Danish Audiophile Loudspeaker Industries (DALI for short) has a number of different speaker ranges and the relatively new Mentors slot neatly into the price gap between the near-budget vinyl-finished Ikons and the more costly Helicon and Euphonia ranges.
The Mentor range has gradually expanded since we first encountered the large floorstanding Mentor 6 a little more than a year ago (HFC 290), and if that model proved a little too large and bassy for our 4.3x2.6x5.5m listening room, there's a good chance this smaller Mentor 5 pair will fit the bill rather better.
It's certainly one of the prettiest and most compact floorstanders around, standing just 88 cms off the deck and also looking slim from any angle, thanks to the use of relatively small 130mm bass/mid and bass drivers. High-quality real wood veneered enclosures are available in either cherry or black, too.
All the Mentors use variations on DALI's proprietary dome/ribbon treble module theme, above a range of different size enclosures and bass/mid drivers. In this middle model, the smallest of three floorstanders, the two 130mm drivers have 95mm dish-shaped doped paper diaphragms.
Loaded by a rear-port, the upper main driver operates all the way up to the main 3kHz crossover point, while the lower one is just used to reinforce the bass and lower midband and starts rolling off above 800Hz. The treble module combines a 28mm soft dome and a 17x45mm ribbon on a single chassis, the ribbon just operating above 10kHz, partly to extend the bandwidth and partly to ensure consistently wide lateral distribution.
The enclosure has slightly convex front and back panels, presumably to increase stiffness and marginally reduce standing wave focusing. The whole thing feels very solid too, with a total weight of 13.5kg. The drivers themselves are mounted on an extra silver-grey flat baffle panel.
A neat separate plinth improves the stability footprint, and if thumbwheels lock the spikes, they seemed more effective than usual. Twin terminal pairs apply the signal input, permitting bi-wiring/bi-amping options.
Sound quality
Clearly intended for free space siting, the very compact dimensions tend to place the ribbon tweeter a little below seated ear height. It may, therefore, be worth adjusting the spikes slightly, so that those at the front are slightly longer than those at the rear, giving the speaker a slight backward tilt.

