SONUS FABER BOOKSHELF SPEAKER ADVICE: Lumina II; Sonetto I; Sonetto II; Venere 1.5

venessian

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SONUS FABER BOOKSHELF SPEAKER ADVICE: Lumina II; Sonetto I; Sonetto II; Venere 1.5

I would appreciate advice from readers who have direct experience with any or more of the following Sonus faber bookshelf speaker models:
Lumina II
Sonetto I and/or Sonetto II
Venere 1.5

NEED:
Bookshelf speakers with great musicality, in a normal living room, especially off-axis (I do not sit in a set position), front-ported.

I have recently heard and really liked a pair of older Sonus faber Cremona M stand-mounts, as well as KEF R3 (the KEF are out of our budget). The speakers I directly compared to which I did not like much were various Bowers & Wilkins (606 S2; 607 S2; 705 S2) models, Monitor Audio Silver 100, and Martin Logan. Focal Chora 806 were recommended by a friend, but we could not listen to them anywhere. Both stores I visited stated that if I preferred the Sonus faber Cremona and the KEF R3 and did not like B&W and Monitor, I would very probably like any of the other Sonus Faber models, and not so much the Focal.

Based on this and other research, inexperience in audio matters, and fatigue from research/etc., I would like to narrow the list down to just the Sonus faber models. The max $1200 budget allows for either new Lumina II or used Sonetto I, Sonetto II, or Venere 1.5. I am trying to gather information between these models as I cannot audition any of those.

The Lumina II seem to garner universal praise, and I have been told I would enjoy them. What appeals to me a bit more about the Sonetto I, Sonetto II, and Venere 1.5 (but only if they are acoustically equal to or better than the Lumina II) are the slightly larger size and the classic Sonus faber "lute" shape.

PURPOSE:
Music almost exclusively. The speakers would connect to the TV but HT is not a requirement at all.

ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT:
Cambridge Audio AXR100 stereo receiver
Rotel 955 CD player
2 x Rythmik L12 subwoofers

ROOM:
The room is a standard small/medium living room (not a "listening room") of ~240 sf with a 60 sf dining area diagonally away from where the speakers would be. So, ~290 sf total (~2,500 cf). The speakers would have to sit on 16" maximum deep solid shelves, so front-ported is good. Speaker stands are not a viable option, for both space and budget reasons.


Any advice and impressions from those who have experience with any of the Sonus faber models listed above would be welcome.
 
SONUS FABER BOOKSHELF SPEAKER ADVICE: Lumina II; Sonetto I; Sonetto II; Venere 1.5

...Both stores I visited stated that if I preferred the Sonus faber Cremona and the KEF R3 and did not like B&W and Monitor, I would very probably like any of the other Sonus Faber models, and not so much the Focal.

Absolutely true. Forget the Focal.

I know the Venere 2.5 and the Cremona M floorstanders. Terrific speakers!
But can´t help with the bookshelf models. Sorry.

By the way, I read long time ago in a Brazilian forum from a SF owner that every audiophile should started in audio with SF. With time, it will be easy to detect the flaws in other brands (like human voices). And he was totally right. You can´t go wrong with SF.

Welcome :hey:
 
Absolutely true. Forget the Focal.

I know the Venere 2.5 and the Cremona M floorstanders. Terrific speakers!
But can´t help with the bookshelf models. Sorry.

By the way, I read long time ago in a Brazilian forum from a SF owner that every audiophile should started in audio with SF. With time, it will be easy to detect the flaws in other brands (like human voices). And he was totally right. You can´t go wrong with SF.

Welcome :hey:

Thank you for the confirmation! :thumbsup:

And: your Brazilian story is fantastic! :)
He might be right: nothing I have heard yet approaches the lush power, wide range, and clean quiet of those Cremona Auditor I heard the other day. Closest "modern" I have heard to date are the KEF R3, but the Cremona sounded more special, by a real factor.
 
Thank you for the confirmation! :thumbsup:

And: your Brazilian story is fantastic! :)
He might be right: nothing I have heard yet approaches the lush power, wide range, and clean quiet of those Cremona Auditor I heard the other day.

2 posts / 2 truths!
Amazing ratio ;)

This is the difference between SF and many other brands. The SF are not perfect but they will teach you a lot, especially how to listening. Not just the differences between the electronic components but everything else. Differences between cables, feet, tweaks, copper and silver, terminations, etc.
Other speaker brands remind me of the first CD players, full of jitter. That´s why many of its owners don't hear differences at all because that transition zone between mids and highs is never clean. These owners usally believe that the solution lies in moving up the range...

And then they are never happy.
You will be happy in audio.
:thumbsup:
 
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