What Hi-Fi (UK)

We think you'll be tempted by the Aurender S5W speakers

Properly wireless; musical and cohesive sound; excellent build and finish They don’t like to be pushed to very high volume levels Aurender’s S5W are a wonderful solution where cables aren’t wanted and space is at a premium

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In hi-fi circles, wireless has never truly meant wireless. There’s always some form of physical cable that needs to be used, especially when it comes to premium stereo speakers.

Even those that actively promote the concept – KEF’S excellent LS50 Wirelesses (£1999) or Dali’s Callisto 6 Cs (£3199) come to mind – still need mains cables to each speaker, and in the KEF’S case, a link between the two channels to help synchronis­e things.

Aurender’s imaginativ­ely titled S5WS are different, being genuinely wireless, battery-powered and devoid of physical inputs. If you really want wireless stereo sound, you can’t get more untethered than this.

If the thought of relying on battery power in a premium speaker worries you, we can sympathise. The idea of having to recharge the speakers midway through a listening session doesn’t appeal to us either – but Aurender has taken a sensible and practical approach. The company also provides a mains-power option in the box, but using the S5WS this way would go against their raison d’être.

Rather than develop its own batteries, which would have been an expensive and time-consuming approach, the company has decided to use the 18v Lithium Ion battery power packs as used on Bosch cordless power tools.

Two of these 18v 6Ah batteries and a charger are included in the £2700 price we’ve quoted, though if you want to buy the speakers without the battery pack it will cost £200 less.

The batteries take 30mins to reach full charge and once there you should have around 50 hours of music, depending on volume levels and the type of music played. Aurender claims 30 days of standby time, so as far as battery-operated products go, the S5WS should be as painless as they come.

These batteries are readily available, so it makes sense to buy another pair and keep them fully charged, ready to replace depleted packs when required. It takes only a matter of seconds to swap.

TWO DRIVERS, TWO AMPS

The S5WS have two built-in 50W amplifiers per channel, each dedicated to a single drive unit. It comes as no surprise to find that the amplifiers are Class D designs; such circuits make total sense when low power consumptio­n, minimal heat output and small size are priorities, as they would be in any portable battery-powered product.

Aurender buys in its drive units, as most small manufactur­ers do. The tweeter is a 25mm soft-textile dome from Danish OEM specialist Scan-speak, while the small 11.5cm mid/bass comes from Norway’s SEAS. The mid/bass cone is coated with Nextel to help with resonance control, and its motor system is optimised to reduce distortion and improve power handling. There’s a rear-firing reflex port to augment the mid/bass driver’s low-frequency output.

The S5W’S crossover point is positioned at 2khz and Aurender claims a fairly convention­al 50Hz-22khz frequency response (within -6db limits). That lowfrequen­cy reach is pretty impressive considerin­g the small mid/bass driver and compact 22cm-tall enclosure.

As far as inputs go, there’s only one. It’s a dedicated uncompress­ed 16-bit/44.1khz wireless link with a range of up to around 20m. This takes the form of a USB dongle that can be plugged into your computer, phone or tablet and connects to the speakers automatica­lly. If you own an Apple device you’ll need the USB Camera Adaptor (£29) to connect the Lightning connector on your device to the dongle. It all works seamlessly once you have all the bits with the connection being made without fuss.

SMALL BUT SUBSTANTIA­L

Take the S5WS out of their packaging and it’s surprising just how small they are. Their footprint is barely bigger than that of a typical paperback. The next surprise is how much they weigh. At 5.2kg they’re pretty hefty for their size and much of that is down to the immaculate­ly constructe­d aluminium cabinet. It feels immensely solid and is beautifull­y executed – edges are crisp and fit is lovely. The

“Aurender’s S5WS are different, being genuinely wireless; battery-powered and devoid of physical inputs”

“They have a lovely, well integrated midrange. Voices have generous portions of passion and subtlety”

use of Class D amplificat­ion means the speakers don't warm-up much either. There are three finish options: red, black and dark blue.

Around the back, you’ll find the socket for the detachable aerial beside buttons for power, bass and treble. After playing around with the tone settings, we choose to leave them off, as the standard level sounds most balanced to us, regardless of the chosen speaker position.

COMPACT VERSATILIT­Y

The Aurenders’ lack of wires (as well as their small size) means that they can go just about anywhere. While they undoubtedl­y sound best on a solid pair of stands, a little way away from the rear wall – around 30cm works best in our test room – they still produce fine sounds in all sorts of places from a window sill and desktop all the way through to bookshelve­s or on a table next to a TV. Simply plonk them down where you want and enjoy. It’s really as simple as that. We want to extract the very best from them, so we do all the hi-fi set-up things for serious listening, but the point is you don’t have to and they will still entertain.

Once we start auditionin­g, the S5W’S expertly judged tonal balance shines. Speakers this small can easily sound undernouri­shed, but these Aurenders properly buck that trend and deliver a full-bodied and solid presentati­on that belies their diminutive dimensions.

Lows are pleasingly solid and weighty, delivering the challengin­g pulsating low-end of Neneh Cherry’s Spit Three

Times with determinat­ion and punch. The Aurenders convey the track’s momentum well, and manage to tie together the various instrument­al strands in an admirably cohesive way.

These speakers dig up a good amount of detail, but it’s their ability to organise all this informatio­n in a musically entertaini­ng way that really impresses us. There’s enough insight here to analyse a recording if that's what takes your fancy, but really, these Aurenders would prefer you just to sit back and enjoy the music.

They have a lovely, well integrated midrange. Voices come through with generous portions of passion and subtlety. This points to well-matched drivers and a carefully calibrated crossover network. Similarly, the top end has a good amount of bite, but tempers it with enough refinement to avoid a fuss with aggressive recordings.

We try Tchaikovsk­y’s Romeo And Juliet and are surprised by the S5WS gusto when dealing with the wide-ranging dynamics and complex score. These speakers can sound surprising­ly forceful when required and can render the almost brutish power of an orchestra in full flow well.

Stereo imaging is good. The speakers’ soundstage is decently expansive and nicely layered. It stays stable and focused even when the music gets demanding. Image scale on a grand orchestral piece such as this is a little on the small size, and the speakers have a clear upper limit in terms of volume. Beyond a certain point they quickly lose their composure and start to sound thin, hard and confused. That limit is relatively high though, and above what we would consider normal listening levels in a small to medium-sized room.

If you have a large listening space or listen to bass-heavy material at high levels it’s worth checking out whether these Aurenders are suitable. They're impressive­ly accomplish­ed, but the laws of physics come into play and certain limitation­s imposed by the size of cabinet and mid/ bass unit can’t really be avoided.

PARTICULAR APPEAL

We haven’t come across anything quite like these speakers before. Being so small and truly wireless means that they can be used in places and situations where convention­al alternativ­es just wouldn’t get a look in. As such they have an advantage even before their excellent sound and build is taken into account.

While we wouldn’t replace our convention­al hi-fi system with these, their very particular set of talents means that we can think of many circumstan­ces where the Aurenders would be perfect. And that makes them mighty tempting in our view.

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 ??  ?? Stereo speakers £2700 (including battery pack) SOUND FEATURES BUILD
Stereo speakers £2700 (including battery pack) SOUND FEATURES BUILD
 ??  ?? Power in each speaker comes from an on-board Lithium Ion battery
Power in each speaker comes from an on-board Lithium Ion battery
 ??  ?? They like a little space behind them but the S5WS sound good anywhere
They like a little space behind them but the S5WS sound good anywhere

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