Monitor Audio R90AV-12 review

Great looks and great performance - winning performance

It's hard not to be impressed by the overall fit and finish

TechRadar Verdict

Impressively big performance from these surprisingly small speakers

Pros

  • +

    Excellent build quality

    Superb performance

Cons

  • -

    Treble not always great

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Monitor Audio's Radius speakers have always been good-looking and better-sounding, but the R90AV-12 system shifts the subwoofer/satellite system up a gear.

The previous R90AV system, costing about £1,000, has been replaced by this R90AV-12 system, bumping the price up by £350. This price increase comes down to the presence of the RSW-12 subwoofer - and it's an upgrade that more than earns its keep.

Mean radius

The system comprises two pairs of the ever-popular Radius 90 satellite speakers, resplendent in their black piano gloss finish. These speakers come with black and grey metal grilles. There's a separate one each for the 25mm C-CAM (ceramic coated aluminium/magnesium) dome tweeter and the 100mm 'MMP Mk II' (second generation metal matrix polymer) cone mid-range driver. They are vital to keep the drivers from damage, but hard to fit properly.

These tiny boxes look great on Monitor Audio's tall stands, which lock the speaker in place from the back and route cables through the stand itself, giving the speaker an uncluttered and stylish appeal.

These satellite speakers are partnered with the R225 centre speaker. This has the same treble unit as the R90, but this time a pair of the 100mm mid-range units, and the black and silver metal grilles, cover all three drivers (but are just a little bit fiddly to fit). The RSW-12's black cloth is much easier to fit, but the box is much harder to lift. At more than 25kg, this is a lot beefier than the rest of the system, but given it sports a whopping great 300mm MMP bass driver and an equally whop-filled 500W amp.

This powerful amp can knock out 1kW at peak. It puts the fit and forget controls (phase, frequency roll-off) at the back and places volume and two 'EQ' settings on top of the black piano gloss cabinet. These allow the user to switch between subtle bass reproduction and action-boosted fun.

It's hard not to be impressed by the overall fit and finish. The gloss is rich and deep and the whole package looks distinctly professional.

Sound of the crowd

But it's the sound that keeps you enthralled. A quick spin of our test DVD of Superman Returns reveals this 5.1 system to be a more than capable sonic performer. The treble is zingy, fresh and exciting, the middle registers are articulate and make speech seem perfectly distinct. The bass is as subtle or as powerful as you care to make it.

We preferred the subtle (EQ1) setting, but couldn't resist a quick wigging out session on EQ2. It's not perfect - the zingy treble can be too much at times - but it makes a sound far bigger than those little boxes would suggest, and should be top of anyone's wish list.

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