Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
Yusri Yieotal Otai ᠌ photo
1 Level
109 Review
27 Karma

Review on πŸ”Š Black Yamaha NS-555 3-Way Tower Speaker with Bass Reflex (Each) by Yusri Yieotal Otai ᠌

Revainrating 3 out of 5

The product did not cause delight, but you can use it.

At the same time seven years ago, we were given it by mistake along with a Yamaha receiver from the six hundred and a DVD player manufactured by the same firm. In the beginning, I was relieved because I believed that I would be able to give up the Corvettes. These are much more attractive in appearance, and they stood next to each other for several days while switching places periodically. Refused. From Yamaha. I closed the door behind me and ushered my father into the room. There is a Yamaha two-channel receiver from the early 1980s, and he uses it to listen to the radio. (By the way, remarks from individuals who evaluate the "sound quality" produced by an initial version of a multi-channel receiver are highly delivering. I have a six hundred, which is a bit better, but I refuse to consider it sound since there the signal travels through a dozen chips, and the number of semiconductors that are included in each chip is unknown; however, it is safe to assume that there are a great number of them. Only movies and nothing else will be shown here. IMHO. I have a CA-810 from the 78th year, along with other models from that series, for playing music. (And one more thing.) In general, they remained in place until I noticed, just by chance, that one channel had lost its treble. It ended up being a head all along. On AVITO, there is a new three thousand. In light of the fact that the entire collection was acquired for 10 (obviously until the year 2022) dollars, I found that I strangely did not want to spend money. Even after the head has been taken apart, the winding remains intact. The issue was caused by the inability to properly link the leads going to the terminals with the leads of the winding itself. The connection can be made by "clamping" one wire to another and then covering it with some kind of black "snot." And BOTH connections were severed at the same time. Somehow split, bent, soldered. Works. But it came out incredibly awful, with hot melt hanging down and cheap plastic painted to look like chrome. Inside, the case is made of thin MDF plates, the joints, at least with a sealant, went through - horseradish, bars in the joints as thick as a little finger, the front panel is about the same. A piece of molded foam rubber is inserted into the woofer part of the speaker. Indeed, the wires are at least pretty thick inside, the cross was only visible from the edge, and the coil was "in the air." Nevertheless, as it turned out, the other two are on ferrite, and electrolytic capacitors are in the filter. In general, the interior of the Microlab, which was also dismantled, is not any worse. It would appear that we are approaching a point where the term "brand" has very little significance.

Pros
  • Appearance (if you do not look inside) is very decent, varnishing (the same "black piano", although they say that this is a film - but neatly anyway) - too. They basically have a sound that corresponds to their pricing and their proportions. A reputable name (it is more appealing to look at the inscription "Yamaha" than it is to look at some Chinese "brand," even though the components may not vary all that much)
Cons
  • On the inside of the structure, there are "microlabs" and other such facilities located quite close together. That was the sound. OK, that's fair, but you shouldn't anticipate any "miracles" from the products sold in stores.