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Product Description
Kanto’s TUK Powered Speaker is a near-studio-level entry into the bookshelf speaker space. Featuring a mostly single-color black or white design with sleek beveled cutaways and a contrasting driver ring, the TUK will look at home on a bookshelf—in a high-end listening room, and yes, even in a professional studio mixing space Read More
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These have good looks, premium drivers, and useful IO. Unfortunately, at this price, they lack bi-amping, DSP, and Pro connections that studio monitors should have. They are more than the KRK ROKIT 7 G4 and ADAM Audio T7V, which are studio monitors with larger woofers.
LT Dan, you’re right there are better speakers out there that are much better than these. Biamp and all. I haven’t seen any Kanye Turks in any studios but I have seen them at mixing consoles. Enjoy
I like the Kanto YU5 speakers I bought on Drop. When I received them the tweeter was puckered. Contacted the company and they promptly shipped out a new speaker (no questions) and paid for shipping back. That said, these speakers, based on specs, are on the expensive side compared to the competition. In 2022-2023 active speakers with Bluetooth should not be using a BT version (4.2) released in 2014...
I bet the same manufacturer made this Kanto and the Monoprice MM-5R that is regularly $449, but often on sale. At $700, I'd look at the new SVS desktop speakers.
GiantHeadphoneSquidIMO, no they are not that bad. I bought a pair of the little, YU2s for my computer over a year ago and I have not felt the desperate need to look for better. I do not intend to compare Kanto's products from opposite ends of their catalog. Use your ears, eh?
This speaker system is overpriced considering it is not a bi-amped system with electronic crossovers. I don't understand how it can be marketed as a studio-type speaker without the bi-amp-engineered feature integrated into the speaker system.
AlphaIOmegaThat is FUNNY! And yes, maybe I should not have typed my response in CAPITAL letters. I guess I have Rube Goldberg tendencies. Rube Goldberg, by name of Reuben Lucius Goldberg, (born July 4, 1883, in San Francisco, California, U.S.—died December 7, 1970, in New York, New York), was an American cartoonist who satirized the American preoccupation with technology. His name became synonymous with any simple process made outlandishly complicated. Lol! Peace...........