Keeping up to date with home theater technology isn't easy, buyers need all the help they can get.
Mark Fleischmann covers LCD, OLED, plasma displays, LED backlighting, DLP projection, 3D TV, AV receivers, speakers, connectivity issues, and the never-ending blizzard of features in his recently revised book, "Practical Home Theater: A Guide to Audio and Video Systems" (268 pages, $19.95). It's chock full of useful information.
Do HDMI connections confound you? Fleischmann delves deep into the continuously evolving "standard," from the original 1.0 version all the way up to version 1.4. THX certification is another one of those barely understood terms used in reviews, the book gets you up to speed on what THX certification entails. All of the various Dolby and DTS surround schemes are explained. There's a wealth of information about VCRs; right, some people still watch video tapes! The chapters on home theater setup and troubleshooting are excellent.
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This is the Kipnis Studio Standard.
(Credit: Robert Wright)
If your typical high-end home theater with rows of plush seats, velvet wallpaper, and popcorn machines offers Cadillac levels of performance and luxury, then Jeremy Kipnis' $6 million ultimate home theater is more like a fire-breathing Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano, the fastest production Ferrari ever built.
This home theater is all about aggressively advancing the state of the art of picture and sound presentation. Yes, it's comfortable and beautiful, but its prime directive is a quest for the very best. Nothing, and I mean nothing, is overlooked. Kipnis won't settle for second best.
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The Audiophiliac and the CRM-2
(Credit: Home Theater magazine/Steve Guttenberg)With its grille removed you notice something unusual: the CRM-2's front baffle is almost completely covered by a 6-inch "ribbon" tweeter (essentially a lightweight aluminum foil, suspended between neodymium magnets). The ribbon's ultra-low moving mass allows it reproduce treble detail, up to 40 kilohertz, with a realism no conventional dome tweeter can match. The speaker's sides are each fitted with an all-new 4.5-inch driver with two very unusual design features--an over-sized, four-layer copper voice coil, and a suspension that allows a 1-inch, back and forth excursion that's more typical of a 12-inch woofer. The cabinet's purposeful shape was designed to enhance sound--sides are parallel, but the top panel slopes back to meet the rakishly canted rear baffle. The ribbon tweeter is responsible for the speaker's pinpoint imaging while side-mounted woofers project spectacularly wide soundstages. You've never heard anything quite like the CRM-2. The 8.25-inch tall speaker is finished with seven coats of high gloss Ebonized Lacquer over Rosewood. In all but the brightest light the Sunfire speakers appear black.
Read my full review on Home Theater magazine's website to get the full scoop, but I'll tell you here the sound defies the limitations of its trim size. The CRM-2 can play really loud without duress, and the speaker projects an enormous soundstage, with remarkable width, depth and height. Please understand, I'm not claiming the CRM-2 are the equal of four foot tall, hundred and twenty pound tower speakers, just that the wee Sunfire satellites trump every other mini speaker I've heard. It's a breakthrough design.
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