No, the B&W Zeppelin isn’t the newest iPod speaker system out there, but like many quality products, it might good and well be the best.
You may have walked past the gorgeous dirigible last time you were at the Apple store, but I should tell you now – that was a poor choice. You should have stopped, dropped your iPod right into its floating dock’s port, turned it right to your favorite song and prepared yourself for euphonic glory.
Comprised of two 1-inch aluminum tweeters, two 3.5 inch fiber cone mid-range drivers (25 watt amplifiation, each) and one 5-inch bass driver the B&W Zeppelin reproduces audio flawlessly. Let me elaborate by giving you a little background. The B&W Zeppelin wasn’t just hastily thrown together in some shop that makes three dozen different accessories for your iPod. No, the Zeppelin is crafted by the team that creates the speakers used to master the very song you’re listening to. The speakers in the Zeppelin are made with the same standards as those used in Abbey Road Studios and Skywalker Ranch.
$600 may sound like a hefty amount, but when you consider that the speakers used in the Zeppelin are descendents of the B&W 800 series reference speaker (which cost upwards of $18,000), it’s an absolute audiophilic steal. What it doesn’t steal though, is your experience with music. With delicious midrange, something sorely lacking in most low-end speakers, the Zeppelin reproduced the stacatto strings from Coldplay’s Viva La Vida intro with such bravado that it made my hair dance. Better yet the treble and bass were so well rounded that they became nearly transparent with nary a notion of crossover gap. Their only tangible affect – the maddening laughter I unleashed from my unbridled enthusiasm with the Zeppelin’s acoustic soundstage. I thought I was listening to a professional 2-channel sound studio.