo is perfect. We all
            try to make the most of the gear we have, which in large part is defined by what our
            wallets can afford. But its often hard to be content with our lot as real-world
            audiophiles, particularly when we read reviews of outstanding equipment that costs more
            than most of us pay for a car -- or a condo. The result is that we often feel we
            cant enjoy the really good stuff because we just cant ante up enough to
            play in that game.
 So when a loudspeaker offers world-class performance for a
            mere $7995 USD per pair, its good news indeed. The Grand Veena, from Ontario speaker
            maker Reference 3A, costs less to own than the price of leasing a new economy car for
            three years, which makes it an extraordinary value thats affordable for many of us
            who are seriously committed to high-end audio. As for its sound, the Grand Veena scales heights that most
            loudspeakers cant even begin to climb. In pursuit of the outer limits of
            performance, it incorporates new technology (an ultrasonic transducer) that expands what
            we knew about the replication of high frequencies, and older technology (a midrange driver
            coupled directly to the speaker cables without a crossover) that reproduces midrange
            frequencies about as purely as they can be. Furthermore, much of the design and construction is done
            in-house, with an eye toward creating a state-of-the-art product at a practical price.
            Reference 3A builds its own drivers based on venerable designs from French audio designer
            Daniel Dehay, but uses new, expensive, high-tech materials -- yet the companys
            speaker cabinets are a clever combination of relatively low-cost materials designed to
            reduce resonances. Clearly, theyre committed to high performance and high
            value. Much of the thinking behind the Grand Veena was done by
            Tash Goka, president of Divergent Technologies and director of Reference 3As
            operations. Kudos to him, and congratulations to the entire Reference 3A team. The
            Reference 3A Grand Veena is really good stuff, and one of Ultra Audios Products
            of the Year for 2008. . . . Albert Bellgalbertb@ultraaudio.com
 Weiss Minerva
            Digital-to-Analog Converter  There are times when searching the
            list of products weve reviewed in a given year, looking for those that stand out
            from the pack, is an exercise in frustration. Some years, there are so many great products
            that rereading our reviews and trying pick just one or two can make my eyes glaze over.
 2008, however, was a snap. Looking back over the products
            the Ultra Audio team has reviewed, there were two clear choices: the Reference 3A
            Grand Veena loudspeaker, which Albert Bellg writes about above, and the Weiss Minerva
            digital-to-analog converter ($4500), a sample of which spent time in my hi-fi system. Daniel Weiss has long been recognized in the consumer and
            pro-audio worlds as something of a digital guru. Its not hard to find a professional
            recording studio that uses his equipment, and it seems his products are becoming more
            popular every day, as audiophiles look for the best digital sound available. So by the time I received a review sample of the Minerva
            D/A converter, Weisss reputation alone had led me to expect it to be good. What I
            didnt expect was that it would perfectly mate with my Apple MacBook -- and
            high-resolution recordings -- to create the best digital sound Ive heard from my
            audio system. As I said in the October 1 installment of my "The Worlds Best
            Audio System" column: "This is what high-end audio should be about, and where
            the Minerva really shone. I could listen deep into this recording, hearing such
            details as tinkling bells with absolute clarity -- something Ive not heard bettered
            by any system. It has whetted my appetite for more. If youve not heard this
            degree of resolution over a really good audio system, you owe it to yourself to do so --
            though you might then be spoiled for anything else." In my experience, the Weiss Minerva is the high-water mark
            of digital sound. Sure, you can spend more money -- but unless you do a head-to-head
            comparison with the Minerva, I wouldnt be at all confident that you could better its
            sound, even for substantially more money. Give it shot -- you might have a musical
            revelation a lot like mine. . . . Jeff Fritzjeff@ultraaudio.com
   |