... a "decent" turntable ($2500), a "budget" cartridge ($800) and a reasonable digital player ($1000) and there you are at $10k. I'll be at that point or slightly higher once I upgrade the turntable so it would makes sense for someone who wants to do it all at once. Being a tube guy, though, I'd probably still stick with my Cronus Magnum integrated.
Good Sound For Under $6000 From A System Comprised of Unfamiliar Gear
Odyssey Audio, based in Indianapolis, Indiana, manufactures and sells from there factory-direct everything in this system.
In any case, this system, consisting of the Lorelei Loudspeakers, a nicely finished, two-way floor-standing box design costing $2700/pr, the $1500 Candela preamp and the $1800/pr. Khartago mono blocks plus Groneberg Quattro cabling costs $5700 complete!
That is not a lot of money for a complete high performance system. And it is a high performance system. The solid state Khartago amps, for instance output 110 watts per channel. The very attractively finished in wood veneer Lorelei speaker features a Scanspeak tweeter and 6.8" carbon fiber/graphite composite mid woofer and a crossover featuring Alpha-Core, Mundorf and WBT components. The cabinet is made in the United States.
The sound of this system was exceptionally "musical" ( I hate that too, but in the context of a show write-up, deal with it!) and did everything well one would expect from a high performance system costing far, far more. I was as impressed with it as was my friend Jacob, whose home I visited that evening.
His system just about duplicated mine: Wilson XLFs, Continuum turntable, Lyra Atlas cartridge and Ypsilon VPS phono preamp. He's got the Ypsilon preamp and big mono block towers. The biggest difference is the room: his is a large, room, built from scratch with high ceilings. I got to hear what my system would sound like in a big room and while my system sounds great, it opens up and breathes in the big room, revealing its full potential.
Jacob and I walked out of the Odyssey room equally excited and impressed by what we heard for $5700. Of everything I saw and heard at Capital AudioFest, I'd say the Odyssey Audio room, while not the best sounding, was the most impressive sounding, particularly given the cost of the system.
- Log in or register to post comments
![](/sites/all/themes/hometech/images/headicon.png)
![Paul Boudreau's picture Paul Boudreau's picture](/images/user_account_pictures/picture-47447-1417439218.jpg)
![invictus77's picture invictus77's picture](https://www.stereophile.com/images/default_user_85x85.jpg)
why doesn't STEREOPHILE review some Odyssey products? I learned about Odyssey Audio from the Absolute Sound?
![williamsims's picture williamsims's picture](https://www.stereophile.com/images/default_user_85x85.jpg)
I love my combination of the Odyssey Stratos monoblocks and the Aesthetix Janus -- highly musical (no doubt in part due the tubed preamplifier) and good disciplinarians of my Dali Euphonia MS5s!
![mp's picture mp's picture](https://www.stereophile.com/images/default_user_85x85.jpg)
What front end did Mr. Bunge use at his demonstration and how much does it cost?
"Good Sound For Under $6000 From A System.
[$5700] is not a lot of money for a complete high performance system."
It's not a complete system without a front end. One's reaction to a an author's message is reduced credulity when the content is incompatible with the headline.
Cordially,
mp