December 2019
SVS Pinnacle 3.5-Way Floorstanding Speakers
These speakers can rock, plus produce excellent macro and micro dynamics too!
Review By Dr. Matthew Clott
SVS
came on the scene several years ago and impressed everyone with their range of
high performance subwoofers. They established themselves as a high value to
performance product and sold primarily dealer direct. Their subwoofers come in
multiple sizes, multiple price points and in both sealed and ported versions to
seamlessly mesh with home audio and home theater systems. With their success,
speaker production was an obvious progression and they introduced a 5.1 HT
system, bookshelf speakers, dedicated surround speakers and floorstanders.
Considering the popularity of today's home theater, Gary
Yacoubian (President of SVS) brilliantly maneuvered his company's subwoofers and
5.1 speaker system into Best Buy's Magnolia high end distribution network to
increase exposure and prove to the world that his company's product can deliver
and deliver strong. Manufacturer direct is still the bulk of their sales, and he
implemented a 45 day in home audition policy with free shipping and returns,
100% money back. Heck, they will even generate the return paperwork and arrange
for pickup! This policy exudes confidence in their product and makes it
obscenely easy to try truly risk free. They also have a five year warranty.
Technical Details
At a retail price of $1,599.98 the SVS Prime Pinnacle sits at
the top of their Prime line and below their Ultra line. The key words here are "affordable
performance." The Pinnacle is a beautifully designed floor standing 3.5-way
speaker measuring 41.1" high x 8" wide x 13.9" deep, and weighs a hefty 57
pounds. That weight conveys the amount of internal bracing, driver heft and
cabinet reinforcement utilized by the SVS engineers. These guys are used to
building cabinets to withstand the massive forces that huge subwoofers create.
Call it trickle down, call it experience, call it elf magic, but these speakers
are seriously solid beyond their cost point. The cabinet has chamfered front
baffles to reduce edge diffraction and improve both imaging and widen
dispersion. The footprint is petite, the design is elegant and the
implementation is meticulous. They come in Piano gloss or premium black ash
finish options. I received the piano gloss option, a totally reasonable $200 up
charge considering the quality of the application, seamless continuity and
richness of luster. I have seen $4000 speakers that didn't have the finish
quality of these Pinnacles.
The Prime Pinnacle's utilize a 1" aluminum dome tweeter,
single 5.25" glass-fiber midrange And three 6.5" polypropylene woofers. There is
a separate sealed midrange enclosure and three independent woofer enclosures,
each utilizing a 2" rear port and tuned to slightly different frequencies to
optimize low frequency extension and midrange integration. Here's where the
specs get interesting. The engineers integrated these five drivers utilizing a
three-way crossover (2.1 kHz and 300 Hz) with a nominal (and VERY easy to drive)
impedance of 8 Ohms and 88db sensitivity. They recommend a wide range from 20 to
300 Watts of required power, although I found that it took over 50 Wpc to really
optimize dynamics and low frequency extension.
Speaking of low frequencies,
these $1,600- speakers are rated from 29 Hz to 25 kHz! Yup, they produce sound
down to an impressive 29 Hz! Would you expect anything less from a company
primarily known for its earth shaking subwoofers? Standard five-way binding
posts complete the electrical end of the description. I respect the fact that
they chose to not utilize bi-wire posts as very few in this price point really
bi-wire or shotgun anyway.
I have to complement them on their packaging. The speakers
arrived double wrapped and protected in well-engineered foam inserts designed to
both protect if falling out of an airplane, and make removal of the speaker easy
and back pain free. Well done, package design team! And thank you.
Listening Test
Reportedly, their engineers spent more time voicing these
speakers than any other. They were designed specifically to sound good with both
music and home theater, and to work well in most rooms. It appears the three
small 2" rear ports allow for more flexible placement as they suggested I placed
them within 12" of the front wall. I tried the Pinnacles in several locations
and my findings were consistent with what one would expect, the further out they
came the wider and deeper the soundstage, and the leaner the base. But they are,
unquestionably, designed to be placed about 12-16" off the front wall as that is
where the base is both deepest and most taught. For home theater, soundstage
depth is irrelevant but for music reproduction I preferred them about 24" off
the wall. It was the ideal compromise. At that distance stage is wide, although
even perpendicular to the front wall I rarely heard extension of the stage well
beyond the outer edge of the speaker. Centrally, image specificity was quite
good and stage height was natural and correct.
Listening to classical allowed the Pinnacles to stretch their
arms a bit and their strengths to shine. These speakers can scale. Night on Bald
Mountain properly conveyed gravitas and showed how nice it is to have a full
range speaker (yes, these speakers do go below 30 Hz for under $2000, no sub
needed). And Saint Saens' Danse Macabre offered both proper delicacy and weight
when required. Where they fell short was a true sense of texture that some of
the best in this price begin to offer. Ziggy Stardust proved that these speakers
can rock, and push macro and micro dynamics into the room.
Low frequency
extension is clear, tight, deep and downright wondrous at this price point, and
puts the Prime Pinnacles in a class by themselves. Although the Pinnacles lacked
the last detail of accuracy and clarity, and could not truly reproduce the
subtle tonality and complexity of a cello (not really much in this price point
can), what it does do VERY well is engage you in the overall experience by doing
macro really well. In Thor: The Dark World's Asgard, the reproduction of horn
and tympani sent me soaring above Asgard and feeling the majesty that piece
conveys.
SVS's stated goal for the Pinnacle was to create, "Audiophile
refinement and musicality without sacrificing wide dynamic range, deep,
effortless bass and all the excitement of a world-class loudspeaker." While the
Pinnacle does not truly accomplish "audiophile refinement" and certainly is not
a "world class loudspeaker" when looking at the whole of audiophile offerings,
it certainly competes favorably with its similarly priced competitors.
While
manufacturers like ELAC and Magnepan offer a sense of refinement and harmonic
complexity the Pinnacle lacks, the Prime Pinnacle counters with scale, rhythm,
dynamics and real low end extension. If you are looking for a speaker that does
music and HT equally well, the Pinnacle is an absolute no brainer. If your
building an audio only system and can't fit a sub yet want near full range
performance at an affordable price, the Pinnacle may be your only choice. If you're
looking for an audio only speaker to convey the subtle nuances of a saxophone,
the complex textures of a cello, or the harmonic richness of a French Horn and
can either utilize a sub or just don't value what's available under 40 Hz, your
options widen significantly. Considering the risk free trial opportunity SVS
offers, it's tough to pass up the chance to give them a try and see if they work
for you.
Listening List
Natalie Merchant's Peppery Man (Leave Your Sleep, Nonesuch,
522304-2, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Yes's Leave it (90125, Rhino Atlantic, XWAR21829F96, FLAC 96kHz/24bit)
Oscar Peterson Trio's You Look Good To Me (We Get Requests,
Verve, XVRJ8606D64, DSD single rate 2.8MHz/64fs)
Mussorgsky's on Bald Mountain: Tuileries (Russian Showpieces,
Sony Classical, B000003FMY, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Count Basie (Live at the Sands, Mobile Fidelity, Reprise
Records,9362-45946-2, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Hugh Masekela's Coal Train (Stimela) (Jive Africa, Jive,
JVD-0330B, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Dave Brubeck's Take Five (Time Out, Analogue Productions,
XAPJ8192D64, DSD single rate 2.8MHz, 64fs)
Eric Clapton's Tears in Heaven (Unplugged, Reprise Records,
945024-2, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Sinatra's The lady is a Tramp (57-In concert, DCC, UCDCC 101, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Rimsky Korsakov's Dance of the Tumblers (The Snow Maiden, IMP
Digital, B075DHQ1NH, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Alison Krauss's Down to the River to Pray (O Brother, Where
Art Thou?, Mercury Records, WAV 96kHz/24-bit)
Mussorgsky's Dance of the Persian Slaves (Khovanshchina, Act
IV, Pentatone, FLAC 96kHz/24-bit)
Shelby Lynn's You Don't Have to Say you Love Me (Just a Little
Lovin', Lost Highway Records, FLAC 196kHz/24-bit)
Asgard (Thor: Dark World, Universal, B00FXH21M0, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Saint Saens' Danse Macabre (Witches' Brew, Blue Moon Imports,
B0098YTXAC, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Ziggy Stardust (The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the
Spiders from Mars, Rhino/Parlophone, B0106UFG1G, 44.1kHz/16-bit)
Associated Equipment
Analog Source: Lyra Atlas SL cartridge, VPI HW40 turntable and
arm, Manley Steelhead phono stage
Digital source: Laufer Teknik Memory Player MP64, Light
Harmonic Davinci 2, NAIM Uniti Star
Amplification: Absolare Signature Integrated, GrandiNote Essenza Integrated, Octave V80SE with Super Black Box Integrated,
Musical Fidelity TriVista Integrated, NAIM Uniti Star
Speakers: Dynaudio Consequence Ultimate, Laufer TeknikThe
Note, Zu Audio Druid Mark V, Elac UniFi B5, pair of Vandersteen Sub Three
w/M7-HPB
AC Power: Dedicated Square D 125 amp panel w/10 gauge runs to
each outlet, Furutech GTX-D-NCF Rhodium outlets, dedicated circuits for each
outlet, Environmental Protection EP-2750 ground filter on each circuit, EP-2050
surge protection/waveform correction
Power Conditioning: Shunyata D6000, Richard Gray 400S, Torus
RM20BAL
Rack and Shelf Support: Adona SR4 & Nemisis ALGC racks,
Symposium Ultra shelves, Symposium Rollerblocks 2+ doublestacks, HRS Nimbus,
Shun Mook Giant Diamond Resonator, IsoAcoustics Gaia 1 & 2, IsoAcoustics
Orea Bourdeaux
Interconnect - Crystal Cable Absolute Dream 1.0m XLR, Analysis Plus 1.0m
Micro Golden Oval XLR, Shunyata Anaconda S 8.5m XLR, Cable Crystal Connect Reference Diamond 1.5m RCA phono w/ground cable
Digital: Light Harmonic Lightspeed 20G USB, Wireworld Platinum Starlight
USB, Empirical Audio 1.0m S/PDIF
Speaker Cable: Crystal Cable Absolute Dream 2.0m (spade to banana), Analysis Plus
Big Silver Oval 2.0m (spade to spade)
Power Cable:Shunyata Z-Tron NR 15 amp, Shunyata Z-Tron NR 20 amp, Enklein DAVID
15 ampere
Acoustics: Dedicated room, Vicoustics, GIK, Acoustic Wings,
Auralax,
Room: 15' 1" wide x 18' 5" long x 9' 2" high
LP cleaning machine: VPI