| December
2002
Wilson Audio Specialties WATT/Puppy
7 Loudspeakers
by Marc Mickelson
|
" David Wilson and crew have...further
enhanced the WATT/Puppy's status as an audio classic." |

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Hall of Fame


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Review Summary
| Sound |
"Consummate
resolution and musical
communication" -- "conveys
so much information
in a completely natural
and involving manner
that it readjusts
expectations for
reproduction"; "bass...is
impressively deep
and weighty, able
to convey the heft
and mass of live
music"; "crushing" dynamics
with lots of power
behind them, but
also "able to convey…the
sheer beauty of single-ended-triode
amps." |
|
| Features |
Highly
evolved two-piece
floorstanding speaker
that uses advanced
materials and custom
drivers; high claimed
sensitivity; optimized
setup comes with
the purchase price. |
|
| Use |
"The
fact that it can
accommodate both
the high-power and
low-power amps with
such aplomb makes
the WATT/Puppy 7
the most universally
applicable speaker
[Marc knows] of." |
|
| Value |
"A
small-footprint floorstanding
speaker that offers
true state-of-the-art
performance." |
|
|
|
Among the audio products for which the word classic fits
is the Wilson Audio WATT/Puppy two-piece loudspeaker system.
In its nearly 20 years of existence, the WATT/Puppy has undergone
a number of minor and major revisions, and these are testament
to the ingenuity of David Wilson's original concept. Although
I had heard various WATT/Puppy iterations over the years, I came
late to the parade viamy review of the WATT/Puppy 6. To say I
was impressed with that speaker would be an understatement. It
became my reference because of its wonderful sound and abilities
as a reviewing tool, and we named it our Reviewers' Choice Edge
of the Art product for 2000.
With so much going for the WATT/Puppy 6, why did
Wilson Audio decide to update the speaker? The answer is that
the company didn't set out to create a new WATT/Puppy, but with
the development of the Sophia, the Wilson Audio engineering team
learned some new applications for existing materials and experimented
accordingly on the WATT/Puppy platform. Then a new Wilson Audio-designed
woofer became available, one whose free-air resonance is 3Hz
lower than the woofer in the WATT/Puppy 6. This allowed David
Wilson and crew to tune the bass enclosure for deeper and more
linear bass that would be more consistent from room to room,
which is always a worthy design goal for a loudspeaker. The crossover
was also radically changed to lower time-based distortion by
over one-third compared to the WATT/Puppy 6's crossover. The
effect here is that Wilson Audio now proclaims the WATT/Puppy
7 to be nearly as correct in the time domain as the company's
flagship: the $225,000 WAMM system.
Wilson Audio is well known for championing the
use of advanced materials in its speaker cabinets, and the WATT/Puppy
7 is notable for a major change in this regard. The series-6
WATT was constructed of a mineral-filled acrylic-based material
that had been used for the WATT for 15 years. For the series-7
WATT, Wilson Audio turned to its M material, a high-tech composite
that's used in varying degrees in the cabinets of all other Wilson
Audio speakers. In the new WATT, M material of different thicknesses
is used along with lead ingots to make for a very dense, very
heavy, very inert enclosure. Wilson Audio claims that the new
WATT cabinet is 37dB quieter than that of the series-6 WATT.
The Puppy also uses M material along with harder-than-steel X
material in strategic places -- this is a key to Wilson Audio
cabinets: materials chosen via extensive testing for specific
applications. Another change occurs in the price -- an increase
to $22,400 USD per pair.
As with the WATT/Puppy 6, the 7 uses a 1" Focal
inverted titanium-dome tweeter and 7" Scan-Speak carbon-fiber
midrange -- both of which are customized at the Wilson Audio
factory -- along with a pair of the 8" Wilson Audio-designed
woofers, which are manufactured by Scan-Speak. The company will
divulge nothing about the WATT/Puppy 7's crossover -- no points
or slopes, no admission of parts used -- but I was able to see
and photograph during my factory tour the Zero Halliburton aluminum
case in which each crossover is potted. The speakers still come
with a very detailed and well-written manual as well as a box
of accessories, including spiked Puppy Paw feet for coupling
the speakers to the floor. There are also the four different-height
Phase Delay Correction spikes used for adjusting the tilt of
the WATT on the Puppy -- thereby optimizing the speaker's time
and phase correctness. This is an elegant solution, but one that
is not nearly as involved as it is with the Wilson Audio MAXX,
for instance, which is adjustable in 39 increments. Grilles are
the fabric-over-frame type that also came with the WATT/Puppy
6. However, Wilson Audio can also supply simple foam grilles
that are acoustically transparent and far superior in
terms of sound to the more complex ones. Ask for them by name.
The look of the speaker has changed a little, although
it is still recognizably a WATT/Puppy. The lip around of the
top of the bass enclosure is taller near the rear of the speaker
and now completely hides the gap between the WATT and Puppy.
The change makes for a more integrated look, although from the
side the WATT looks like it is not sitting on a level surface
(it is) because of the increasing height of the lip, an optical
illusion of sorts. There are still a dozen finish colors available,
but a few deletions from and additions to the WilsonGloss palette
-- a new gunmetal blue is stunning. Wilson Audio undertakes a
painstaking 12-step finishing process to ensure that a pair of
WATT/Puppy 7s, or any of its speakers, looks like the luxury
product that its price tag indicates. Say what you want about
the cost of Wilson Audio speakers, but once you see how they
are made (have a look at our factory-tour article for details)
and what they look like once they're finished, you know they're
not inexpensive.
Wilson Audio specs the WATT/Puppy 7's frequency
response as 21Hz-21kHz +0/-3dB, with sensitivity as 93dB. Minimum
power is listed as 7 watts. Once the WATT and Puppy are united,
the speakers measure 40 1/4"H x 12 1/4"W x 18 "1/2D. Pound for
pound, the WATT, which weighs in at 65 pounds, is the most solid
transducer I know of. The Puppy tips the scales at 105 pounds.
The speakers are shipped from the factory in wooden crates, and
a peel-away "frisk" is applied to the cabinets for added protection.
Wilson Audio doesn't overlook even the smallest of details when
it comes to the presentation of its products.
Review system
I used the WATT/Puppy 7 speakers along with the
usual suspects that make up my reference system -- Lamm ML2 mono
amplifiers and L2 Reference preamp, Bel Canto DAC2, Mark Levinson
No.39 CD player/transport -- as well as some of the products
I've reviewed recently or will review soon. These include an
Audio Research Reference Two Mk II preamp and 100.2 solid-state
stereo amplifier, Mark Levinson No.383 integrated amp and No.434
mono power amps, and at the very tail end a Wyetech Topaz 572B
single-ended-triode stereo amp. Interconnects and speaker cables
used for the bulk of the review period were from Shunyata Research
(Aries and Lyra) and Analysis Plus (Solo Crystal Oval and Solo
Crystal Oval 8). Power cords were from Shunyata Research: Anaconda
Vx, Taipan, and Python. I had Wilson Audio's massive WATCH Dog
power subwoofer on hand for use with the WATT/Puppy 7s. I used
pairs of WATT/Puppy 6es and Wilson Audio Sophias for comparison.
As with the Sophias, which I reviewed exactly one
year ago, John Giolas, Wilson Audio's marketing director, set
up the WATT/Puppy 7s. I had marked in tape where John had positioned
the Sophias, and this ended up being almost exactly where the
WATT/Puppy 7s came to rest. After some tweaking and playing various
recordings, John had the speakers nearly where he wanted them
sonically, but he then made an adjustment of a mere 3/8". The
difference was truly amazing -- like cleaning your glasses after
neglecting to do so for a few days. The soundstage, which was
already very spacious, snapped into focus, and midbass resolution
improved notably.
The best thing about this treatment is that you'll
get it from your Wilson Audio dealer, who will deliver, set up,
and adjust your speakers in accordance with Wilson Audio's "voweling
in" process, which works. Don't poo-poo this fine-tuning
or consider it some kind of sales gimmick -- it's mandatory for
getting the very most from the WATT/Puppy 7, and is even more
important with the larger Wilson Audio models. I applaud Wilson
Audio for making in-room setup a mandatory element in the proper
use of their speaker systems.
Lucky 7
Once you live with a speaker for as long as I have
with the WATT/Puppy 6, it becomes easy to pick up even the most
minute of differences between it and another speaker, and this
was the case with the WATT/Puppy 7. Two traits of the 7 showed
themselves immediately -- our measurements can prove or disprove
them. Foremost, it was clear that the bass of the 7, while just
as impressive overall as that of the 6, was not as subjectively
noticeable but a little bit deeper. There was still plenty of
bass power and slam, but in comparison, the 7's bass made that
of the 6 seem a tad too prominent. The WATT/Puppy 7 was also
more sensitive than the 6 -- a half or full decibel, I would
have guessed.
But these were only the starting points for my
assessment of the WATT/Puppy 7. As impressive as the 6 is, the
7 improves on it in many ways that are significant to long-term
enjoyment of music. The most obvious of these is also the one
that's the most difficult to describe fully. Call it integration,
harmony or balance, but the WATT/Puppy 7 is a speaker that conveys
so much information in a completely natural and involving manner
that it readjusts expectations for reproduction. In some ways,
the 7 is an amalgam of the Sophia and the WATT/Puppy 6, but it
is even more musically satisfying and resolving than either.
Among the recordings I've been playing heavily this year is John
Hammond's great Wicked Grin [Pointblank 7243 8 50764 2
8]. If you don't have this CD but are even the least bit curious
about how well a strict bluesman can cover Tom Waits's eclectic
songs, buy Wicked Grin and find out -- you won't be disappointed.
Via the WATT/Puppy 7s, the vast sonic panorama on "Clap Hands" is
positively packed with layered detail, and yet it all unfolds
in a gentle manner, Hammond's voice emerging from between the
speakers with realistic texture and drive. To be sure, the WATT/Puppy
7s suspend disbelief; they're seemingly all signal and all music.
The WATT/Puppy 7s are also very composed speakers,
ones that impart so little distortion and internal noise -- subjectively
less than any speaker I'm aware of -- that they heighten the
perception of harmonic texture and inner detailing. To my ears
at least, Wilson Audio's claim of the 7 being quieter than the
6 makes sense. Wicked Grin is a good test of this, but
one that's even better is bassist Tony Overwater's Up Close [Turtle
Records 198119], a recording that's spacious and detailed in
the extreme. I've used "Ironic" as a demo track since I purchased
the CD, and over the WATT/Puppy 7s, Yuri Honing's sax blasts
into the room with gale-force power but always sounds controlled
and utterly pure. Near the end, Honing blows air and saliva in
bursts, and the 7s are able to convey this low-level spittiness and the
musical necessity of it. The WATT/Puppy 7s get the major events
like Honing's sax eruptions right, often making them seem even
more vivid than I remember, but they also communicate the smallest
of details too -- all completely in service of the musical message.
The bass of the newest WATT/Puppy is impressively
deep and weighty, able to convey the heft and mass of live music
like no speaker I've heard short of Wilson's own MAXX. Slam and
physicality are consummate, as I heard on my de facto bass-reference
CD, Suzanne Vega's Nine Objects of Desire [A&M 31454
0583 2]. But don't think that the WATT/Puppy 7 is a speaker to
satisfy bass lovers only. The transition from the treble to the
midrange is better than I have heard from any dynamic design,
and the quality of both regions is as high as it gets due, once
again, to consummate resolution and musical communication. Aimee
Mann's high, whispery voice is a challenge for speakers to get
right. Prominence in the vocal range can make Mann's voice sound
brittle; too little overall resolution and she loses her characteristic
delicacy. Mann's latest recording, the great Lost in Space [Superego
SE-007], sounded just right over the WATT/Puppy 7s: beautiful,
fragile, and emotive.
The WATT/Puppy 7's dynamic capabilities can be
crushing with large-scale music and big-time solid-state power,
or delicate and able to convey the nuance-laden interplay of
a small jazz ensemble as well as the sheer beauty of single-ended-triode
amps. These are speakers that can turn on a dime, going from
very loud to very soft with realistic speed and range. A great
test of this is a recording of Carmina Burana, and my
favorites are both from Telarc. As much as I like the more recent
recording with Donald Runnicles and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
and Chorus [Telarc CD-80575], I prefer the older version with
Robert Shaw and same group of musicians and singers [Telarc CD-80056]. "O
Fortuna" goes from loud to soft to very loud with realistic scaling
and speed, and when the soloists are front and center, their
slightest vocal inflections are communicated fully and with great
drama.
Because of the 7s' slight additional bass depth,
I found that I needed to adjust the Wilson Audio WATCH Dog subwoofer
to compensate in terms of the low-pass frequency at which it
was set. On so much software, the WATCH Dog makes no contribution,
but when really low bass tones are apparent, you will know, perhaps
in startling fashion as the WATCH Dog springs to life and rattles
your house at its very foundation. Doug Schneider had told me
about Greg Keelor's brooding Gone [WEA CD 17513] and the
bass tones on it, wondering just how low and weighty they are. Very at
the beginning of "When I see You" and at a few other places throughout
the disc. Of course, you don't need a subwoofer with the WATT/Puppy
7 -- as my earlier comments about its bass performance attest.
But, boy oh boy, can such a subwoofer be enlightening and just
plain fun.
Another subject peripheral to the WATT/Puppy 7
is amplification, and here your choices are wider than with any
other speaker I know of. If you need a speaker that can handle
500 watts of solid-state power, this is it. You can push the
7 to literally deafening levels and it doesn't make you pay with
hardness, brightness or any other malady -- unless it's intrinsic
to the amps or something upstream from them. You can also use
this speaker, as I did for the most part, with single-ended tubes,
in which case it becomes one of a handful of speakers that should
be on any short list for such application. And the fact that
it can accommodate both the high-power and low-power amps with
such aplomb makes the WATT/Puppy 7 the most universally applicable
speaker I know of.
6 vs. 7
I've noted above some specific ways in which the
WATT/Puppy 6 and 7 differ, but I hope that doing so doesn't leave
you with the impression that the 6 is far inferior or, even worse,
that there were faults in the original that I didn't recognize.
Neither is the case -- the WATT/Puppy 6 is still a world-class
loudspeaker and will be for a long time. If some unknown company
were to unveil it today, audiophiles and reviewers would be wildly
enthusiastic about it, but because it carries the Wilson Audio
name and has been replaced, the enthusiasm wanes. If you own
a pair of WATT/Puppy 6es, be secure in the knowledge that you
still have one of the finest loudspeakers available, but one
that has been bettered in some important ways.
All of this said, I will state that the 7 is a
more pure-sounding speaker than the 6, and an even more dynamic
speaker as well. It sounds more neutrally balanced than the 6
and, most important to me, more involving and natural. Bass may
be a wash subjectively, with the 6 sounding more prominent down
low, but to my ears the 7 goes a little lower still and with
even more control, something that the 6 didn't lack. Voice sounds
clean and pure over the 7, a small improvement over the way the
6 handles the vocal region. Both speakers convey well the character
of partnering equipment, but the 7 is superior in this respect
too.
I could live easily with the WATT/Puppy 6 and the
Sophia for that matter. In fact, I would be doing just that if
the 7 didn't exist. Above all, the newest WATT/Puppy shows how
viable the two-piece platform is and how ingenious the engineers
at Wilson Audio can be when it comes to squeezing even greater
performance out of it.
Conclusion
Call it refinement, upgrade, or modification, but
with the WATT/Puppy 7, David Wilson and crew have made an already
great loudspeaker sound even better and further enhanced the
WATT/Puppy's status as an audio classic -- an impressive achievement.
I was especially delighted with the 7's purity and naturalness,
both of which translate to great enjoyment of music, but the
bass power, explosive dynamics, and high resolution that are
WATT/Puppy earmarks are all in abundance too. At $22,400, the
price of a pair of WATT/Puppy 7s is steep, but so is the climb
to commensurate levels of sound quality with competing speakers
-- if indeed they have been reached at all outside of Wilson
Audio's Provo, Utah headquarters.
The WATT/Puppy 7 is a small-footprint floorstanding
speaker that offers true state-of-the-art performance. It is
also the finest speaker I've heard in my system -- with solid
state, low-power tubes, and everything in between. Hey, Christmas
is coming. Maybe Santa's sleigh can hold a pair for you.
...Marc Mickelson
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