Fidelity Imports

Acoustic Energy Corinium Loudspeaker | TweekGeek

$7,999.00
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Finish: Matte Black
The Acoustic Energy Corinium is a 3-way reflex-loaded floorstanding loudspeaker designed and built in Cirencester, England. A curved Resonance Suppression Composite cabinet with 6mm aluminium baffle houses a 120mm carbon fibre midrange, two 140mm carbon fibre bass drivers, and a 29mm soft dome tweeter. Sensitivity 92dB, 4 ohms nominal, 200W power handling. Available in British Racing Green, Matte Black, Tectona, and Midnight Silver. Priced per pair.

Acoustic Energy Corinium

Acoustic Energy named this speaker after Cirencester — Corinium in Roman Britain, the most important town in England outside London. The company has been based there for more than 25 years. It is a small detail that tells you something about how Mat Spandl, AE's managing director and the designer of this speaker, thinks. The Corinium is not a product. It is a statement from a company that has spent 35 years building loudspeakers with a specific point of view about what matters, and has now decided to say it at full volume.

Three years of development. A blank sheet of paper. The brief was to create the most dynamic, live-sounding, musically involving loudspeaker AE had ever made. Whether they got there is something you will decide when you hear it. We think they did.

What They Were Trying To Solve

Spandl's design brief started from a question about acoustics rather than specifications. A singer playing guitar in a room produces mid and high frequencies that come directly from the instrument — point sources at ear height. The bass is different: omnidirectional, room-coupled, felt as much as heard. A PA system separates these deliberately — subwoofers on the floor, mid-high boxes pole-mounted above. The separation is familiar. It sounds right because it mirrors how live music actually works.

The Corinium speaker is built around that principle. Mid and high frequency drivers sit at ear height. The bass drivers sit lower, coupling to the room the way a bass source couples to a room at a live event. Designed as a unified system from the beginning — not a stand-mount bolted to a subwoofer, which is the compromise version of this idea. The goal was a speaker that presents what Spandl calls a simple acoustic source: each driver covering its range cleanly, the whole arriving at the listening position as a single coherent event.

The Enclosure

The cabinet is curved, which is not a styling decision — or not only that. Curved panels diffract sound around the enclosure rather than reflecting it back into the room from large flat surfaces. They are also inherently stiffer than flat panels of equivalent thickness. The side panels are built from AE's Resonance Suppression Composite, a hybrid material chosen for its specific blend of mass, stiffness, and damping. These panels run 22mm thick. The top and bottom plates are 50mm. A spine runs up the rear of the cabinet, clamping the whole structure together.

The Front Baffle

The front baffle is two materials laminated together. A 25mm MDF layer provides the inert mounting surface for the midrange and bass drivers and ties the side panels together. A 6mm solid aluminium plate is bolted to the front of that — extremely high stiffness, very low surface radiation. The tweeter mounts directly to the aluminium, isolated from any vibration the mid and bass drivers generate. It is a thoughtful piece of engineering rather than a list of materials chosen to sound impressive on a spec sheet.

The cabinet tilts 4 degrees — achieved by shortening the rear spikes. That angle is enough to time-align the acoustic output of all three drivers to a seated listening position. The midrange driver sits in its own dedicated vented chamber within the cabinet, acoustically separated from the bass section, with damping kept deliberately minimal to preserve speed and openness.

The Drivers

All three drivers are Acoustic Energy's own. The 120mm midrange is the heart of the system, covering five of the eight audible octaves. AE evolved the carbon fibre cone geometry from the 500 series specifically to improve break-up behaviour — those out-of-band resonances that colour the sound and force crossover designers into steeper, more phase-disruptive filter slopes to suppress them. The Corinium's midrange cone breaks up more cleanly, which meant AE could use gentler crossover slopes with lower phase shift. The benefit arrives as a more natural, coherent midband.

The two 140mm bass drivers use a new carbon fibre cone with a low-hysteresis motor system — tight magnetic control for speed and efficiency. AE's bass tuning philosophy on this speaker is unconventional. The port is tuned lower than textbook alignment would dictate. The woofers handle most of the bass weight on their own; the port is there to underpin the bottom registers, not to do the heavy lifting. The result is a bass system that behaves more like a sealed box in its upper registers — fast, articulate, rhythmically precise — while still reaching deep. It is not a common approach. It is one of the reasons this speaker sounds the way it does.

The tweeter went through an extended development. AE had used a carbon fibre dome on the 500 series. For the Corinium the goal was lower moving mass — faster transient response, finer detail. They tried natural silk from Japan before settling on Tetoron, a synthetic polyester material with the same mass as the silk but slightly higher stiffness. That stiffness keeps the dome's shape under excursion, which produces a cleaner, more open sound. No ferrofluid in the magnet gap — AE avoids it on all their tweeters, citing added damping, increased mass, and long-term reliability concerns as reasons to leave it out. A shallow waveguide manages dispersion and keeps the tweeter's output from reaching the cabinet edges, which would create secondary radiation points and disturb the frequency response.

The Crossover

Crossover points sit at 260Hz and 3,400Hz. Second-order filters throughout, tuned to blend with the natural rolloff behaviour of each driver rather than imposed against it. Air-core inductors in all series positions — iron-core inductors, Spandl notes, coloured the sound and made the tonal balance level-dependent. Film capacitors throughout. A specific branded capacitor selected by listening on the critical tweeter path. Metal oxide resistors over cement units. Every component choice auditioned and selected for its effect on the sound, not just its measured performance.

Internal wiring is Wireworld oxygen-free copper cable, soldered directly to the driver terminals rather than terminated with spade connectors. Single-wire only. AE's position is that a single pair of high-quality cables outperforms two pairs of inferior ones, and that biwire configurations introduce reliability concerns through bridging links. The PCB itself uses a heavier copper deposit than the rest of the AE range.

Sonics

The Corinium is not a speaker that immediately declares itself. The first thing you notice is probably the bass — how controlled it is, how it doesn't bloom or overhang — and then you stop noticing it and start following the music. That is the point. StereoNET's David Price made the comparison to the original AE1: "as tight and together as the classic AE1 standmount ever did." That is a specific compliment from someone who knows what the AE1 actually sounded like. The midrange is the speaker's real achievement. Mark Craven at Hi-Fi News called it natural and revealing, with vocal reproduction he described as a standout trait.

At the top end, the Tetoron dome does what it was designed to do — smooth without losing detail, extended without fatigue. Jason Kennedy at The Ear described the combination of speed, power handling, and transparency as intoxicating. Fernando Marques at Music and Sound Portugal, after 30 years in the hobby, said it was only the second time he'd been genuinely blown away on first listen. These are not people given to overstatement.

Where It Fits

At 92dB sensitivity into a 4-ohm load, the Corinium is easier to drive than most speakers at this price. The sensitivity is high. What the 4-ohm load means in practice is that current delivery matters — an amplifier that doubles its rated power from 8 ohms to 4 ohms is the target. AE recommends 100W or more into 8 ohms for full dynamic headroom. Below that you can still run it, but you will not hear what it can do in a large room at real-world levels. This is a speaker for a system built around quality, not just power.

Aesthetically, it is a significant object. 1,100mm tall including spikes, 40kg per cabinet, available in British Racing Green, Matte Black, Tectona, and Midnight Silver. It does not try to disappear into a room. The cabinet finish is furniture-grade. It looks like what it is.

Press Recognition

The Corinium has accumulated an unusual amount of serious critical attention since its introduction — across the UK, Europe, and the United States. A selection below.

  • Hi-Fi News — Highly Commended Award, April 2026. Reviewer Mark Craven, lab Paul Miller. Craven singled out the midrange as the speaker's defining quality — natural, revealing, with vocal and instrumental reproduction he called a standout trait.
  • Hi-Fi+ — Best Floorstanding Loudspeaker over £5k Award, December 2024; Hall of Fame, September 2024. Reviewer Ed Selley. He concluded that the Corinium does things he hadn't always associated with Acoustic Energy — and does them without losing the company's character. That is a more considered compliment than it first appears.
  • Hi-Fi Choice — Editor's Choice Award, April 2024. Reviewer Nick Tate called it the best Acoustic Energy speaker he has heard, including the legendary AE1. More than twice as good as the AE520 at just under twice the price.
  • The Absolute Sound (USA) — Editors' Choice Awards 2024 and 2025. Reviewer Tom Martin compared it directly to his reference Magico A5 — speakers at roughly $19,000 more per pair. Differences were matters of degree rather than kind.

  • Part-Time Audiophile — Reviewer's Choice Award, July 2024. Reviewer Marc Smazik compared it against Von Schweikert, Magico, and Acora — all at two to four times the cost — and could not find a meaningful competitor under double the price. He concluded that Acoustic Energy is putting the industry on notice.
  • AVForums — Best Buy Award, April 2024; Best High-End Floorstander 2025. Reviewer Ed Selley described it as a metre-tall love letter to listeners for whom rhythm is the heart of music.
  • StereoNET — Applause Award, November 2023; Product of the Year 2024. Reviewer David Price: "one seriously special-sounding loudspeaker." Bass as tight and together as the classic AE1 standmount. Imaging described as superlative.
  • The Ear — 5 Stars, February 2024. Reviewer Jason Kennedy found the combination of speed, power handling, and transparency intoxicating, with the speaker consistently digging deep into recordings to bring out power, emotion, and scale.
  • Diapason d'Or — Award, March 2024. Reviewer Vincent Cousin: hyper neutral, monitor-like, free of colouring, capable of reproducing a soundstage exactly as the recording intends — no more, no less.
  • Audiophile.fr — Silver Award, June 2025. Reviewer Lionel Schmitt: AE has made something beautiful and something good. The degree of musical expression from the Corinium is multiplied by ten compared to the rest of the range.
  • Music and Sound, Portugal — September 2025. Reviewer Fernando Marques: in thirty years of the hi-fi hobby, perhaps the second time he was genuinely blown away on first listen.
  • Hi-Fi Voice — 10 out of 10, June 2024. Analytically rich without being clinical — plays with information, drive, and determination regardless of genre.
  • HiFi.nl — 5 Stars, January 2024. Reviewer Harro Tillema: spatial representation described as orderly and realistic even on complex large-scale recordings.

Specifications

  • Design: 3-way reflex loaded, curved RSC cabinet, aluminium front baffle
  • Midrange driver: 120mm carbon fibre cone
  • Bass drivers: 2 x 140mm carbon fibre cones
  • Tweeter: 29mm Tetoron soft dome with shallow waveguide
  • Crossover frequencies: 260Hz / 3,400Hz
  • Frequency range: 32Hz – 30kHz (-6dB) / 38Hz – 25kHz (-3dB)
  • Sensitivity: 92dB / 2.83V / 1m
  • Impedance: 4 ohms
  • Power handling: 200W
  • Connections: 4mm single-wire banana sockets / 9mm spade connections
  • Internal wiring: Wireworld OFC, soldered direct to driver terminals
  • Cabinet wall thickness: 22mm RSC side panels / 50mm top and bottom plates
  • Front baffle: 25mm MDF + 6mm solid aluminium plate
  • Spike thread: M10 x 1.5
  • Dimensions: 1,100mm H (including spikes) x 280mm W (spike point to point) x 385mm D
  • Weight: 40kg per speaker
  • Finishes: British Racing Green, Matte Black, Tectona, Midnight Silver
  • Sold individually
  • Designed and manufactured: Cirencester, England

If you are trying to work out whether the Corinium belongs in your system — what to pair it with, how much room it needs, whether your amplifier will drive it properly — we are happy to talk it through. Call us or start a conversation on the site.