It’s like picking up a boulder or a concrete block. The KC62 measures 10.1″W × 9.7″H × 9.8″D, including the rear panel and feet, but tips the scales at nearly 31 pounds. The KC62 seems tailor-made for Simplifi’d hi-fi.Īs soon as you pick up the KC62, you realize that there’s a lot of heavy stuff packed into that tiny enclosure. Two of these-aesthetics and use in multipurpose spaces-are near and dear to this reviewer’s heart. KEF cites four reasons why people might want a tiny sub like the KC62: for use in smaller listening areas for placement in multipurpose spaces like living rooms aesthetics and to accommodate multiple subwoofers. Specified frequency response is 11–200Hz, ☓dB, and maximum output is 105dB. Iron Laws cannot be broken, but they can certainly be bent.”īent how far? A whole lot, judging by KEF’s specs for the KC62. Hofmann’s Iron Law to its limits,” so it could achieve “high output, low extension and small cabinet size. . . . KEF says its aim in designing the KC62 was “to push. KEF cites Hofmann’s Iron Law in the white paper for its new super-small KC62 subwoofer ($1499.99, all prices in USD), the subject of this review. This states that low-bass reproduction, small enclosure size, and high output sensitivity cannot ALL be achieved in a single loudspeaker design. Josef Anton “Tony” Hofmann is also famous for Hofmann’s Iron Law. Low, Hofmann was a founding partner of KLH Research and Development Corporation, which was formed in 1957, and has recently been revived as KLH Audio. Hofmann? If you’ve been into audio as long as I have, you’ll know him as the H in the loudspeaker brand KLH. Here’s a bit of audio trivia for your holiday enjoyment: Who was J.A.
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