Børresen Acoustics T5 SSE Loudspeaker $230,000 REVIEW
February 18, 2026 § Leave a comment
The Børresen Acoustics T5 SSE superbly represents that elusive amalgam of the “not too much, not too little, but just right” balance – completely owning that optimal middle ground. Its blend of capabilities, wide-ranging achievement, and accountability of execution is truly remarkable, boatloads of fun, and has completely won me over! While the M range obviously represents the pinnacle of the Børresen Acoustics experience, the T range in general, and the T5 SSE in particular, may just be my personal favorite so far. Give them a listen and see just how many of your personal boxes they successfully check off. Their inspired balance of performance and value might just make them the perfect choice for you as well!

Furutech Project V1-S Speaker Cable Review
February 18, 2026 § Leave a comment
Furutech Project V1-S speaker cable offers a unique ability to capture the atmosphere and enhance the emotional impact of music, regardless of genre. In music reproduction, atmosphere and emotional interaction are everything, especially at the top tier of high-end audio.
From the outset, it was clearly designed not to be transformative, but to provide an aural truism without creating a false perception. Project V1-S delivers musical impact that positively shapes the entire listening experience, leaving a lasting impression that is hard to describe yet consistently uplifting.
Some high-end audio cables build in a crescendo, but quickly lead to listener fatigue. In contrast, Furutech reference-level speaker cables belong to a rare category that operate with quiet gravity – present, yet leaving no sonic imprint.

Audio Research D-80 Stereo Amplifier $12,950 Review
February 18, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.soundstageultra.com/index.php/equipment-menu/1296-audio-research-d-80-stereo-amplifier
One of the first albums I played after hooking up the D‑80 was Rain Tree Crow (16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC, Virgin Records / Qobuz), from the group of the same name. This atmospheric album, loaded up with David Sylvian on vocals, could easily be considered as a reprise to Japan, the early 1980s group that was also fronted by Sylvian. It’s a spacious dreamscape, one that’s easy to sink into. That first listening experience was satisfying. I got the large, billowing images from the backing instruments, with Sylvian’s tight, defined vocals layered coherently over top. The bass, most notably Mick Karn’s delicate fretless noodling, was tight and clear in both its extension and definition. There was no slop here. In all, this album sounded like it should, and made for a perfect, if uninformative start to the review period.
Over the next few weeks, I’d unconsciously find myself returning to albums with the same vibe as Rain Tree Crow. As I’ve mentioned in the past, rather than using any sort of logical auditioning protocol, I let a component pull me around and let it show itself to me. And part of this process is letting the component choose the music I’ll listen to.

iBasso Epitome Review
February 18, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.headfonia.com/ibasso-epitome-review/
Epitome keeps the low end relatively linear, and it has a noticeable presence lift through the upper mid / lower treble region, but they spent a lot of time refining the severity of these decisions. I think they were quite careful when increasing certain frequency groups and didn’t proceed until they found the happy medium. I believe this explains why it sounds clean, open, and honest, while also explaining why it does not feel brittle or sharp, too forward. I genuinely believe that iBasso spent a long time fine-tuning the midrange to find this golden ratio.

Revox B77 MK III Analog Reel-to-Reel Tape Deck Review
February 16, 2026 § Leave a comment
Bench measurements confirmed the deck’s excellence: frequency response within ±1.5 dB across the audible spectrum, low harmonic distortion dominated by benign even-order harmonics, crosstalk of -57.5 dB, and wow and flutter of just 0.06%. These numbers meet the published specifications.
More importantly, the listening sessions revealed what measurements cannot fully capture. Jazz recordings exhibited natural warmth, realistic transients, and that ineffable sense of presence that draws listeners into the performance. Electronic music lost its digital edge without sacrificing detail or dynamics. The B77 MK III delivers the sonic characteristics that have fueled the analog revival: smoothness, dimensionality, and musical engagement, while providing the reliability and precision that modern enthusiasts expect.

Kii Audio SEVEN active loudspeaker system$9885 Review
February 16, 2026 § Leave a comment
https://www.stereophile.com/content/kii-audio-seven-active-loudspeaker-system
I was surprised by how similarly the two speakers reproduced a solo voice or instrument. The ambience and soundstage cues are another matter. Consider the old chestnut Eliot Fisk Plays Bach and Scarlatti (SACD rip, Red Rose Music RRM 06). This is an intimate recording with negligible space around the instrument. With this album, there’s very little difference in the presentation of the Kiis and the KEFs. It is almost like listening to test tones, which also sounded much the same.But any recording with good spatial ambience revealed that the KEFs and Kiis are no more twins than Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger. On “Tarrega’s Capricho árabe,” performed by Stefano Grondona on La Guitarra de Torres (CD rip, Divox CDX-29701), we hear everything from the touch of fingers on the strings, the strings themselves, and the resonant tones from the body of the instrument, all within a richly warm ambience. The SEVENs directed more attention to the early items on that list—the close-in, local things—while the KEFs made a stronger case for the ambience.It comes down to how they interact with the room. With the SEVENs nearly against the front wall, listening from a seat fairly close to the speakers, the cardioid radiation minimizes the excitation of room modes and delivers a finely detailed soundstage defined by the width of the speaker pair. The KEFs sound best a few feet from the walls and from a listening position farther from the speakers than they are from each other. Under those conditions, the soundstage conjured is consistently wider than the speaker span. While their imaging is marginally less incisive than the SEVENs’, they are somewhat better at separating the music from the speakers. Tough choice.

Raidho X2.6 Floor-standing Speaker $22,800 Review
February 15, 2026 § Leave a comment
It’s nearly impossible to fault the Raidho X2.6 floor-standing speakers. Their designers set out to create a perfectly neutral and accurate speaker, and they achieved that goal. They’re so neutral that they make most of the speakers I’ve heard before sound colored. They take accuracy to another level. And therein lies a quandary.
I’m a fan of neutral speakers, and I’ve said so on many occasions. The X2.6’s accuracy gives rock and heavy music an addictive quality. They capture the feel of every band’s performance style and their recording aesthetic in a way I haven’t heard before. I could listen to Pantera and The Beatles, and everyone in between, all day and twice on Sunday.
But my main interest is classical. As I’ve also said on many occasions, there is a huge gap between the best and the worst orchestral recordings. The X2.6s are almost too good here. They demand the best fidelity and balance from orchestral tracks. Anything short of reference quality sounds fine until you hit the volume barrier. Then, it’s less enjoyable. This is a small thing that I don’t see as a flaw, but as something that comes with audio gear that is so meticulously precise. And I can’t say it better than that. The X2.6 floor-standing speakers are incredibly good at their job, and Raidho is to be highly commended. If you want to rock out at arena volume levels, or you want to build a library of classical reference recordings, there are none better in my experience.

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