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Delta audio studio review
Delta audio studio review












delta audio studio review
  1. #Delta audio studio review drivers
  2. #Delta audio studio review driver
  3. #Delta audio studio review upgrade
delta audio studio review

Internal damping is limited to a handful of wadding, which should be enough to suppress rear panel reflections and standing waves without overdoing things.

#Delta audio studio review drivers

In fact the magnet is quite small for a reflex ported enclosure – as is the apology for a port itself, set into the rear panel and tuned to a lowish 50Hz.Īll drivers were well secured by tight coarse-pitch woodscrews into the 16mm particle board baffle, the same substantial material ensuring the whole enclosure makes a solid mechanical foundation.

delta audio studio review

To which end, the all up weight is a respectable 4.5kg, and that’s not just a function of a large magnet. In fact it uses a 125mm paper cone, so the baffle has to be somewhat wider than most speakers of a similar volume.įinish is strictly econobox, the priority clearly being to provide the most rather, than the prettiest loudspeaker within tight cost contraints.

#Delta audio studio review driver

One reason why this speaker is such an unconventional shape is that the main bass/mid driver has a somewhat larger cone than most £99 miniatures, a feature that should ensure somewhat greater sensitivity and loudness than others of its ilk. Then there’s the graphics, or should that be graffiti, emblazoning the model name in stylised extra bold white script across the uncovered part of the front panel.

delta audio studio review

#Delta audio studio review upgrade

In fact if you were to set out to disguise a hi-fi speaker as a midi system refugee, these basic dimensions would be a good place to start, so maybe Wharfedale has its eyes on the midi speaker upgrade market. Stacked up amongst a couple of dozen other hi-fi speakers, the Delta 30.2 looks an odd shape, with quite a large front panel area and comparatively little depth. MusicRadar verdict: The retro styling offers a few clues as to the kinds of sounds on the menu, but with its switchable drive and FET boost, allied to line out and power amp inputs, the Delta King 12 makes for a versatile and practical take on vintage tube combo.The Delta 30.2 is very much the budget model in the Wharfedale range, and these days ‘budget’ starts at £99, twenty quid up on the launch price of the original Delta 30. The spring reverb is organic and natural, adding a sense of space, but to really get into the spirit of the Delta King 12 a tremolo pedal and tape echo emulation would make for a serious vintage rock ’n’ roll rig. There’s a pleasing amount of gain for rock players to get stuck into already, but throw an overdrive pedal in front of this and the saturation is rich, musical and addictive. With both boost and the drive mode off, the tone is vintage clean with a honeyed quality that does well to complement the bracing treble of a Telecaster single-coil pickup and support the warmth and width of a Les Paul’s humbuckers.ĭiming everything and rolling back the volume control and you’ll find this makes a very dynamic mouthpiece for your electric guitar, cleaning up nicely for mellower passages while presenting heaps of toothy grit at full bore. Not only for studios but also for home, backstage and small gigs, the Studio 10s are great amps producing boutique-quality tone at a very compelling price. No matter what guitar you use, the Blues Junior flatters single coils and humbuckers alike, not to mention drive pedals with plenty of volume.














Delta audio studio review