Cerwin Vega T250 -
| Feature | CV T250 | Klipsch KG 3.2 | JBL L80T | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 10" Sealed | 8" Ported | 10" Ported | | Sensitivity | 96 dB | 94 dB | 89 dB | | Low End | 38 Hz | 40 Hz | 35 Hz | | Best For | Rock / EDM | Home Theater | Studio Monitoring | | Used Price | $200 - $350 | $300 - $450 | $400 - $600 |
Here is a secret the hi-fi forums don't want you to know:
is a mid-high frequency cabinet that utilizes a complex horn-loaded design to maximize efficiency. cerwin vega t250
embodies this by using horn loading to project sound over long distances, making it suitable for concerts and outdoor events.
: For optimal performance, users often run the | Feature | CV T250 | Klipsch KG 3
Enter the (T standing for "Tweeter" or "Technology"). The T250 was the largest bookshelf model in this lineup, sitting above the T200 but below the rare floor-standing T400. It was designed to answer one question: How much bass can we physically extract from a 10-inch woofer in a sealed enclosure?
The T250 utilizes a . While ported boxes give you a one-note boom at the tuning frequency, the T250 delivers tight, fast, low-end. The 10-inch woofer punches you in the chest. Listening to The Acid Test or Daft Punk ? You will feel the kick drum in your kidneys. The spec says 38Hz, but in-room response feels solid down to about 45Hz—remarkable for a 1990s bookshelf. The T250 was the largest bookshelf model in
You can drive these with a $50 1990s Sony receiver and blow away a $1,000 modern bookshelf/amp combo. They are not subtle. They are not analytical. They are fun .