Contour 60i
If you have a bigger listening room—or if you just like to play it loud – the Contour 60i, with its unique midrange driver, is your new best friend. Contour 60i sounds bigger than you’d think. Yes, we mean that. And it isn’t just because it’s a grown-up, full-size, three-way floorstander. Of course, it’s capable of outright, neighbor-infuriating volume. It sounds big in other ways too – from the soaring soundstage of a top orchestral recording to the caffeinated surround-sound effects in a movie, Contour 60i simply fills the room—without resorting to bass-heavy bombast along the way.
Starting at the top
You’ll find the jewel in the crown: the Esotar 2i tweeter. We looked at the older Esotar 2 from the 2016 Contour, took it apart, and realized we could give it a boost with some tech from our flagship Confidence range (the Hexis) and also our flagship Core professional reference monitor series (the larger rear chamber). Together, these clever mods help to reduce unwanted resonances and smooth out the frequency response for even clearer treble performance. The Contour 60i is the only model in the family to have a dedicated midrange driver. It uses an aluminum voice coil and also has a neodymium magnet system—all developed and optimized at the Dynaudio Labs in Denmark. It is, in fact, the same midrange driver we used in the 2016 Contour 60. If it ain’t broke.
Where the difference lies in how it’s mounted
We’ve used more tech from Core here, isolating it in a precision-molded cup containing resonance-defeating ribs. If there’s one thing you can never have too much of, it’s midrange clarity – and Contour 60i now has even more. The two widgets are updated. Each has a bigger magnet system, a different voice-coil design, and a glass-fiber voice-coil former, as first used in the Confidence range and Sub 6 subwoofer. That means even tighter bass at higher volume. We’ve chosen copper for these ones over aluminum. Why? Because they’re dedicated bass drivers. Copper is heavier and provides more moving mass. More moving mass lets us dig deeper without impinging on the midrange, handled by the super-sprightly driver just above. The crossover has been updated, too. You can’t change all the drivers without taking a look at the speaker’s ‘brain’, after all. Plus, the effect of that molded midrange cup and the aramid fiber woofer spiders let our engineers shift the crossover frequency up. It now works better at slightly higher frequencies (up to around 300 Hz). The frequency curve in this area is also flatter, meaning better midrange performance from a simpler design. and sleek-but-solid aluminum baffle provide your music (which was likely mixed using Dynaudio studio speakers, too) with a robust, defined acoustic foundation. So much so that, if we’ve done our jobs right, you’ll forget they’re even there and just … listen.
Key Features.
- Esotar 2i tweeter: Featuring a larger rear chamber and now the Hexis inner dome, which helps to reduce unwanted resonances and flatten the frequency response.
- Improved spider: Improved asymmetric spider for increased system symmetry – and this one is made from aramid fibres for improved acoustic response.
- Updated crossover: Extensive tweaks from the 2016 Contour model have led to a simpler, cleaner, and even better-performing unit.
- Voice coil: large diameter, long throw copper voice coils.
Specifications
Design
| Product or component type | Floorstanding Speaker |
| Complementary | Bass reflex rear ported |
|
Sensitivity (dB @ 2.83V/1m) | 88 |
| IEC Power Handling (W) | 390 |
| |
Lower Cutoff (Hz @ +/- 3 dB) | 28 |
| Upper Cutoff (kHz @ +/- 3 dB) | 23 |
| |
Physical
Material