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BLUMENHOFER ACOUSTICS TEMPESTA 17 LOUDSPEAKERS

The Tempesta 17’s stand at 1m tall (with spikes) and are a 2-way floor standing speaker with a floor ported bass reflex which Blumenhofer call a divergent bass reflex due to the aperture design. The face has a 6.5” /170mm woofer and a 1” compression driver inside a horn throat that flares to roughly 6”, and has a mylar membrane. Positioned just above the entry-level speaker in their range, the construction is of unbraced 19mm MDF with (in the case of mine) a walnut veneer, inscribed rather beautifully with the Blumenhofer motif. That woofer is a “sandwich” of 2 layers of a polymer called PEEK, manufactured by a company called Vitrex, with a layer of carbon between them, and is named a P2C Sandwich). The separately chambered crossover is set at 1800hz (low compared to many speakers that often favour a 3khz crossover) with the speaker on paper purporting to have a frequency response between 45hz and 20kz.

The actual form of the speaker is interesting in that rather than a simple vertically symmetrical “tower”, the front face is set at an angle, with the base widening slightly which I assume is to assist with bass response. Well-formed single-wired binding posts constructed of gold-plated Tellurium copper are set in the back. The Tempesta 17 is rated at 100w with a nominal impedance of 8ohm but is valve friendly at a 90db sensitivity, something Blumenhofer is focused on so much that they include impedance linearity controls in their upper-tier speakers.

Each speaker is set on 3 adjustable spikes, 2 in the rear and 1 in front – which makes positioning easy and for fine-tuning that bass reflex height to suit your room, should you need to. The listening axis can also be adjusted by adjusting just the 2 rear spikes to tilt the speaker. At 16kg a speaker, these are robust but not back-breaking heavy should you need to move them around.

HOW DO THEY SOUND?

I hadn’t expected to like these as much as I do. The Tempestas were the 4th-floor stander I listened to critically over 2 days after whittling my list down over time. They fitted the profile and were at the top end

Reviewed by Alan McIntosh

of an admittedly quite wide budget range. I initially listened to them in quite close proximity due to the store layout, then further back and also at home in my current listening room. What struck me about these varied listening modes was how unfussy the Tempestas appear to be on placement and yet still manage to retain the coherence of a single image. The second thing that was evident was how great the bass response was while maintaining an incredibly smooth tone right up through the spectrum, notwithstanding that closeness to the wall can accentuate that bass reflex response. I can usually sniff out a speaker’s broad credentials pretty fast by playing Princes Sign O’ the Times (2020 remaster, Qobuz) due to how high he had set the bassline and how much edgy activity there is in the upper registers. Some speakers can leave you lacking bass or can, when the volume is pushed become too forward and brittle at the top end, bordering on painful instead of having a smooth response throughout the range.

Even with the volume pushed north, the Blumenhofers remained smooth, detailed, precise, and airy, but not at all uncomfortable. With regard to bass on the Tempestas, it’s not gut-rumbling ultra-subsonic low, but it is got great heft, is organic, and is thumpingly tight enough to stop and start right where you’d hope without over bloat. It certainly “feels“ like they exceed the rated 45hz. For some reason, I hadn’t expected a relatively compact floor cabinet with horn/reflex design to have the weight and punch of bass these deliver and so was caught very off guard – in a good way! Blumenhofer’s diverging aperture design of their reflex port uses air pressure and flow rate calculations to achieve the response desired (higher pressure on exit)– which as mentioned, can be tuned further by lowering/raising the speaker on its spikes, so it seems they know their maths and how to turn it into great bass.

Moving through my digital test track list, next up was The Vanishing of Peter Strong by Yello (24bit/48khz) which only confirmed the bass capability and also highlighted the detail and stop/start control in percussion and upper tones. Jarre’s wonderfully pumping Arpeggiateur was delivered crisply and with well-defined bass, great tempo, and scale that some speakers can fall a little short at. In Blumenhofer’s documentation, they mention that the Tempesta range works equally as well as a cinema experience speaker as it does for pure music listening and I can only attribute that to the bass and well-timed dynamic response they have achieved. Tanya by Dexter Gordon (2015 remaster, 24/192) allowed me to test successfully the 17’s handling of Jazz – the honest and organic response of the horns just works incredibly well for jazz brass, as it did for very dynamic rock in the guise of Journey’s Separate Ways (Worlds Apart), specifically the staggeringly powerful Bryce Miller/Alloy Tracks remix. (24bit/48khz)

Using open-reel tape as a source across a number of master copy albums further confirmed how well the Tempestas open the door to a captivating presentation and honest sound. Throughout testing, the coherent image, forming one wide soundstage was very impressive, more so than some of the others I’d tested earlier in the week. By this point, the highly proficient Audiovector QR5s I had also listened to the day before had been pipped to the post by the Tempestas. It was close though, I have to say, with the Tempesta’s offering just a bit more of what each had to offer. The Audioverstors while very solid in the bass and very resolving overall were a little dry for me, whereas the Tempesta offered more realism to my ears. Versus the Totem Bison Twin Towers that I’d also listened to that week which to me were a little forward and sharp at times, the Blumenhofers offered a much smoother top end, while the Bisons did pretty much match the Tempesta’s for soundstage.

I compared the same playlist across three quite different amps, the Atoll SDA 200 Signature (instore) and both my Hegel 190 and Prima Luna Prologue 1 at home. None produced anything but super results, the Brimar 6L6GC valves in the Prima Luna had no trouble driving these at scale but also with dimensionality to the sonic image, did expand the bass somewhat and added gravitas across the board as you might expect, whilst the Hegel’s class-leading grip and Scandi neutrality allowed them to deliver vibrant clarity and pace in spades, while not over voicing into sharpness.

Conclusion

Obviously, my conclusion was summed up as soon as I opened my wallet and drove them home, but over the last couple of weeks that’s only been further confirmed. These are very, very good speakers. Be it electronic, acoustic, jazz, or dynamic rock the combination of the horn-throated compression

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