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Piega usa Premium Wireless Gen2 301 Speakers [Pair]
Dealers selling Piega usa near you
Airy, detailed highs and a surprisingly weighty low end define the Premium Wireless Gen2 301, pairing a refined ribbon tweeter with a tight, tuneful controlled bass and a focused soundstage. Reviewers from What Hi‑Fi? to HiFi News praise its clarity, build and imaging, making it a compact choice for detail-focused listeners.
Pros
- Refined, airy treble with strong transient clarity thanks to the ribbon tweeter.
- Surprisingly deep, well-controlled bass that punches above its cabinet size.
- Focused, well-defined soundstage and strong instrument separation for precise imaging.
- Premium aluminium construction and solid fit‑and‑finish that reduce cabinet distortion.
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Cons
- Can exhibit a slight treble edge or brightness on very forward/harsh recordings.
- Not the most visceral, high‑octane speaker—some listeners may find dynamics a touch restrained.
- Analogue inputs/analogue-to-digital routing can sound inferior to the digital/Connect feed.
Sound Quality
88/100
Bass
91/100
Reviewers repeatedly praise the low end as 'deep, tightly controlled' and 'exceptional for such a small box' (The Ear). Placement sensitivity was noted (move 15cm from rear wall improved balance), but overall the 140mm mid/woofer delivers surprising extension and punch for its size, at times 'fooling anyone into thinking they were listening to a speaker twice its size.'
Mid
89/100
Consistently commended for vocal presence and timbre: reviewers describe vocals as 'open and packed with emotion' and guitars/piano with body and nuance (The Ear, HFN). The speakers are transparent and musical, conveying expression without harshness.
Treble
85/100
Ribbon tweeter delivers air, transient clarity and sweet, controlled highs (The Ear, HFN). Some reviewers note occasional edge or shrillness on very bright recordings ('occasional edge to treble', What Hi‑Fi?), so while refined most of the time, certain source/recordings can show a bit of brightness.
Soundstage Imaging
88/100
Speakers present good separation, depth and a focused, open soundstage: reviewers report 'good separation and depth of field' and convincing instrument placement (HFN, What Hi‑Fi). They favour focus and control over an enormous, enveloping soundscape, yielding precise imaging.
Dynamics
83/100
Generally dynamic and nimble—'dynamic yet sweet' with strong rhythmic drive on many tracks (The Ear, HFN). A few reviews call for more visceral punch or attack ('lacking engagement' and could use more excitement, What Hi‑Fi), so dynamics are very good but not hyper‑exciting.
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Build Quality
92/100
Handcrafted Swiss aluminium/extruded cabinets and a premium finish draw repeated praise for solidity and style (The Ear, HFN). Reviewers highlight the sense of quality and rigidity (claimed 30% more rigid cabinet construction), contributing to low distortion.
Features Connectivity
80/100
Passive-baseline score applied per agent scoring rules. (Note: reviews describe both passive and wireless/active variants with multiple inputs and wireless grouping features; connectivity details vary by model.)
Value for Money
84/100
Reviewers praise performance vs peers and call the speakers a strong buy at the cited review price (~£2,500), with statements like 'outstanding performance' and 'punch well above their weight' (The Ear, HFN, What Hi‑Fi). Product_data lists a higher price point (3995), which reduces the value proposition somewhat versus the review context.
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