Hey the "nose thing" was a joke. As I mentioned, Tannoy is looking for skeptics to go into any studio equipment pro shop and listen to the Ellipse 8 or 10 Passive loudspeaker. I did and was very surprised. Tannoy Ellipse speakers were used on a traveling AES educational program that toured the USA when the speaker was a new thing, a few years ago.
The tour was mainly for members to hear a 6 position speaker set up plus subwoofers to go over the production blah blah for video 5.1 production 6.x, 7.x et al. The studio material and recording engineers they took around was very nice. I have the blab for the edu program. Spacial resolution seems to work best when the speakers have extended high frequencies was demonstrated well enough for the younger studio cats in the USA. I borrowed a pair for myself.
The demo studio cats from around North America and Europe would each do a little demo of material they had produced using the Ellipse 8 monitors and their own digital production suite that interfaced really well with the Tannoy digital system. The sound was exceptional although we were in a large room. There were videos, commercials, musical sound only, training and theater movies and a number of other types of productions common to TV, movies, internet, CDs and downloads etc. Time delays were discussed along with movie formats from mono to whatever number represented the foreseeable future in 2007/8.
Engineers who were using these systems every day got asked what they had thrown out when those loudspeaker systems were replaced with the Tannoys. I was interested in how many Fostex Studio monitors had been replaced (none) because most of the replaced units were JBL, Westlake or Altec/UREI. The Tannoys sounded much better than any of those 3. I asked as many people as I could what was the reason why they bought the Tannoys and the answer was either, 1) something like "They sounded much cleaner", or "Less cluttered" or " "much easier to work with because I can hear what's going on better.", or #2) "I have a clients who heard them and didn't know what they were but told me they were the best speaker he had ever heard in a studio, so please use them." or "I was asked to remix an old 24 track for George Thorogood or someone similar and when he heard it, he wanted to do the job for sure with me."
One of the demo engineers collected analog multitrack tape machines and could set them up himself. He said being at the console listening through the Tannoy monitors on wideband material was more like listening to a "window of reality" (I understand what he meant). Everyone should try this kind of demo. Sweetwater Sound near Chicago sells them and demos them. They are a studio equipment retailer. They are all around us and a demo at a quiet time in the retailer's store is free.
If everyone recognized that the Tannoy Ellipse 8 was "The emperor's new clothes" then it wouldn't be the consistent seller that it is. It might sell well for a year or two, but it isn't a toy, it's an important expense and has to prove it is better or the word gets around. It is a better loudspeaker than other studio monitors. The Tannoy monitor without the super tweeter didn't sell that well. It's the extended high frequency response that sells this loudspeaker.
But why attack me for reporting on the success of a loudspeaker like the Ellipse 8, when it is a Tannoy product. The best production loudspeaker I used was a pair of Fostex Studio 12 time aligned monitors. I liked them because I had heard them at The JVC Cutting Center. I really like the extended high frequency response out to about 23/24KHz with the Studio 12 Fostex monitors. I often dragged them around in my van going to jobs. But the Tannoys produce better sound IMO.
I'm not trying to justify the Tannoy Ellipse 8 to you or anyone, I just like them, and it's the high end sound from the Tannoy Ellipse 8 I like the most. IMO it's cleaner, as described in the Tannoy literature and website. Everyone else who has heard these Tannoy Ellipse 8 or 10s tells me the same thing, even if they are not professionals and they don't know Tannoy from my uncle. I may be the only one on this forum who has heard the Ellipse 8 and 10, but that doesn't mean they can't be great. I'm not even a fan of compression driver sound.
But what is anyone afraid of? Just go hear a demo of what is the difference of sound to 20KHz and sound out to 40KHz. Anyone who can hear the difference should be allowed to post hear about their listening experiences. No one will hypnotize the person who goes to hear a Tannoy Ellipse 8 or 10. I'm not even suggesting that someone with limited hearing will be able to sense any difference between band limiting at 20KHz and no band limiting when played back on these monitors with extended high frequency response to 40KHz. There shouldn't be anyone out there who can censor a reasonable listening suggestion they don't like. Anyone who thinks that loudspeakers with super extended high frequency response produces better sound compared to a loudspeaker that doesn't, should be able to express themselves here.
I only suggest Tannoy Ellipse 8 or 10 monitors because I use them. But there are numerous high end home loudspeakers that will perform in a similar fashion. ld has his own opinion on whether there can be very noticeable and better sound quality produced from vinyl when a loudspeaker can coherently produce low-distortion sound in the octave 20KHz to 40KHz. The forum needs this kind of input from listeners who go hear demos like this.
It's always better to know more, even if the experience seems to fly in the face of one's beliefs.

