Klipsch The Nines integrated loudspeaker system Specifications

Sidebar 1: Specifications

Description: Two-way bass-reflex, standmount digital loudspeaker system with integrated D/A conversion, class-D amplification, and on-board DSP. Drive units: 1" Titanium LTS vented tweeter with Tractrix silicone-composite horn; 8" high-excursion fiber-composite–cone woofer in a rear-ported enclosure made of MDF and finished in wood veneer. Crossover frequency: 1.6kHz. Frequency response: 34Hz–25kHz, –3dB. Dynamic bass extension: 22Hz at 35% volume. Maximum output: 115dB at 1m (stereo pair). System power: 100W (low frequencies), 20W (high frequencies); 240W total, 480W peak. Dispersion: 90° horizontal, 90° vertical from horn. Digital inputs: HDMI-ARC with CEC, Bluetooth 5.0 (SBC, AAC, aptX, codecs), S/PDIF (TosLink), USB2 Type B. Formats and sample rates supported: PCM to 24/192. Analog inputs (phono and line level): one pair single-ended on RCA, one 1/8" (3.5mm) stereo miniplug. Subwoofer outputs on RCA; a 4th-order crossover is engaged when a subwoofer is connected.
Dimensions: 9.5" (241mm) W × 19.13" (486mm) H × 13.38" (340mm) D. Weight: 28.4lb (12.9kg) primary speaker, 27lb (12.25kg) secondary speaker.
Finish: Walnut with off-white front panel, Black with black front panel.
Serial number of unit reviewed: 107128623160250. Made in China.
Price: $1499/pair. Optional KS-24 stands: $349/pair. Approximate number of US dealers: 70; also sold online. Warranty: Two years.
Manufacturer: Klipsch, 3502 Woodview Terrace, Suite 200, Indianapolis, IN 46268. Tel: (317) 860-8100/(800) 544-1482. Web: klipsch.com/powered-speakers.

COMPANY INFO
Klipsch
3502 Woodview Terrace, Suite 200
Indianapolis
IN 46268
(800) 544-1482
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COMMENTS
mrounds's picture

You might want to invest in a recent, low-end TV for these kinds of tests. I have an ancient (but new enough to have Toslink and ATSC tuner) plasma (originally was smart but updates have remove the by-now-useless apps) and a recent cheap (not smart!) lcd panel, both accepting OTA via an attic antenna. OTA sound with both has a noticeable delay between in-set speakers and external audio, so it's one or the other unless you like subway-tunnel effects, and lipsync can be an issue.

Sources, though, matter as you found. OTA sound can be very good - try that if you're in a place where you can get it. Check rummage sales for ATSC converter boxes for your old Sony. Cable of any sort dramatically messes with audio as well as HD video. App (via Roku) sound is all over the map. PBS sounds great with Austin City Limits among many other things, but classical music is often massively and noticeably compressed (pumping and noise). Amazon sound quality generally sucks, as does (surprisingly, since it works OK from a computer) Youtube. Britbox is generally decent, within the limits of the type and age of the show. I don't do Netflix etc so no comment on them.

That said, powered speakers have always been intriguing to me. These look nice. Any experience with the smaller (more affordable?) models, that would make more sense with a subwoofer? And how serviceable are the parts? Can the plate amp be replaced if necessary?

MLP's picture

Most of us can't get antenna TV reception these days. Having experienced a bit of it here and there, I agree that there can be better picture and sound quality from an antenna vs a cable or streaming transmission. The lack of sound/picture sync is a plague of digital TV. It doesn't seem to ever go away. It must be a big deal to get that right from production through transmission and reception. Back In The Day, NTSC TV rarely had that problem. Fuzzy picture and all, it was better in some ways.

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