For sale matching pair of quality audiophile B&W 684 S2 Speakers System. In mint and very clean condition and in full working order.
The speakers are like new and have been stored in the cupboard for some time and not used much at all, that's why they are still like new. Superb high quality and stunning sounding floor-standing slim designed speakers with natural, crystal clear open sound stage plus great bass response and an option for Bi-amping, Bi-wiring or standard connection.
Both woofers, midrange and tweeters are original in excellent condition and in full working order. One scuff on one of the speakers' case. Please see all 24 pictures available in the gallery. Original bottom bases/plinth x2 and metal spikes x8, printed copy of manual plus extra free quality Gale Bi-wired speakers' wires x2 included. The speakers can be used with the bottom plinths or without and you still will be able to use the metal spikes. Using trickle-down technology from higher ranges of Bowers & Wilkins speakers, both bass and bass/ midrange cones are constructed from a very stiff but lightweight material called woven kevlar, similar material is used extensively in Formula 1 racing cars. The Nautilus loaded tweeter unit is a twin aluminium dome, and features a special surround material which allows this design to sound both detailed and extremely spacious in the high register, and is also protected from accidental damage by a perforated steel grille. In the listening experience, these towers can play loud but also reveal subtle musical details that will astonish you. Bass is extended and tight, midrange has great neutrality whilst stereo soundstage is truly three dimensional. The high frequencies are sweet, detailed and yet smooth to the ear.The B&W 684 S2 is a superb performer both on music and as the main front speakers in a home cinema system, and are available black ash or white finishes with matching plinth, which aids stability on carpeted floors. Decoupled Double Dome aluminium tweeter with Nautilus tube loading. Kevlar® brand fibre cone bass/midrange drivers. Two way reflex ported enclosure. 1x ø25mm (1 in) aluminium dome high-frequency.
2x ø130mm (5 in) woven Kevlar® cone bass/midrange. 6dB at 30Hz and 50kHz. 87dB spl (2.83V, 1m). 25W - 150W into 8? Height: 920mm (36.2 in) cabinet only plus extra 3in for spikes and plinth. Width: 160mm (6.3 in) cabinet only. Depth: 234mm (9.2 in). 14.2kg (31.2 lb). 2nd and 3rd harmonics (90dB, 1m). The 684 S2 is the smaller of two floorstanders in the new 600 line-up: in that slightly wacky way they have down in Worthing, within each series the larger the number the smaller the speaker. That slimming-down has been helped by the adoption of smaller drive units: the S2 version of the 684 uses two 13cm mid/bass units in place of the 16.5cm drivers of the old model, B&W saying that advances in technology have enabled improvements in performance despite the smaller cones, and that the smaller voice-coils employed here increase sensitivity. As has long been the way with the 600 Series, the new models make use of technology trickled down (or'cascaded', as Kerr puts it) from products further up the company's range. The most obvious example of that is the use of B&W's yellow woven Kevlar mid/bass cones, long a hallmark of both the B&W range and the 600 series, and now widely copied both in the weave and in some cases in the colour. The bright yellow B&W cones were striking back in 1995, and still are almost two decades on. But there's more cascading in the detail: here, the drivers use Anti-Resonance Plugs derived from the company's PM1 speakers, and designed to improve pistonic movement for distortion-free midrange performance while also keeping the cone from getting out of shape - or going'out of round' - under duress. This in turn helps keep resonances at bay. Bass tuning employs a front-venting Flowport tube, the inner surface of which is dimpled like a golf ball to smooth the flow of air and avoid'chuffing' caused by pressure build-up in the port, with two-part foam plug/rings provided to allow the user to reduce the amount of bass delivered if required. Above these drivers, and mounted in its own gel-filled cavity to decouple it from the main cabinet, is the new 25mm Decoupled Double Dome aluminium tweeter, which uses a cut-away second skin on the dome to improve rigidity without adding too much mass. That technology is drawn from B&W's CM10 speaker, while the Nautilus tube loading behind the dome is derived from models stretching back to the strikingly sculptural speaker of the same name, in which straight and spiral tubes were used to back-load each driver, absorbing unwanted sound. The tweeter also has a metal mesh grille to protect it, B&W saying this'has minimal effect on the tweeter output', and'is similar to the mesh used on the CM10, for which the hole pattern was optimised'. As they say in the furniture catalogues, some home assembly is required when the 684s are unpacked, but not much: the plinths have to be attached to the base of the cabinet using bolts, spacers and washers (for which an Allen key is provided), and then either rubber feet - for hard floors - or carpet-piercing spikes and locknuts are fitted to the plinth.The terminals to the rear of the speakers make provision for biwiring or biamplification should you wish, and for stereo use B&W suggests the speakers be used at least 0.5m from side and rear walls, and between 1.5 and 3m apart, depending on the listening distance. Basically the old idea of the speakers and listening positioning forming the three points of an equilateral triangle applies here, and while there's no advice about toe-in, I found angling the speakers very slightly toward the listening position, so the outer side-panels of the cabinets were just visible, helped focus the stereo image.
Mind you, that's a personal preference, and depending on your room or your tastes, you might prefer the speakers in strict regimental positioning, firing straight down the room. What's not in question is the need to give the speakers some work before you form an opinion of how they sound: they're a bit brash, and light in the bass, straight from the boxes. However, after some use to flex the driver surrounds and get some heat into them, they soon settle down and show just what they can do.B&W says in the manual that'the performance of the speaker will change subtly during the initial listening period. If the speaker has been stored in a cold environment, the damping compounds and suspension materials of the drive units will take some time to recover their correct mechanical properties. The drive unit suspensions will also loosen up during the first hours of use.
The time taken for the speaker to achieve its intended performance will vary depending on previous storage conditions and how it is used. As a guide, allow up to a week for the temperature effects to stabilise and 15 hours of average use for the mechanical parts to attain their intended design characteristics. However, longer run-in periods (as long as a month) have been reported and there is evidence to suggest that this has little to do with the speaker changing and more to do with the listener getting used to the new sound. This is especially so with highly revealing speakers such as these, where there may be a significant increase in the amount of detail compared with what the listener has previously been used to; the sound may at first appear too "up front" and perhaps a little hard. After an extended period of time, the sound will seem to mellow, but without losing clarity and detail. All very sensible advice, treading the path between the obvious mechanical effects and those who'd have you believe that all'running-in' effects are illusory: I found that after the speakers warmed-up - when they were delivered, the outside temperature was fairly low, and they'd been in transit for a day or two - I was able to enjoy them within a day or so of use, and not much changed in their sound beyond that. That's good news, as it suggests you can soon be listening to what the 864 S2s do so well - and that's deliver a confident, dramatic view of a wide range of music, with a pleasingly natural tonality, well-weighted and tightly-controlled bass to give substance without impeding the rhythmic flow of music, and plenty of impact and ambience without ever becoming fatiguing.Nothing really caught them out: they just delivered striking clarity and intelligibility even with very complex recordings, and proved very easy to drive, but at the same time very revealing of the amplification with which they were used. B&W quotes 87dB/W/m sensitivity and 8ohm nominal impedance, falling to a minimum of 4ohms, and suggests amplifiers from 25W upwards will be sufficient to drive them.
While they'll certainly work well enough with low-powered amplifiers, as some experimentation showed, they do rather thrive when connected to something with rather more power (they can be used with amplifiers of up to 150W), which has the effect of making the most of their superb dynamic ability and openness. They worked extremely well on the end of my reference. Amplifier, sounded huge if occasionally a shade over-exuberant when connected to an Onkyo TX-NR818 AV receiver, and were sweet and entirely controlled when coupled with the Devialet. However, these should prove very easy speakers to partner with a wide range of source components and amplification, which is just as one would hope for a design clearly aimed at the widest possible appeal. Use the 684s with a decent amplifier and CD player or network music player, or with a computer fed straight into the digital input of a suitable amp such as the RA-1570, and you'd have the makings of a very fine system.Bowers & Wilkins 684 S2. Two 13cm woven Kevlar mid/bass drivers, 25mm aluminium dome tweeter.
72kHz - 22kHz +/-3dB on-axis, -6dB at 45Hz and 50kHz. Black ash with black grille, white with light grey grille. 92x16x23.4cm (cabinet), 95.5×23.5×23.8 (with plinth). All the pictures in this listing are of this item in its real condition and original and exactly what you will receive. The parcel will be very well and safe packed with polystyrene, bubble wraps, solid.
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