Piega Premium Wireless 701
Piega’s Premium Wireless 701 is precisely the kind of speaker glossy magazine lifestyle supplements exist for. A willowy tower of gleaming aluminium, it’s so good looking it isn’t just décor friendly but puts pressure on its surroundings to come up to par. The aluminium outriggers at its base (optionally spiked or pad-footed) aren’t just functional, but fastidiously engineered and exquisitely finished. Even the act of attaching them is a pleasurably tactile experience rather than a tedious necessity. The £5k price tag might be lower foothills high-end, but the quality of execution is as rarefied as it comes.
A fully active design, there’s no need for untidy external amplifiers and speaker cables and the mains leads trailing from the back of each speaker are slim enough to be tucked out of sight. The same is true of the elegantly compact Piega Connect box, which provides the wireless connection between whatever source you plug into it and the speaker. It doesn’t have to be part of a ‘hi-fi display’ but, physical interconnects permitting, can be hidden away in a cupboard. And, for people who can’t be bothered with wires at all, streaming music, via aptX Bluetooth, from a smartphone or tablet, is the simplest option of all.
In short, the Piega Premium Wireless 701 ticks all the modern, on-trend boxes and for your average glossy lifestyle supplement that’s by and large where the story ends, the assumption being that hard-bitten audiophiles seeking the very best in sound quality are willing to live with an unholy mish-mash of components and wouldn’t have started reading in the first place. As misconceptions go, that would be a sizeable whopper. Yes, brushed aluminium looks cool and wireless is very much of the moment, but when Leo Greiner and Kurt D Scheuch started Piega in Horgen, on the banks of Lake Zurich, in 1986, it was all about the sound and according to Greiner’s son Manuel – now running things – it still is.
The company name gives a strong hint. Piega is Italian for ‘fold’, and it was a new type of folded ribbon tweeter – the so-called Linear Drive Ribbon – that gave the fledgling Swiss operation a significant slice of its USP and, over time, evolved into what is claimed to be “the world’s first coaxial ribbon system”. The practical upshot is that Piega’s large ribbon panel reaches down far lower than conventional ribbon tweeters, allowing much easier integration with the partnering dynamic drivers, which can be freed to do what they do best (bass and lower midrange).
What seems particularly Swiss, however, is the hours of intricate, painstaking labour poured into making every ribbon. The work is so precise and exacting, it can only be carried out in a room with carefully maintained climatic conditions at Piega’s factory in Horgen. Maybe it’s just as well that most of the employees’ eyes fall on a tranquil Lake Zurich when they look out of the window. Both the factory and a second studio building have lakeside locations. The management believes that this is how it should be; where the staff feel at their best, where creativity is encouraged and where the view across the water has a calming effect even when things get hectic.
The other strand of the company’s USP is the use of aluminium for the cabinets of its more up-market models. As already discussed, the aesthetic is very appealing, but in conjunction with the seamlessly curved boat-tail profile of the cabinet, aluminium also delivers exceptional rigidity to put the bite on resonance and distortion. All right, form follows function, but clearly Piega is going for the win-win here. Once more employing the talents of Swiss designer Stephen Hurlemann to finesse his original ‘look’ for the Premium series by flush-fitting the grilles is kind of a giveaway.
Developed from Piega’s existing passive Premium range of speakers, the active Wireless lineup likewise consists of just three models: the £2,000 301 standmount, the smaller floorstanding 501 (£4,000) and the £5,000 701 floorstanding 2.5-way flagship I’m reviewing here. As each model has an RCA analogue input on its back panel, it’s possible to use it as a wired active speaker fed from a conventional preamp with sources connected or digital device toting a variable output. But if you want to go wireless, you’ll need the £500 Connect interface.
Although aluminium is a lightweight alloy, the combination of the 701’s lofty enclosure and 200W of onboard Class D amplification make for a structure that belies its svelte frame by tipping the scales at 28kg, though thankfully the slim and curved alloy form is easy enough to grasp and manoeuvre into position.
The latest iteration of the LDR ribbon tweeter for the 701 is called the 3056 and features a tweaked magnet system and new foil membrane to provide a wider frequency response (all the way to 35kHz is claimed) as well as improved efficiency. It’s joined by two long-throw 140mm MDS drivers handling the lower-mid and bass frequencies which, with the help of a front-firing reflex port, reach down to a claimed 34Hz.
Round the back of each enclosure, near floor level, is a control panel with tiny toggle switches. The one labelled Group has three positions (red, white and blue) and allows you to link pairs of wireless Piegas for multi-room installations. Only ‘red’ supports 24-bit/96kHz hi-res audio; white and blue are restricted to 24-bit/48kHz. The rest of the tiny switchgear is used to ‘hand’ the speakers – left and right – and configure them – with DSP – for an open-space setting, close to a back wall or near a corner. DSP also automatically adjusts each speaker’s frequency balance according to volume. At a low setting, bass and treble are subtly boosted while, with something closer to party levels, the bass is gently reined in to prevent driver overload and irate neighbours banging at your front door.
Take your pick: purist wired active speaker or wireless wonder with multi-room compatibility. I start with pure and simple, not least because it will almost certainly be the shortest route to the Piega’s best sound. An Audiolab 6000 CDT CD transport (HFC 447) and Cambridge Audio CXN V2 network music player (HFC 437) are connected to Chord Electronics’ Hugo 2 DAC/preamp (HFC 428) and, from there, the signal is fed directly to the speaker’s RCA inputs via lengthy runs of Nordost Hemidall 2 interconnect. Naturally, I’m using the Hugo’s digital volume control to adjust system level.
Sound quality
Wires, yes, and only digital sources but given the talent of the front end
it makes for a simple, elegant and deliciously potent system – the only problem being that the wireless capability that you’ve paid for is redundant in this configuration. That said, the sonic pay off is considerable and once again a big endorsement for the active way of doing things.
I feel the best way to kick off a session with a speaker as shiny and skinny as this is with a dose of grime, volume up. Stormzy’s Rainfall from Heavy Is The Head fits the bill splendidly and immediately reveals the kind of discipline that this rare marriage of individually amplified drivers, size-zero baffles and super-stiff metal enclosures can achieve. My first impressions are of classic hi-fi qualities that shine right into the listening room: clarity and control, detail and dynamics, timing and tempo. Bouncing affectingly over a massively thumping grime beat, Stormzy’s repeated “Fall on my enemies” refrain has fine intelligibility and separation, while the rhythmic detonation of bloated bass bombs registers both viscerally in the gut and has some semblance of definition and shape at ear-level. Everything considered, this is exactly what you want from a high-performance speaker system. Indeed, the sheer scale, solidity and heft of the sound is confoundingly at odds with the dainty footprint and slender form factor of the loudspeaker cabinet.
Going wireless with the Piega Connect box (and using its built-in DAC rather than the Chord) perhaps inevitably robs the sound of some immediacy and resolving power (and takes a further quality hit when streaming with Bluetooth), but the slightly softer and warmer presentation – while less hardcore audiophilic – retains a good measure of the wired setup’s precise, organised and punctual character, underpinned by a reassuring sense of coherence and imaging focus. Enough, certainly, to appreciate the inclusion of a Rega Planar 6 turntable with Ania MC cartridge (HFC 453) and Chord Electronics’ Huei phono stage. There’s plenty going on with Beverley Knight’s BK25 outing with the Leo Green Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall on vinyl, especially the frenetic opener Made It Back. It’s not the greatest recording, but taking its cue from the Rega/Huei combo, the 701 doesn’t labour that but instead expertly mines passion and emotion from Knight’s soulful vocal while portraying the orchestral backing with effortless zeal and crisply defined timbral contrasts.
Randy Newman confirms it. I play The Great Debate from his terrific Dark Matter album and the result is attitude on steroids, but delivered with compelling detail, warmth and texture. Apart from its effortless ability to fill a big room with high-definition sound and almost preposterously full and deep bass given the apparent volume of the enclosure, the Premium Wireless 701’s musical skills span the whole spectrum from get-up-and-dance verve and energy to draw-you-right-in emotional power and subtlety.
Conclusion
Without wishing to demean the many fine, high value compact desktop and standmount active wireless systems that are currently on sale, Piega’s Premium Wireless 701 takes things to the next level. The best part of £5,500 (including the Connect wireless interface) is no small investment, but then – arguably – this loudspeaker’s style, build and finish is a match for anything claiming a loftier high-end billing at many times the price. Given an appropriately talented source and the option it offers to be wired, its sound isn’t far behind. DV
DETAILS
Product: Piega Premium Wireless 701
Price: From £5,000
Origin: Switzerland
Type: 2.5-way floorstanding wireless active loudspeaker
Weight: 28kg
Dimensions: (WxHxD) 180 x 1,060 x 230mm
FEATURES
● 1x LDR 3056 ribbon tweeter
● 2x 140mm MDS mid/bass drivers
● Quoted power output: 200W Class D
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