Doug
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At 600 hours in I decided to re-insert the PAP Quintets and it became immediately obvious that they are the superior performers. Here are a few random thoughts on the performance of the ZF15Ls and the Quintets.
I hear a wider, deeper, taller, more realistic soundstage with the Quintets. I also hear significantly better vocal and instrument imaging/placement on that soundstage.
Having listened to a dozen or so recordings since yesterday afternoon, from a variety of musical genres, I find the Quintets to be quite remarkable in that they capably handle all types of music at a very high performance level.
To my ears, in my smallish room, the ZF15Ls are more akin to Klipschorns, Zu Definitions, and Azzolina Audio Gran Sferas (all of which I've owned); they sound fantastic with certain styles of music, but not quite as good with other music. The Klipsch, Zu, and Azzolina Audio speaker do cost 8 to 12 times as much as the Lii Songs.
The Lii Songs are more dynamically capable than the Quintets with certain types of music, but the Quintets play louder denser music with far more clarity and control. The ZF15Ls became a bit congested when playing certain louder, more complex music passages.
One of my favorite genres of music is solo classical piano. In my room, to my ears, the Quintets easily outperform the ZF15Ls. The Lii Songs might have a very small edge in detail, but the Quintets are the easy winner when it comes to reproducing the bottom two octaves of a concert grand piano.
A super fun recording is Bucky Pizzarelli's Nirvana album. It has lots of hot closely miked solo drum work that shows off the ZF15L's speed, dynamics, and slam. I haven't mentioned slam up to now, but let me tell you, these Lii Songs have real ability to hit you in the chest like no other speaker in their price range. I queued up my favorite seventies rock demo disc, Dire Straits Brothers in Arms, and cranked it up to well over 100 decibels. The ZF15Ls played Money for Nothing with clarity, great bass, nice vocals, and real slam.
Here's an interesting difference in how the two speaker systems work in my system. With my Quintets I seldom, if ever, turn my ZROCK2 control knob past the 1:30 mark, but with the ZF15Ls the ZROCK2 was always set between 2:00 and 3:30. Fortunately, even though the ZR2 is cutting high frequencies at this setting it never reached a point where I felt I wasn't hearing enough high frequency information. I'm guessing that's because the ZR2 is pretty much flattening out the tipped up mid and high frequency response of the Fast 15 drivers. If you have a ZR2, these can be great rock and roll speakers.
Here's my final performance comparison today. The Quintets are invisible on nearly all recordings. Though the ZF15Ls disappeared on many recordings, their ability to vanish is not nearly as consistent as the PAPs. It could be my smaller 18' x 13' room; it could be that I didn't work hard enough to find their best position, it could be my 8' ceiling; whatever it is, I could not dial in a consistent disappearing act.
I've done a ton of listening this past week and I'm ready to declare the Quintets my clear winner. I have remained mindful, however, that the Quintets cost six times as much as the ZF15Ls. Does that make the Quintets under-performers? No! I actually view them as huge over-performers at their price point. So where does that leave the $2,000 per pair Lii Song ZF15Ls? They are EXTREME over-performers. I've owned a number of speakers in the $2,000 range over the decades, including my current family room speakers, and none of them comes even remotely close to realistically competing with the ZF15Ls. The ZF15Ls are extraordinarily special!
I'm very glad to have satisfied my curiosity, but with the Quintets being the much preferred system, the Lii Songs will likely be going up for sale in the near future. I simply don't have room for two large speaker systems. If I sell them, I'll list them here in the classifieds at a very low price point. Happy listening to all!
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