Mordaunt-Short's Avant 908i might look very similar to the Avant 906i, but the resemblance is largely superficial.
The difference is clear when one attempts to lift this senior model from its carton, and discovers that 19kg is a much more serious proposition than the 906i's 12kg. And, predictably enough, the price is heavier too, up from £350 to £500 per pair.
Although the attractively slim front view of both models looks very similar, with the same silver coloured aluminium 'skin' sub-baffle covering the top half, and the same twin metal-dish bass/mid drivers and tweeter, closer scrutiny reveals several important differences.
Even though the width remains the same, the enclosure is deeper and taller than its junior brother, and tucked into one of the sides is an extra 255mm bass-only driver.
A full three-way design, the enclosure proper is available covered in either black or maple vinyl woodprint, though the main focus of the cosmetics is clearly that silver front section. The twin midrange drivers are actually mounted from behind the front panel, to create a clean look with no visible mounting hardware.
An elliptical 'dished' section around the tweeter, redolent of an earlier Mordaunt-Short era, probably contributes to directivity control. An nicely embossed name completes the look.
The speakers are made in mirror-imaged pairs, and are normally installed so that the side-mounted bass drivers with their 190mm cones face towards each other. The twin midrange drivers use small 100mm diameter dish-shaped (rather than cone-shaped) diaphragms, described as CPC (Continuous Profile Cone) technology
These diaphragms are further refined by the addition of small radial ribs set just in from the edge, which will improve stiffness. The tweeter has a mesh-protected 25mm metal dome.
Stylish bi-wire terminal pairs are mounted low down on the back panel, below two separate reflex ports - presumably one loading each of the CPC drivers via a subdivided enclosure. Spike-equipped moulded feet improve the lateral footprint and mechanical stability of the slim enclosure (improved production control has sorted the spike-fixing problem we encountered in the 906i).
Sound quality
Not unexpectedly, this speaker is best kept well clear of walls, for fear of generating excessive mid-bass and thickening up the sound - all the more likely since the port is on the rear and the driver is inevitably rather closer to the wall than the front-mounted mid and treble.

