Well, I've bothered most of you enough already with my questions. It’s time I simply post to share my experience regarding Axiom.

I finally took the time and auditioned a pair of M60s at a local Axiom owner’s home. The owner had the entire Epic 60 Home Theater system—with the exception of a different sub. Since I don't have approval to describe the owner’s configuration, nor share his name yet, I will spare you from setup detail.

My impressions:

I sampled many songs in about 30 minutes. We listened to:
Sting, Ten Summoner’s Tales, Fields of Gold
Peter Gabriel, So, In your Eyes
Rush, Moving Pictures, Tom Sawyer
Harry Connick, various tracks
Eric Clapton, various tracks
Ellis Marsalis, Heart of Gold, Dr. Jazz
James Newton Howard & Friends, Caesar, Tandoori, & Slippin’ Away II.

I was very impressed with the speakers ability to adequately control the “S” that sting is know for producing. Many cheaper systems will over extend the “s” he sings, and make it sound horrible. Not the M60s. They held that range perfectly.

The speaker’s ability to play Tom Sawyer without giving in—to the point that my ears began to hurt (not good) was amazing. Don’t confuse this with listening fatigue; I simply had it up too loud, to see if they would give in. Nope. No base fading, no loss of mid range. Excellent response; equally excellent reproduction of an excellent song.

Eric Clapton’s live CD was a great way for me to hear the M60s ability to reproduce such a wide range of sound, that was originally intended to be heard—but often not replicated—on lesser systems. Eric’s toe tapping was a tight, hard thud that never distorted; his fingers playing up and down the neck of the guitar was as clear as I’ve ever heard. Flawless.

Ellis Marsalis’ piano was tight, clear and not too forward to be bothersome. I really enjoyed the overall ability the speaker had to simply play the music like it was recorded. Heart of Gold’s Dr. Jazz really proved to me the speaker was designed to do just that, represent the artist like the performer intended to be. Clear, not too bright, nor mellow, just clear piano, bass that didn’t boom, and crisp drums to carry the rhythm.

Overall I was extremely impressed with the speaker’s clarity of the human voice, crisp highs and extremely tight and precise lows. The mids were right on.

I have to admit, I thought the speakers were a bit too much for the room; I wanted to sit even further away from them. I believe we were about 6 feed back. I would have like to be 8 to 12 feet, but that is just personal preference.

My only complaint was that I came away being a bit worried that the 60s might not have as much high-end as I like. That, again, is a personal preference. Also, the room was very sound absorbing, so I’m confident the environment contributed much to that. Not too many hard surfaces for reflection of the higher frequencies. It did make me want to ask Axiom’s if getting 80s instead of 60s would give me a bit more strength in the higher frequencies, since there is an additional tweeter AND the tweeters are a few inches closer to the human ear. I suppose that is for Alan to respond to.

I should add that the owner then decided to give me a sample of the full surround system. All I want to say is while watching a real lively few minutes of a show, it actually got my adrenalin flowing; I was even a bit scared. The sound was so realistic and true to life that I felt my heart race. This is coming from someone who doesn’t get scared easily. I supposed its cause I don’t have such a Hi-Fi surround system at home, so I’m not desensitized to such video. WOW, it was amazing. It made me think that perhaps I should buy the entire setup and not just the fronts…..no surprise…

To date, I’ve listened to the following speakers (in order of MY preference):

B&W’s Nautilus 800s;
Sonus Faber’s Stradivarius Speakers
B&W Nautilus 805s;
B&W 703 and 704
KEF Q7 with KEF PSW2150
B&W 603 S3
Klipsch – Synergy III
JBL - Northridge 3

Overall, I’d say the Axiom’s sit somewhere between the B&W 700s and the 800s. It’s hard to place them, since all are so different. But it is safe to say the M60s are not as impressive as the Nautilus 800s (no surprise, since the Nautilus 800s are probably the best there is out there) but were more clear and bright—to me—than the 703s, but just a bit under the 704s in that category. They were far better than the KEFs, B&W 603s, Klipsch and JBLs. All simply my listenting opinions, of course.