: The 66 mm cone tweeter delivers a soft, organic treble that prevents listener fatigue. 2. Bass Reflex Engineering
. What makes it stand out is its efficiency. These speakers are remarkably easy to drive, meaning you don’t need a modern 200W monster amp to make them sing.
Thanks to the large-diameter pulp woofer, the bass is big, round, and physically impactful. It excels at reproducing the acoustic thump of classic rock bass drums and the warm resonance of a jazz double bass. It favors a rich, "room-filling" bass over ultra-tight, clinical modern sub-bass. pioneer cs787 extra quality
A dedicated cone mid-range driver handles the critical vocal frequencies. By isolating the midrange, the speaker avoids the muddy crossover distortion common in cheaper 2-way designs of the era. The Tweeter / Super-Tweeter (High Frequencies)
The air in Elias’s workshop usually smelled of solder and old cedar, but tonight, it pulsed with something else: high-fidelity history. : The 66 mm cone tweeter delivers a
The is a paradox. In raw measurements, modern KEF or Elac speakers are flatter and more neutral. Yet, nostalgia and physicality matter. These speakers are not analytical tools; they are musical instruments.
For audiophiles, collectors, and vintage gear enthusiasts, the CS-787 represents a unique intersection of classic Pioneer engineering, robust physical construction, and distinct acoustic characteristics. This comprehensive analysis dives deep into the design, specifications, performance, and modern-day value of this classic loudspeaker. 📦 Technical Specifications at a Glance What makes it stand out is its efficiency
The "Extra Quality" moniker was marketing, but the sonic performance validates it as a competent musical performer with a specific flavor:
The CS-787 sat firmly in the middle of Pioneer's consumer tower lineup. It aimed at buyers who wanted the imposing look of a multi-driver studio monitor without the prohibitive price tag of the high-end HPM series. 2. Design and Cabinet Construction
Citation: Jianwei Li, Xiaofen Han, Yanping Wan, Shan Zhang, Yingshu Zhao, Rui Fan, Qinghua Cui, and Yuan Zhou. TAM 2.0: tool for microRNA set analysis. Nucleic Acids Research, Volume 46, Issue W1, 2 July 2018, Pages:W180–W185.
Ming Lu, Bing Shi, Juan Wang, Qun Cao and Qinghua Cui. TAM: A method for enrichment and depletion analysis of a microRNA category in a list of microRNAs. BMC Bioinformatics 2010, 11:41