Klipsch Heresy IV (Objective) Speaker Review

Erin

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First post here. Might as well come out swinging. :greengrin:


I recently wrapped up my auditioning and measurements of the Klipsch Heresy IV. Already feeling the wrath from the Klipsch folks who love these things. But, I'd rather be honest than shill stuff just to get some amazon affiliate link hits. If you don't care for my assessment, so be it. But let's try to remain civil. This stuff takes me days to complete and I put more time in to it than your favorite reviewer at your favorite audiophile magazine. And my data is far more accurate than their quasi-anechoic measurements.

Here is the full written review:



and here is the YouTube review...





Below is a highlight of the review.

Frequency Response:
  • The mean SPL, approximately 94dB at 2.83v/1m, is calculated over the frequency range of 300Hz to 3,000Hz.
  • The on-axis frequency response is extremely non-linear, measuring +3dB/-4dB above 74Hz.
  • The speaker’s F3 point (the frequency at which the response has fallen 3dB relative to the calculated mean SPL) is 74Hz.
  • The F10 (the frequency at which the response has fallen by 10dB relative to the mean SPL) is 47Hz.
  • The nearfield responses show many issues which turn up as resonances in the frequency response. For example, the port has significant resonance above 200Hz over multiple octaves that contributes to peaks/dips from 300Hz to 1kHz. The woofer shows breakup at ~1.3kHz and again at ~6.5kHz which affect the frequency response measurements and drive the uneven tonal balance of this speaker. Multiple diffraction effects appear to be borne from the termination point of the horn/compression driver throat.
Impedance/Amplifier Requirements:
  • There are a couple areas that show up as resonance in the impedance/frequency response measurements. ~120Hz and ~400-600Hz both show signs of resonance (the former being very audible in my listening evaluations).
  • The tuning frequency of the enclosure is approximately 35Hz.
  • The minimum impedance dips to about 3.6 Ohms below 5Hz so keep this in mind. But, realistically, this speaker is closer to a 5 Ohm nominal load. A standard AVR would not be recommended for powering these speakers. A separate amplifier is recommended to drive this speaker to typical playback volumes.
Distortion/Max SPL:
  • At 100dB at 1 meter (which is equivalent to 88dB at 4 meters), the low frequency distortion increases but is still respectably low between 1-3% THD from 50Hz to 200Hz.
  • There is a glaring HD profile increase around 800Hz. I presume this to be the midrange compression driver. This distortion level reaches 8% THD at 100dB at 1 meter and increases to as much as 14% at 104dB.
  • The max SPL measured is 110dB (mean) at 1 meter. So far, this is the highest max SPL achieved by any of my test subjects, besting the previous winner by about 4dB. Keep in mind that these speakers can play louder than 110dB. The test setup and conditions are described in the appropriate section above. This simply gives me a way to provide an apples-to-apples comparison against other test subjects.
Dispersion and Off-Axis Response:
  • Horizontal dispersion varies by frequency thanks to resonance and directivity mismatches. Though, the mean horizontal dispersion window is about ±50° below 10kHz .
  • Vertical dispersion varies by frequency thanks to resonance and directivity mismatches. Though, the mean horizontal dispersion window is about ±30° below 10kHz.
  • This unevenness tends to cause the soundstage to behave quite erratically causing some instruments to be placed throughout the soundstage differently from the fundamental to the harmonics, driving imaging inaccuracies as well.
  • Some DSP can be used to smooth out these problem areas (wherever the Directivity is relatively flat is a good candiate for DSP correction). For example, a portion of the 300-500Hz resonance can be tamed. But there are many directivity mismatches that would make this task more challenging. If not for the resonances, however, this task would be much easier.
Spinorama and Predicted In-Room Response:
  • No way to sugarcoat this: the SPIN data results in a very uneven response riddled with mismatches in driver-to-driver directivity as well as numerous resonances. From on-axis to listening window to predicted in-room response.
  • The midwoofer to midrange crossover region indicates a directivity mismatch.
  • Though, the midrange to tweeter crossover region looks relatively benign and indicates a fair match in their directivity profiles.
  • The port resonance discussed above shows up clearly in this SPIN data in the 500Hz region and tended to make voices sound boxy. In combination with the 200-500Hz dip in response this resonance was even more pronounced.
  • The predicted in-room response indicates a peaky 1-2kHz region (which results in a “forward” sound; verified in my listening evaluations). I’m mentioning this specifically because this area was the most bothersome to my ears.



Here are my key subjective notes and takeaways from my audition:
  • The Heresy IV has a very uneven tonal balance. The high frequency tends to be a bit forward (thanks to the 1-2kHz being a bit higher in output level vs the mean). The bass is punchy but “dull” thanks to the ~100Hz “knee” where the response falls off rapidly below this point and trails off to be -3dB at 300Hz.
  • There was no low bass in my demo sessions. Even with room gain, I often found a lot lacking below 70/80Hz and I would definitely recommend a subwoofer if you want low frequency content. In my home theater the speakers were out from the walls. In my living room the speaker was placed both next to the cabinets (about 1/2 foot) and also demoed at about 2 feet from the cabinets. The former helped shore up the bass a little bit but still left me underwhelmed and confirmed my notion that a subwoofer would be needed. Maybe if you corner load them you can get some more low end but there’s nothing you can do to change the Fs (or Fb/Fc) of the speaker and it will rolloff above 70Hz so if you’re comparing to other speakers in the same placement position, keep this in mind.
  • These speakers get very loud. I measured about 110dB at my listening position (~12 feet from the speakers) when demoing them. I couldn’t take this output level for too long and had to turn the volume down.
  • Soundstage width was a bit slapdash, if I am being honest. Some notes tended to go a few feet outside of the physical location of the speaker while other notes did not. I attribute this “slapdash” aspect to the uneven response (caused by resonances and directivity mismatches between drive units). If you look back at the objective notes, particularly the horizontal dispersion, you can understand why this is the case.
  • Soundstage depth is an odd bird here. Again, thanks to the unevenness of the response, there are bits about this speaker that have a “forward” presentation (the 1-2kHz region, notably) while others have a more “recessed” presentation (the midrange). This causes the soundstage depth as well as the “depth to stage” to vary depending on the frequency in a way that I would deem inaccurate.
  • Numerous times I heard a resonance in the cabinet that was quite annoying. I mentioned this in the objective section above but I wanted to point out that it is quite audible; notably on male voices.
  • While the majority of my demo was with the speaker placed directly on the floor, I tried these lifted off the ground, placed on a stand as well. I preferred the coupling of the bass to the floor when placed directly to on the floor. I have read others who preferred them on stands. To each his own.
  • As for horizontal toe-in, most of my session was with the tweeter aimed directly at me. However, I did find that (in some cases) I preferred the speaker toed-in about 20°. But, again thanks to the wild variation in horizontal response there really wasn’t a “best”. I’d recommended trying toe-in but no more than 20°. Once you go beyond that angle the dip in the 2-4kHz region is more pronounced relative to the 1-2kHz region and results in a considerably more unpleasant sound. At least to my ears.


Bottom Line
Klipsch has a very strong following in the audiophile community. Klipsch fans generally know what they are getting and they enjoy it. What do they know they are getting? Well, consider this: Klipsch’s literal marketing line is (and I quote) “ off the neighbors since 1946”. I know I am not alone in thinking this tagline translates to “loud and bright”. That is what Klipsch has given you in the Heresy IV. You have a 94dB (2.83v @ 1m) sensitivity speaker with an upward trend in the HF response. The newly implemented rear port may help the bass response compared to the Heresy III model but you’ll find it hard to get much below the 70-80Hz region out of these and you’ll need a subwoofer if you want good kick-drum (50/60Hz region) and definitely need a subwoofer if you want LFE content (if you choose to watch movies with these speakers).

With the above said, Klipsch also says this about these speakers: “The Heresy IV offers unparalleled sound quality from a relatively small speaker”. While this may be true relative to the Heresy III, let me make it clear: the Heresy IV speaker is not the quintessence of hi-fi. These are not an accurate speaker. I do not believe others expect that to be the case. I just want to make that clear up front. They may very well play your favorite rock n’ roll album with the zest you love, but they are not a reference speaker. Their response is too unbalanced for that task (both subjectively and certainly objectively). In my opinion, these are party speakers. They are show-off speakers when your neighbor comes over bragging about his Bose setup. The Heresy IV is what I would call a Jekyll/Hyde speaker. Sometimes they make your music fun and sometimes they make it boring. Heck, sometimes they make it aggravating. It’s a grab bag depending on what track you come across and your mood at the time.

As an aside, I am not biased against “horns” or compression drivers. My home theater system is made up of JBL Pro 2447j CD, 2380 horn and 2035HPL midwoofers. They literally came from the old Cinemark in town when they closed down about 8 years ago. They are ran actively off a Rane RPM88 DSP and some Crown amplifiers. So, while I prefer a different radiation pattern for general music listening, I do enjoy “horn speakers” assuming they are designed and implemented well.

Acoustics aside, let’s not ignore the “retro” look of these. They are quite appealing in their own way. A simple box with a throwback-look that appeals to many generations (myself included). It’s not a work of art. It’s a box. But, in its own way, it’s pretty cool. And, again, this is something Klipsch is known for and fans come to expect.

Ultimately, aside from looks, this is not the kind of speaker I would personally purchase. The tonal balance is much too varied for me to enjoy. But whether I enjoy them or not is of little consequence to your listening tastes. I’ve established that these have that “Klipsch sound” and it’s evident many prefer it regardless of how inaccurate it is. Therefore, I can merely only provide you the data and my thoughts on the performance and let you decide what works best for you.
 

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Erin

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Edit: Sonnie got it fixed for me. :)
 
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Sonnie

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I tried linking my written review but the forum is telling me it is seen as spam. :/

So, if you want to read the actual written review and all the gory details, you'll have to go to my site (ErinsAudioCorner.com) and find it there. @Sonnie, do you mind helping me with this?
I think I got it set so you can link... if not, email me the link and text you want for it and I'll insert it. If what I did doesn't work, you may have to have either 5 or 10 posts to enable links. You can post a few one, two, three posts in the test forum.

You probably want to list your equipment in your profile.

Appreciate the review... and no doubt you'll gather up some drama from the Klipsch owners, but hey, you report what you measure and hear. Honesty is a most welcomed virtue. I wrote a less than popular review on a processor several years ago and there were a few unhappy folks to say the least.

In the same manner that we all seem to have a hard time getting great sound from speakers in our vehicles, we use PEQ or Dirac or both to help tame the response. I find the same for my home audio listening room. Speakers don't really sound all that great, and a lot of that has to do with getting them placed correctly for the best sound stage, imaging and depth acuity. Then I have to fix the response to get them to perform their best. Of course because of the location, being pulled out from the walls so far, they lose any resemblance of bass, requiring subs in most cases, although with my current 15A's the ARC system will get them flat to below 20Hz. Have you given any consideration to listening to the speakers you are testing with Dirac Live (or some sort of EQ filtering)? It seems like you'd have a hard time finding speakers that would have all the characteristics of a good speaker and have the proper imaging and sound stage along with an acceptable response. Granted the subjective listening is in your room, which obviously would be different in other end-user rooms.
 

Erin

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Thanks, Sonnie. That worked. :)

I just had one guy reply that the Heresy IV was "designed to be a center channel for the Forte speakers"... as if that is an excuse for them being poor performers. (Not to mention that statement is total and utter )
 

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Welcome to the Forum, Erin! Great review!

I was interested in reading it because I attended a church many years ago that was using Heresys for their house PA system, and I though they sounded great – way better than any PA speakers I’d heard in the ’80s.

I think the graph on your site effectively tells why. The bump in 1-2.5 kHz range is one reason because it helps vocal presence. Most vocal mics have exaggerated lows when held close to the mouth, and that bump serves to lift the critical frequencies out of the “mud.” And the bump at 5-6 kHz helps emphasize the sibilants. Both “features,” if you will, greatly enhance vocal clarity in a live-sound situation.

And of course, high freq extension all the way out to 20 kHz – unheard of in a PA speaker back then.

Regards,
Wayne
 

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Thanks, Sonnie. That worked. :)

I just had one guy reply that the Heresy IV was "designed to be a center channel for the Forte speakers"... as if that is an excuse for them being poor performers. (Not to mention that statement is total and utter )
I know a few guys that have the Heresy's ... and I've seen them at audio shows setup for two-channel.

I owned the Forte's back in the 90's... never was that impressed with them, but I was also clueless about how to setup speakers back then.
 
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Erin

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Welcome Erin, are you a manufacturer or a dealer?

Nope. I am just a dude who is passionate about audio, measurements and helping people make an informed purchase decision.
 
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Erin

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JStewart

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First post here. Might as well come out swinging. :greengrin:

There’s an understatement if ever there was one :)

Love your review process. A shame this speaker measured and sounded so poorly.
The retro styling is very appealing for nostalgic reasons. Your review shows I may have listened to a lot of junk in my youth. OTOH maybe quarter space placement and the high end absorption coefficient of a couple of uncomfortable beds in a small dorm room would bring out their best?

Best 1st post ever. Thank you for all the work that went into it!
 

JStewart

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Erin, looking at the predicted in-room response rise at approx 850Hz and the almost step like change in the directivity at the same frequency, from these two charts you provided in the review,

EB48239E-66F1-4806-9157-0E2811079A4C.png
1AAB37F2-651E-40E8-B54F-A139FF35A318.png



would think the low to mid xo to be the culprit? It looks like much of It’s performance could be cured by fixing this area of the response.
 

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Erin

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Hey Erin... you may want to fill in some of the blanks here: https://www.avnirvana.com/account/account-details

That will allow readers to use the drop down list below your avatar on the left... where you see the following:

View attachment 37407


I looked all around for where to put that info in. FWIW, "Account Details" is not intuitive. Would make more sense to have it in "profile" or even a dedicated section. Because I didn't even look in account details. To me that is more moderator type stuff. Again, just my humble opinion. At any rate... updating it now.
 

Erin

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DIY 120" Acoustically Transparent
Erin, looking at the predicted in-room response rise at approx 850Hz and the almost step like change in the directivity at the same frequency, from these two charts you provided in the review,

View attachment 37402 View attachment 37403


would think the low to mid xo to be the culprit? It looks like much of It’s performance could be cured by fixing this area of the response.

Yep. A 12" drive unit will beam at about 562Hz. You can see the directivity is narrowing above 500Hz to 1kHz and then gets wide again above 1kHz. That lines up with their stated crossover point of 850Hz and reasonably within where my nearfield measurements indicate the acoustic crossover is.

The distortion also increases around 800Hz as well which jives with the midrange crossover.
 

Sonnie

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JTR Neosis 210RT
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JTR Neosis 110HT-SL
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I looked all around for where to put that info in. FWIW, "Account Details" is not intuitive. Would make more sense to have it in "profile" or even a dedicated section. Because I didn't even look in account details. To me that is more moderator type stuff. Again, just my humble opinion. At any rate... updating it now.
Most members complete it when registering... it's explained in detail there. Never had any complaints... most everyone that uses the forum loves it like it is. Makes it easy for other members to see it without have to leave the thread.
 

JStewart

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Yep. A 12" drive unit will beam at about 562Hz. You can see the directivity is narrowing above 500Hz to 1kHz and then gets wide again above 1kHz. That lines up with their stated crossover point of 850Hz and reasonably within where my nearfield measurements indicate the acoustic crossover is.

The distortion also increases around 800Hz as well which jives with the midrange crossover.

You have to figure Klipsch has this info and therefore the speaker characteristics are intentional. Wonder why they would do that?
 

Erin

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Denon X4000, Rane RPM88, MiniDSP DRC-88A
Main Amp
Crown Amplifiers XLS1502 x3 (front L/C/R)
Additional Amp
Crown XLS2502 (Subwoofers)
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Oppo BDP-103
Front Speakers
DIY JBL Pro (2446j CD, 2380A horn, 2035HPL 15's)
Center Channel Speaker
see above
Subwoofers
DIY SI HT18 in 4cuft ~18Hz
Video Display Device
Sony HW-55ES
Screen
DIY 120" Acoustically Transparent
You have to figure Klipsch has this info and therefore the speaker characteristics are intentional. Wonder why they would do that?

Man, who knows. It seems to me the midrange CD was already being pushed as is (evidenced by the high HD profile). So crossing that one any lower likely would have been pushing it near failure. Maybe the solution is a larger CD that can take a lower crossover point.

I would be happy to explore it but the Klipsch fanboys have ruined any desire of mine to help improve the speaker in a helpful way. A lot of them are pure a-holes who live behind keyboards it seems. Buncha male Karens. LOL
 

Erin

Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Oct 24, 2020
Messages
36
Location
north Alabama
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon X4000, Rane RPM88, MiniDSP DRC-88A
Main Amp
Crown Amplifiers XLS1502 x3 (front L/C/R)
Additional Amp
Crown XLS2502 (Subwoofers)
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Oppo BDP-103
Front Speakers
DIY JBL Pro (2446j CD, 2380A horn, 2035HPL 15's)
Center Channel Speaker
see above
Subwoofers
DIY SI HT18 in 4cuft ~18Hz
Video Display Device
Sony HW-55ES
Screen
DIY 120" Acoustically Transparent
Most members complete it when registering... it's explained in detail there. Never had any complaints... most everyone that uses the forum loves it like it is. Makes it easy for other members to see it without have to leave the thread.

no worries. My experience getting registered here was a little different as you know. So maybe I just missed that step in all the kerfuffle.
 

JStewart

Senior AV Addict
Supporter
Joined
Dec 5, 2017
Messages
2,040
Location
Central FL
I would be happy to explore it but the Klipsch fanboys have ruined any desire of mine to help improve the speaker in a helpful way.

Maybe that’s the answer then to why they made it this way. A market that likes that sound. Can’t criticize personal preference. :justdontknow:

Not for me though. First thought that came to mind when I saw the 1500Hz peak in your listening sessions ...

37416
 

Erin

Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Oct 24, 2020
Messages
36
Location
north Alabama
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon X4000, Rane RPM88, MiniDSP DRC-88A
Main Amp
Crown Amplifiers XLS1502 x3 (front L/C/R)
Additional Amp
Crown XLS2502 (Subwoofers)
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Oppo BDP-103
Front Speakers
DIY JBL Pro (2446j CD, 2380A horn, 2035HPL 15's)
Center Channel Speaker
see above
Subwoofers
DIY SI HT18 in 4cuft ~18Hz
Video Display Device
Sony HW-55ES
Screen
DIY 120" Acoustically Transparent

Travis Ballstadt

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jul 26, 2017
Messages
1,080
Location
Seattle, WA
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Anthem AVM60
Main Amp
Emotiva BasX 5
Additional Amp
Emotiva UPA-500
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Sony UBP-X800
Front Speakers
NextLevel Acoustics Reference Cinema
Center Channel Speaker
NextLevel Acoustics Reference Cinema
Surround Speakers
NextLevel Acoustics Reference Cinema
Front Height Speakers
NextLevel Acoustics Angled Satellite
Rear Height Speakers
NextLevel Acoustics Angled Satellite
Subwoofers
SVS PB2000
Video Display Device
JVC DLA X790R, Lumagen Radiance Pro 4240
Screen
SeymourAV Proscenium 124” diagonal 2.40:1
Remote Control
Harmony Elite - Moving to Unfolded Circle Remote 2
Streaming Equipment
Kaleidescape Strato C/Terra 48TB/Compact Terra 6TB, PLEX Server, AppleTV4K, Bluesound Node2i
Streaming Subscriptions
AppleTV+, Amazon Prime, HBO Max
Satellite System
They still have those?
Other Equipment
Rega Planar 6, Rega Exact2 cart, Rega Aria Mk3 Phono Stage, Jolida JD202BRC, Rega RS-5 Speakers (2-channel system)
I'm officially Team @Erin in this fight.

Not a fan of Klipsch, and before anyone brings the heat, I'm sure I'm a fan of some things that others don't like or appreciate. My favorite thing about this forum is that it's civil discussions, not just bashing people for their preferences.

Welcome aboard, Erin!
 
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