Advertisement
Advertisement

Review: Canton CD 300 Home Theater Speakers

Grant Clauser
Apr 15, 2008
A   A   A   A
E-mail Article
Print Article
Rights & Reprints
Multiple Pages
Single Page
Submit a Comment
RSS Feed
«    of    »
-1
In home speakers, we’re always looking for that perfect balance between form and function. This is more important with speakers than with most other parts of your entertainment system. Why? First, because your speakers are the one element that can’t (usually) be hidden, unless you opt for in-walls which bring with them other compromises. Second, the shape as well as the material of a loudspeaker can greatly affect it’s sound performance. In Canton’s CD 300 line, we’ve found a very pleasing balance of those elements.

The Canton CD system I’ve been using consists of two CD 300 towers with four 4-inch cones each and one 1-inch dome tweeter; one CD 360F center channel with the same drivers as the towers; two CD 220 surrounds with one cone and one dome tweeter each; and an ASD 250 SC subwoofer. Aesthetically, the CD line is more masculine than feminine, but that’s a Euro masculine, not a mid-western farmer masculine. The smooth brushed aluminum cabinets (if you can call anything made of aluminum a cabinet) are both elegant and tough—like the robots in I, Robot. They look good with a flat panel TV or, as in our demo room, flanking a projection screen.

The 300 speakers’ main drivers are all aluminum with aluminum-manganese tweeters, adding a kind of synergy to the system I liked. On the towers two cones are focused solely on bass while the other two reproduce midrange and bass. Canton calls this a two-and-a-half way system which is designed to produce more bass in a narrow enclosure. The aluminum grilles are removable, with effort, but removing them distracts from the look so I don’t recommend it. The narrow 47-inch towers are ported, while the surrounds and centers are not. The 250-watt subwoofer, like most subwoofers, is not a style statement, but it’s not an eyesore either.

The cabinet design, while being attractive, also affects sonic performance. There are no internal parallel surfaces and the wall thickness varies, the end result is an elimination of standing waves. Canton says that even the design of the flare on the front port was carefully engineered for a 6dB improvement in headroom.

Set up was simple; the towers come with easily attached bases and the surrounds with wall brackets. The wire bindings on the rear of the speakers are large so you won’t be straining with clumsy fingers to get the wires tightened down. The subwoofer includes both line level and speaker level connectors, a phase switch and crossover and volume controls. At 37 pounds it’s not a lightweight, but not as unwieldy as other subs we’ve used here.




 
Thank you . Your comment is being reviewed.
Post a comment about 'Review: Canton CD 300 Home Theater Speakers'.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Why are we asking this?
 
 

More Content Related To These Topics:
Advertisement
Advertisement