In the listening test, the Berlin 5.1 set was able to convince completely of all the fears that the camouflaged Wave-Guide aroused, without tricks and deceptions. As is so often the case in the recent past, the latest devil’s work has not shown any significant weaknesses.
Excellent vote
This is especially true if the price is included. The performance was extraordinarily balanced and powerful for the class below 2000 euros. Although no coaxial chassis was at work, the spatial image left nothing to be desired. The phantom sound sources moved relatively completely throughout the room and could be located precisely, while the loudspeakers as such were not explicitly perceived.
Conclusion
The Center did a very good job in the differentiation and comprehension of dialogue votes. The subwoofer showed enormous reserves and came very deep into the bass cabinet. His precision was not only for the most drastic free special effects, but also for crisp music reproduction with bassdrums or sharp-tipped bass strings.
The T 500 stands were also able to withstand stereo reproduction without a subwoofer. There was nothing wrong with their musicality, imagery and precision. The only small criticism concerned the not 100 percent neutral mid-range playback. Despite all the cleanliness, bright male voices or female voices have a slightly cool taste, but in view of price and overall performance, no reason for nagging.
Devil delivers just so many large litters that one hardly gets out of the astonishment. With this 5.1 set, the Berliners offer an all-purpose weapon for music, home cinema and games sound at a fair price.
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