That's the trouble with a little alcohol and some good music, it stifles the urge to do critical listening. My best guess would be something like 3--a typo that persisted on the Web site and never got corrected. Maybe the webmaster left and nobody knew how to fix it.
When Dennis Chern demoed the CLX's at the NY Audio Show--I think it was the year they had it in Brooklyn--they were cranking out plenty of bass. But given my choice, I would have gone straight to Marcel Dupre playing the organ at St. Sulpice on Mercury Living Presence.
There are certain advantages to using a sub. You want to place the panels for best clarity and imaging, and the bass performance may suffer at those locations. I use the Descent i with my CLS II's (for which there's a special board available for the CLX's, I think for the high pass x-over). I'm still working on optimally placing it, and equalizing it with the Velodyne SMS-1, to get a smooth progression on the organ pedals all the way to the lowest note. A high pass crossover would help with the 40 hz. peak I'm getting from my panels in my room, but I so far can't bring myself to interfere with the pure ESL beauty. Running sweep tones tends to annoy the other residents of the house, so I don't get many chances. Pipe organ music, as well as large orchestral music--which often includes pipe organs, as well as bass drums--are a small but significant part of my musical diet. Rock music with bass guitars, seldom if ever. For piano music, harpsichord and clavichord music, chamber music, small jazz ensembles, medium sized orchestral music, the CLS II's thrill me sans subwoofer.
I have no doubt living with the CLX's would be that much more of a joy, but right now they're too rich for my blood.
Back in the day... previously going through various Maggie's, Apogee's and Quads, there was nothing quite like ML's CLS. It was an awe-inspiring experience when I first heard them but I was a student then and couldn't afford it, although I managed to acquire a very nice pair of SL3's at the time. Soon as I graduated and started earning better the years passed on and it wasn't until I was back in tropical climes when I finally got the CLSIIz's.
They were the most beautiful full range stats I'd ever seen! I had what was called the "honey blonde" finish, custom finished in Spore and specially order from my long time trusted Spore dealer. So basically, these particular versions were supposed to be "tropicalised..." yeah right! Unfortunately, just like the Quads, Jan Zen's and other panel types, they just didn't last. Within the first 4-5 months of use, the panels started their usual problems. I got in touch with ML's tech dept and according to them it was the timber frame and internal construction that was tropicalised not the panels! Uh?
I was so furious with my trusted dealer and had several conversations over the phone but it turned out that even he wasn't aware that it had nothing to do with the actual stat panels, it was only the wood and structure... so we both learned that the hard way. At the end, you can't tropicalise a stat! There's no way of doing this but what you can do is treat the wooden frame with special coatings so that they don't warp over a period time in harsh tropical climates. That was what ML Spore had done for me.
Anyway, after a few trials and errors, we managed to get the CLSIIz's upto spec, and they were absolutely glorious! In the meantime, I used Maggie’s and Quad's ESL 63's as standbys... none of them could deliver that sheer brilliance of what the CLSIIz's could.
So, overall if I still had a pair of perfectly working CLS or CLSIIz's, I'd be happy as!
This was back in 98/99... only after a few years went by... in Sept 2018, I finally managed to get the CLX Art's. Of course I'm absolutely thrilled but who would've know that this new stat existed after a few decades... I certainly didn't expect it! Now, sadly they're discontinued, what a bummer.
Just enjoy those fine tunes! ML stats are marvellous!
Cheers & a mighty WOOF!!! RJ