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Photos: Hands-on with the Klipsch Palladium P-39F

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We hopped on the Eurostar last week for a splendid 24-hour jaunt to the land of snails, frogs and other popular clichés: France. In a peculiar room, dripping with cold champagne and hot French waitresses, we got our hands on the epic new flagship floorstanding speakers from Klipsch -- the Palladium P-39F.

These three-way cabinets deliver sound below 500Hz via three 228mm (9-inch) aluminium, Rohacell and Kevlar hybrid woofers. Sound between 500Hz and 3kHz comes courtesy of a 114mm (4.5-inch) inverted aluminium diaphragm, and above 3kHz (to around 24kHz) by a 19mm titanium tweeter. These are all backed by neodymium magnet arrays, with a rated sensitivity of 99dB.

And as is the Klipsch way, both the mid- and high-frequency drive units employ proprietary horns -- which listeners typically love or hate.

Interestingly nautical is the P-39F's boat-shaped fibreboard cabinet. This 30mm-thick build is purported by Klipsch to offer a more rigid stance, in part due to some 'extensive internal bracing'.

Certainly a session in a suitable room would give us a chance to examine the qualities of this speaker more carefully, but for some bizarre reason the pair on demo to us last week were coupled up to an admirable valve-driven amplifier, but also a pair of standard CD turntables and curiously cheap-looking interconnects.

But despite the questionable source of music, and the room full of chattering journalists, the 400W P-39Fs half-managed to demonstrate a powerful sound, with a prominent mid-range and a sweet high end. Judging performance in these conditions, however, is about as fair as judging how a car handles on a road covered in ice.

Yet one thing was clear: the power existed behind these speakers' drivers, just waiting to be unleashed. If you'll excuse a brief excursion into animal-based metaphor, imagine if a pigeon were to use his wings alone to push two fully grown pigs out of his nest. That would be one powerful bird, worthy of our admiration; so are these speakers.

For those of you with great warehouses full of cash to throw at seriously high-end speakers, you can order a pair of the P-39Fs as of now for £14,000 a pair. Plenty of hands-on photos are over the next few pages. -Nate Lanxon

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