Vanguard Scout Speaker

Glad you like them Drjoe!

You won’t find another speaker with quality rosewood veneer cabinet, nicely voiced, and high quality crossover like this for $300.

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I have placed my Vanguard Scouts in a 'Compromised Location'. Mainly because of other factors of life. My main listening room is occupied by a Very Large Horn System, and the Scouts are doing duty in my Upstairs Great Room for TV, Movies and Background Music. The Bass can get a bit boomy because of this location. They are on a book shelf, with 10 inches behind the speaker. They are basically inside a small 'cavern'. (Picture Attached). I am thinking that a Port Plug of some type would help with this situation. What would you recommend for this?
Vanguard Scout Location.jpg
 
That FM30 Amplifier only puts out about 4 Watts per channel, Correct? --- Is that really enough power for those speakers? - I own a pair myself, but that would seem to be under powered to me. Unless I'm missing something.... Also, what kind of speaker stands are those?
 
Great sound does not have to cost audiophile dollars. $299/pair Vanguard Scout speeakers driven to bliss with $130 single-ended tube amp from China (FM 30 tube amp).
Unbelievable..




That FM30 Amplifier only puts out about 4 Watts per channel, Correct? --- Is that really enough power for those speakers? - I own a pair myself, but that would seem to be under powered to me. Unless I'm missing something.... Also, what kind of speaker stands are those?
 
That FM30 Amplifier only puts out about 4 Watts per channel, Correct? --- Is that really enough power for those speakers? - I own a pair myself, but that would seem to be under powered to me. Unless I'm missing something.... Also, what kind of speaker stands are those?
They are Pangea LS300 speaker stands.

With FU-19 tubes, I have seen the 4 watts figure, but I thought I saw somewhere possibly 6 watts(?) with FM30 tubes, or it could just seem more powerful due to higher gain.
In my desktop audio setup above, FM30 plays as loud as I want, but in traditional speaker setups, who knows? I bought a second FM30 amp for a traditional room, but it's powering 110 dB sensitive horns, so..
 
I have placed my Vanguard Scouts in a 'Compromised Location'. Mainly because of other factors of life. My main listening room is occupied by a Very Large Horn System, and the Scouts are doing duty in my Upstairs Great Room for TV, Movies and Background Music. The Bass can get a bit boomy because of this location. They are on a book shelf, with 10 inches behind the speaker. They are basically inside a small 'cavern'. (Picture Attached). I am thinking that a Port Plug of some type would help with this situation. What would you recommend for this?View attachment 1318477
Some grey open cell foam used in packaging works well. Stuff it in tight.

A rolled up or balled up sock works too, just not as pretty.
 
I still can't wrap my head around how the Vanguard Scouts can sell for $299/pair. Because they are on my desktop, I end up spending the most time with them, and they handle all different kinds of music without me thinking "I need more of X, less of Y, etc." Great speakers.
 
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I know that I'm late to the party here, but I happened to have heard this amp in Nov. 2024 at the Capitol Audiofest. It was in a room hosted by an informal local group. They wanted to showcase a few systems that didn't break the bank yet sounded really good. I believe they had the Scouts hooked up to an inexpensive Fosi 2-channel amp and used a Macbook as the source. These speakers sounded amazing. I couldn't believe that they were $299. I was so impressed that when I decided to put together a 2nd desktop setup that I ordered a pair. They came today, but I haven't unpacked them yet. I will see what they sound like in the morning. I'll probably have to stuff the ports, as I doubt the rear will be more than a foot from the rear wall and I won't be able to pull them out further.

Based on my past experience I would say that they are a great deal. Maybe you could do better in terms of performance with $300 spent on a DIY kit, but then you have to do the work.:hphones:
 
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I build DIY speakers and I know that there is no way you could DIY something this level of cabinet and crossover and fit and finish for $300. The cabinet is amazing on these things and they sound great. The crossovers parts and construction are quite premium. You are getting the benefits of mass production.
 
@xrk971 I didn't mean it as an insult. Only that DIY MIGHT be the only way to better the Scout, with exceptional skills. My statement was meant as a complement. The Scout is a great speaker. I wouldn't have purchased it otherwise. Though if you look at my comment, I didn't bring fit and finish into it. I only referenced performance. Even that would be challenging. Even DIY has a hard time competing with economies of scale. And you are correct. The execution all around of the Scout is flawless.