Loudspeaker design is a mixture of art and science. Some brands favour one over the other, while the rest tread a middle-ground. Such is American specialist Revel.

Reviewed here is a full 7.1 channel speaker system, one of several possible 5.0., 5.1, 7.1 or even more exotic combinations that can be assembled from the extensive Performa range.

The system assembled uses five distinct loudspeakers united by the common Performa design features including drive units and voicing, which have been honed and refined at the company's signature Multi-Channel Listening Lab facility, in the US. This is a serious, uncompromising system for those who prefer sound over form.

Taper capers

The F32 main front speaker is an elegant floor standing design with tapered side panels equipped with four drive units in a three-way configuration. The tapered side panels help the system look more elegant and reduces space requirements, while rear panel switches configure the box for use near walls or in free space, and provide subtle adjustment of the treble output in five 0.5dB steps.

The smaller M22 is a chip off the old block, allocated here to the back surround channels. It's like a reduced height F32, with a single bass unit and tweeter, but otherwise is very similar. It too has similar rear panel switching.

The C32 centre speaker is comparatively compact, but again embodies the same fundamentals as the others, using two bass units flanking a tweeter and midrange unit that are disposed vertically in the centre of the enclosure. To achieve this in an enclosure just 216mm tall is impressive. Yet again, the same boundary compensation switch and tweeter adjustment are provided.

The final passive speaker in the system is the S30, an odd shaped affair which can be switched between two output dispersion patterns: monopole and dipole. The monopole setting gives a direct output like the other passive speakers, albeit over a broader angle than usual, which is well suited to multichannel music recordings. Dipole delivers a diffuse soundfield which helps reduce rear channel localisation, and is more suitable when listening to film and TV soundtracks.