B&W 683 review

Purposeful floorstander features B&W’s hi-tech drive unit technology

It's a full three-way design, which allows each drive unit to be optimised to its particular role

TechRadar Verdict

Solid build with notably advanced drive unit technology that contributes to a neutral overall balance and fine dynamic range. Bass tuning option is clever, and if the overall sound is cautious, it’s very effective

Pros

  • +

    Well built

  • +

    Bass tuning option

  • +

    Strong, effective sound performance

Cons

  • -

    Sound errs a little on the side of caution

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Now under Canadian ownership, Bowers & Wilkins (as it now likes to be known) is essentially a British company, with its headquarters and major manufacturing operation in Worthing, plus research and development labs a few miles inland at Steyning. The combination has been conspicuously successful, in creating and sustaining a dominant market position in hi-fi speakers worldwide, aided by numerous ranges of models that fill every possible niche.

Since the dawn of time, various guises of the 600-series have been the most cost-effective conventional speakers in the Bowers & Wilkins line-up, thanks in part to the use of vinyl woodprint surfaces and, in these latest incarnations, Chinese manufacturing. This £899 per pair floorstanding 683 is the largest and most costly of four stereo pairs.

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