Sandy Greene experimented with the
$4,000
47 Lab/Omega system.

September 22, 2005
 
     
 
 
 
     
 
 
 
     
     
  47 Laboratory 4706 Gaincard integrated
amplifier
Specifications:

Output power:
no internal power source
Input impedance: 22k (unbalanced only)
Attenuators: 12-steps for each channel,
output on and off switches for each channel
Dimensions: 170 mm W x 40 mm H x 100
mm D
Price: $1,500 (plus $1,800 for one regular
4700 Power Humpty power supply)

4700 Power Humpty Specifications:
Application:
stereo power supply for
Gaincard only
Power output: 25 Wpc, 8 Ohm
Dimensions: 20lb
Price: $1,800

Total System Cost: $3,300

U.S. Distributor:
Sakura Systems
2 Rocky Mountain Road
Jefferson, MA 01522
Telephone: 508-829-3426
Email:
sakurastms@aol.com
Website: www.sakurasystems.com
  Omega Minuet loudspeaker
Specifications:

Type:
Ported front firing dual single drivers
stand/shelf mount, rear 2" port
Frequency response: 52 ~ 20kHz
Sensitivity: 90dB at 8 ohm
Power requirement: 10 watts +
Driver: Twin full range 4" poly cone wide band
with phase plugs and rubber surround, alloy
chassis and fully shielded
Crossover: None
Terminals: Standard multiway gold plated
binding post
s
Cabinet:
Heavily braced softwood MDF and
adhered with polyurethane glues
Wood finishes: Cherry, Maple, Sapele, and
Walnut with solid, hardwood corners
Laminates: Black and Red Parisian Maple gloss
Pearl, Blue Artic Pearl Gloss
Warranty: 10 years parts and labor for
workmanship and defects
Dimensions: 15" H x 7.5" W x 12" D
Weight: 22lb each
Price: $699 per pair

Manufacturer:
Omega Speaker Systems
235 Main Avenue
Norwalk, CT 06851
Phone: 203-847-2800
Fax: 203-847-4797
Email: marathonspeakers@juno.com
Website:
http://www.omegaloudspeakers.com/
 
     
     
  Listening to music is my therapy.  At my home in Philly, with my wife and
kids, sharing music is a joy.  When I come home from work, the first thing  I
do is turn on the stereo and play an album (album not necessarily referring  
to  vinyl).  My wife  is  always interested in my choice of music and  I  know  
she  can  read  my  mood  by  it.  

There  are  many  shades to my moods.  On  the  “rough” –day  side, the
tunes could swing into something  aggressive  or   I  may  need  to  chill.   
On  the  “great” -days,  the  music  might  be something happy and upbeat,
or  a  trip  down  memory  lane  that reminds me of bygone days.  My  aural  
mood  ring  if  you  will.

My  hi-fi  setup  in  Philly has been assembled to share  (Rogue Audio  
tubed amplification with Meadowlark  Kestrel  II  speakers.    See   Eastern   
Electric   Minimax   CD  player  review  for complete system).   The room is
right next to the entrance of the house and the stairs that go to the 2nd and
3rd floor.  The music greets guests and travels up the stairs and fills the
home with music.

It  is  a  pleasant  sounding  system…  warm  and  inviting.   It  
communicates just as well at low volumes,  a  background  vibe-enhancer,  
as  it  does  at  rockin’  levels  as  an  outright boogie machine!    I would say
the system is  as much a member of the family as the rest of us… (Can he
be serious?   Perhaps there are a few audiophiles with families who will
know exactly what I mean.)

Now,  this  is  a  system  review.    Not   of   my   Philly   system,   but   of   my  
Brooklyn  system.(Philadelphia is about 100 miles away from Brooklyn…
1.5 hours on Amtrak, 1.5 hrs by car.)
 
     
     
 
 
     
     
  Half  the  week  I  am  up  in  NYC  for work, without my wife and kids, so my
small apartment in Brooklyn  had  been  mostly  a  crash-pad.   Now  it  feels  
more  like a  home away from home. Why?    Because  for  the  past  few  
months,  I  have  had a wonderful little system keeping me company.   This  
system  consists  of  a  
47 Lab Gaincard (25 watt), a pair of Omega Minuet
speakers and my trusty Eastern Electric Minimax CD player that I reviewed
in June, 2005.

The  47 Lab/Omega  system is like a new member of my family… more like
a visiting relative, I guess.

My  apartment  is  minimally  furnished  and the minimally designed system
feels right at home. The  living/dining  room  is  on  the  long  side,  and  is  
open  and  loft-like  with  dimensions  of approximately  15’x 45’ x 9’.   The  
system  is  set  up  on  the 15’ wall, with the
Minuets on 28” stands, about  
4’  from the side walls and  in  front  of  my two draped front windows which
sit in small  bays,  so  the  speakers  sit  about  1’  from  the  front  wall  but
right against the curtains. They’re  toed-in  slight  to  pretty  much  point at my
head about 12’ back from the system.  The interconnects from the CD
player to the
Gaincard are my fav,  Van  Den  Hul  D-12 III Hybrid’s. The
speaker cables are solid core copper pulled from an  ethernet cable,
courtesy of my friend Matt.

When  I  come home from work in NYC, the ritual is pretty much the same as
it is in Philly.  First thing  I do  is turn on the system… followed by a quick
change of clothes (OK, too much detail). Anyway,  let’s  just  say,  within  a  
short time, I am comfortably seated on my couch with a beer and a great CD
is playing.   Now,  this is a small apartment and  I am only playing the music
for myself, so  the  volume  is  pretty  much the sane/same (medium-low)
every day.  I’m not having conversation nor am I rockin’ the house  (the
neighbors,  on one side a former head of security for former Mayor John
Lindsay, would kill me).

Now,  in  some  rare  occasions,  if  I  play  my  cards  right, if the tunes are
appropriate and the mood is matching,  the music just NEEDS  to be played
louder to release some of that pent-up energy from a certain kind of day at
the office, if ya know what I mean.

Keeping the volume pretty much the same  for  days-on-end  is  a good thing
with the 47 Lab’s
Gaincard.   You’ve  read  about  this  in many reviews so I
won’t delve.  The  Gaincard  is  dual mono with a volume control for  each
channel.   The volume controls are stepped,  so each turn is regulated with a
click with  quite  a  jump in volume level in between each click.   It makes for
easy  matching  of  channel-to-channel  balance.   For me,  in my very solo
relationship with the Gaincard,  this is fine.   I have had no desire for remote
control… it’s  more  like  set-and-forget volume.   My  Minimax CD player
has a mute  (along with Pause of course)  on its remote… so all is cool if the
phone or doorbell should ring.
 
     
     
My   relationship  with  the
system is very direct.  The
system  is  very  honest in
its  portrayal  of the music
it plays.   It  draws you into
the  music  and  makes  it
worth   your   while.     You
need to sit up straight and
pay  attention  to  hear  all
the   details.      I’m   being
pretty  literal  here…   The
Omega
Minuets are very
focused  and  have a very
tight  and  specific   sweet
spot.     Proper   toe-in   is
essential to achieve great
3-dimensionality,          but
proper    height    is   even
more  critical.  
     
  Louis Chochos,  the  President of Omega informed me that I would want to
get my ear level to be  between  the  two  identical  drivers  that  make  up  
each  Minuet  speaker.  It’s absolutely critical.   You stand up,  the sound
changes;  you slouch on the couch and the sound changes. The  sound  
becomes  more diffuse, flatter and less airy as you move out of the vertical
sweet spot.   Horizontally  it  is  sensitive as well,  but  not  so much in the
color of the sound as in the dimensionality and space.

But when you get in right there, right in the sweet spot and you have the toe-
in right, the sound is  truly  realistic  and  emotionally  involving.  These  little  
speakers  (15” tall x 7.5” wide x 12” deep)  put out amazing low-end.  I
couldn’t believe it when I first heard it.  On some systems, it can often be
quite difficult to  hear  the  acoustic  bass  on  jazz  trio recordings, so I
expected to  hear  very little just by looking at the Minuets,  and I have been
pleasantly surprised.  These guys also give good weight on acoustic piano,
and the timbre they project is very accurate… I mean  the  acoustic  piano  
really  sounds  like it should.  I have often found this another-tough thing to
get right on other systems.  Some of the Jazz CD’s in recent rotation have
been:
 
         
     
Oscar Peterson,
The Sound of the Trio
(Polygram Records,
Catalog: #543321)
Horace Silver,
Song for my Father
(Blue Note Records,
Catalog: #84185)
     
  When I am in my living room and these albums  are playing,  I am
transported to the recording space or the live venue… it is that realistic!
 
     
     
This  system  can  also  dance!  My  wife might be jealous… she was
also entranced by this system.  The new  Gorillaz album is in da haus
and  it’s  sounding  awesome.  The  combo  that  is  this  system,  the
Minimax, the
Gaincard and the Minuets,  can deliver terrific low end
and  fabulous  rhythm.  There’s some  real booty shakin’ tunes on the
new    Gorillaz    album,    
Demon   Days    (Virgin    Records,   ASIN:
B00082IJ08).   The  song,  “Fell  Good  Inc.”,   had  me  teaching  the
whole family to “Raise the roof”  (you know… arms  bent  90 degrees
  at  the  elbows,  elbows  out  in  front  of  your  body,  hands open   flat and
pushing  up  the  “roof”.) Seriously  though,  this song has a kick drum and
bass line that really get  the  boogie  goin’,  and  this system delivers those
goods with surprising bass, real texture and exciting pace.
 
     
     
As  a whole though, this system gives a very personal
experience.  As I mentioned before, it’s really for solo
listening  and  not  for  entertaining.  But when you are
deep in conversation,  it’s  really  rewarding.  You can
really   hear   deep   into   the   music,   and  I  bet  the
Gaincard  has  a  lot  to  do with that.  I’ve read all the
reviews on the Gaincard  (even the one written by our
editor,  Constantine  Soo)  and  I  agree with them all:
pure, direct, insightful, grain-free, solid, soulful (in that
it  allows  you  to hear deep into the soul of the music,
what  the  musicians  are  even  thinking   and  feeling
perhaps),     spiritual,     rhythmic,     tight,      dynamic,
emotional, meticulous, potent.
     
     
     
  Do  you  have  some  friends  you love to have deep conversations with?  
They’re smart, funny, wise,  aware,  direct,  no B.S.   That’s  the  kind  of  
“conversations” I have with this system, and from  reading  all  those  past  
reviews  of  the  
Gaincard,  I  bet  a  lot of this system’s sound is
attributable  to  it.   But I also feel that the
Minuets help achieve that very
positive experience.  I had the Minuets hooked up to my Rogue system in
Philly,  and  I felt the Minuets did a great job of revealing the personality of
each of these very different amplification systems.

For  me,  an  overly  detailed  source would have prevented me from truly
enjoying my time with this system.  It  was great to have my  Eastern  
Electric  Minimax  CD player in the mix.  I felt its tubed  output  gave  just  
that  tiny  bit  of tube richness and air that allowed the whole system to
speak  to  me  in  a  more  refined  and  approachable  manner.   It  was  
never too aggressive, although it would certainly give you its own opinion in
its own special,  direct  way;  but  it  never drove you away.

Let  me  talk  briefly  about  the  “fashion sense”  of  this  system:  clean,  
simple, and tasteful… especially the  Gaincard and the  Minuets.  Quite a
synergy, actually.  Dagogo’s readers would be  familiar  with  the  
aesthetics  of  the  
Gaincard.   Its  chassis  is well crafted, simplistic and
aesthetically clean,  with a real quality feel to the materials.  The  Omega
Minuets are beautiful and simple;  the  boxes  are  finished  in  a wonderful,
rich and, obviously, grained teak veneer. The edges are routed  to  reveal  
the  lighter  wood underneath.  It’s a classy effect. The drivers are very neat
looking with a pattern in the cone and  a  metal  phase  plug.   Even  the  
grills are magnetic,  so when off,  no ugly holes in the front baffle.  The  rear  
has  a single pair of binding posts and a bass reflex port.   By the way,  I
actually prefer the look without the grills,  but prefer the sound with them on,
rendering the highest highs just so slightly tamed.  I prefer that sound.

I’ve  really  enjoyed  my  time  with  this  system.   Physically,  it  is  perfectly  
appropriate: small, unobtrusive,  understated and sophisticated.  Sonically it
is very similar: contained, tight, direct and insightful… but most importantly, it’
s also very involving and welcoming.  It really draws you into the music.   Get  
it  set  up  right  (mostly  through  speaker  positioning)  and  you  can  get
enveloped  in  the  soundscape,  but  more  importantly  completely  brought  
into the music, so much  so  that  you  can  close  your  eyes  and  become  
completely  removed from your actual surroundings and transported deep  
into  the  meaning and the venue of the music.   It’s just the perfect antidote,
and a complement to a sometimes hectic and sometimes perfect workday.
 
     
     
     
  ALSO SEE THE DAGOGO REVIEWS OF

47 Laboratory 4706 Gaincard S
dual-mono integrated amplifier

Eastern Electric MiniMax
CD player
 
     
     
 
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©Dagogo 2005