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GR Research LGK 2.0 Speaker Review (A Joke)

Rate this speaker:

  • 1. Poor (headless panther)

    Votes: 369 87.2%
  • 2. Not terrible (postman panther)

    Votes: 37 8.7%
  • 3. Fine (happy panther

    Votes: 7 1.7%
  • 4. Great (golfing panther)

    Votes: 10 2.4%

  • Total voters
    423

amirm

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This is a review and detailed measurements of the GR Research "Little Giant Killer" (LGK) 2.0 bookshelf speaker. It comes in various forms from a kit ($313) to fully finished pair ($1,038). Our DIY expert @Rick Sykora built my sample using the flatpack ($100):
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Review.jpg

Rick had to do the round over on the two edges per company recommendation as the flatpack is supplied with sharp edges. The build is superb and solid. Here is the back with the famous "tube connectors" and slot port:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Tube Connectors Review.jpg


Internal structure is complex due to that port so unless you are a serious woodworker, you need to get the flatpack.

The main driver is a tiny "full range" 3 inch unit. This allowed the cabinet to be small which I appreciated. Then again, there are plenty of active speakers which are the same size. Here is a comparison to the Neumann KH80DSP which sells for the same cost:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Neumann KH80DSP Review.jpg


They are almost the same depth as well. Of course, the Neumann comes with built-in amplifier and DSP which the GLK 2.0 lacks.

Subjective claims in company video claims sound that is smooth and beats many larger speakers (hence the name).

You may be wondering by now why the title has the word "joke" in it. I reached out to company asking for a sample for review. Company owner, Danny Ritchie answered me saying he had no interest in providing me one. And that he and others think my reviews are a joke because I don't know how to listen to a speaker, don't have the right treated room, etc. On measurements he said he already provides them so nobody needs more information. I explained to him why his measurements are insufficient and again he repeated that nothing more is needed and that measurements like distortion are useless.

Anyway, we were then forced to purchase a pair for testing.

Measurements that you are about to see were performed using the Klippel Near-field Scanner (NFS). This is a robotic measurement system that analyzes the speaker all around and is able (using advanced mathematics and dual scan) to subtract room reflections (so where I measure it doesn't matter). It also measures the speaker at close distance ("near-field") which sharply reduces the impact of room noise. Both of these factors enable testing in ordinary rooms yet results that can be more accurate than an anechoic chamber. In a nutshell, the measurements show the actual sound coming out of the speaker independent of the room.

Reference axis is approximately the center of the tweeter.

GR Research LGK 2.0 Measurements
As usual we start with our "spin" graph:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Frequency Response Measurements.png


At first this looks radically different than what the company shows:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 youtube Measurements.jpg

I have circled some of the reasons the two graphs look different. Danny is using improper and heavy filtering (1/3 octave) for his measurements. This gets rid of the myriad of variations you see in my graph. He also uses gated response to get rid of room reflections which in the process removes any resolution below a few hundred Hertz. This is why his graph starts at 200 Hz rather than 20 Hz.

Rick was kind enough to post process mine to his resolution and chart dimensions and correlation was good.
Edit: here is that comparison:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 vs ASR Smoothed Frequency Response Measurements.png

Back to the spin, on-axis response look fairly flat. There is a notch where I think his baffle step loss filter is but is narrow so likely not audible. Overall, a good showing there.

Near-field response shows cabinet/port resonance interference:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Driver Frequency Response Measurements.png



The single driver is too large compared to a typical tweeter. This means that the sound starts to focus/beam as frequencies go up. This shows up in a number of measurements starting from early reflections in the form of high frequency loss:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Early Window Frequency Response Measurements.png


Predicted in-room response (far field) as a result shows similar droop:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Predicted In-room  Frequency Response Measureme...png


Still, this is a reasonable response.

Back to beaming, we see it clearly in the beam width and directivity plots:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers Horizontal Beam width  Measurements.png



Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers Horizontal Directivity Measurements.png

The picture is nearly the same vertically due to use of a single driver:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers Vertical Directivity Measurements.png


So has the company cheated the laws of physics? Well, not quite. Let's look at distortion at 86 dBSPL:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 THD distortion percentage Measurements.png


Note: both left and right at the same graph at 86 dBSPL. Not 96 dB. Right one simply zooms out to show that distortion has risen to nearly 100%! Now, some of that is beyond the reach of the speaker but looking at the left graph we see that massive distortion reaches out to nearly 500 Hz. Second harmonic of that lands at 1 kHz where our hearing starts to become very sensitive. So bass distortion is likely quite audible.

Worried that it could not handle 96 dBSPL, I lowered the level to 90 dBSPL and ran the distortion test again:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 THD distortion Measurements.png


Near the start of the sweep, speaker started to crackle which then went away above that frequency. Clearly it can't handle that but even 86 dBSPL is poor as I showed earlier.

Impedance is higher than average for the class which is good:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Impedance and Phase  Measurements.png


Something strange is going on as far as resonances though for the graph to become rough below 200 Hz. My measurements here are quite high resolution compared to what others run so this may not be visible in other people's tests.

Company shows a CSD/waterfall which looks clean. Mine does not:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 CSD Waterfall  Measurements.png


Every peak in frequency response will cause time domain ringing which my display clear shows. I can however just change one number and get what the company shows:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 CSD Waterfall Lower noise floor Measurements.png


Here is the company measurement:
csd.jpg


What did I change? I moved up the bottom of the graph 4 dBSPL! This is why I say be careful with waterfall displays. It is so easy to lie with them. Or misuse them (intentionally or not).

Finally, here is the step response for fans of that:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers Step Response Measurements.png



EDIT:
Post review, I measured the electrical response of the filter network at the speaker terminals:

Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Filter Xover Frequency Response Measurements.png


This very much matches the indicated goals for the filter network. As noted, the first filter is to bring down the levels due to baffle step rise. The second is a poor attempt at fixing a resonance in the driver:

LGK_Frequency.jpg


The shape of irregularity from around 6K to nearly 200 kHz is way too complex for that simple notch filter. The filter is also too narrow to make much of an audible effect. High-q/narrow filters are also difficult to aim due to variability of parts/filter network. We see that here where the notch filter is higher than the frequency of interest.

For those of you who stop here and not read my subjective tests, I highly suggest that you make an exception and read on!

GR Research LGK 2.0 Listening Tests

I used my RME ADI-2 DAC as the source to drive a Topping PA5 which in turn powered the LGK 2.0. Listening setup was near-field.

By this time, I actually expected the speaker to sound good (based on spin data). Boy was that not the case. At any listening level above faint music, there would be this nasty warbling sound to vocals which would progressively get worse with volume. I am talking about way below the point where it crackles. The only time this was not super audible was if there was no bass at all. My female tracks are not bass heavy but the bit they had, caused this speaker distort so badly that it was unlistenable. I have tested over 200 speakers and never heard a speaker with such poor response.

By chance I had my desk lamp above it so could easily see the shadow of the driver below the cabinet. As soon as I would see any vibration in that shadow (due to the cone moving), the game was over. And again, this happened at very modest volumes with me sitting just 3 feet/1 meter away from the speaker!

Suspect bass being the problem, I took out the EQ tool and put in a sharp high pass:
Danny GR Research LGK Little Giant Killers 2.0 Equalization EQ.png


This managed to get rid of significant amount of that warbling effect. But then there was so little bass that one was left thinking the sound was just too thin. That aside though, the tonality now shone through and I had little to complain about in that department. I did put a bit of the boost where that notch is and thought it improved the response subtly. To aid more in power handling I also pulled down that bass hump. This helped a bit more but now I had so little bass.

With the EQ in place, I could play at modest levels but sound was boring, and distortion still present. Unless you were playing something that as instrumental/higher in frequency range, nothing sounded clean and without distortion.

Conclusions
Ah, little giant killers... who doesn't want to see an underdog win? Put in a spokesman in front of the camera that tells the nice story and you just want to believe it. I know I believed it a lot more than what I experienced with the speaker. Yes, the tonality is good overall. No, you can't take a midrange+tweeter driver and pretend it can play bass at the same time. It simply cannot. How on earth anyone can say this speaker is usable let alone high-fi is beyond me.

Is Danny this oblivious to distortion? This is not subtle stuff folks. Measurements show extreme amount of distortion and listening tests easily bring out the same. And of course physics solidly predicts it as well.

There is a reason my acoustic measurements from day one have included distortion measurements. And why I listen for dynamic behavior in my listening tests. Hi-fi is about enjoyment and there, you want to have some volume. The LGK 2.0 simply cannot go there. The driver seems to be designed for a boombox or something with matching electronics to control what it can or cannot do. Sticking it in a box and calling it great is one of the biggest farces I have seen in audio business!

I know some may say I am biased to not like GR Research stuff. But I have given positive marks to another speaker kit of his. Importantly, I back my opinion with measurements and science/engineering of the design, not empty boasting. All the arrows point to the same thing. This speaker is simply a bad idea. Had the company spent time measuring distortion and getting feedback from others with better hearing, they would have no doubt gotten the feedback that the design was not feasible.

Yes, the tonality is good but without dynamics of any nature, it is a useless attempt.

For the same cost as these finished, you have tons and tons of choices of speakers including the aforementioned Neumann which runs over this speaker as if it is not there. I don't see the angle of "DIY" here either. Gluing a flatpack is not going to give you much satisfaction when the finished performance is this horrid. If you want to do that, build a larger speaker with proper design. This dog simply don't hunt.

Needless to say, I can't recommend the GR Research LGK 2.0. As I noted, it is the worse speaker I have heard.

Edit: video review also posted:

-----------
As always, questions, comments, recommendations, etc. are welcome.

Any donations are much appreciated using: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/how-to-support-audio-science-review.8150/
 

Attachments

  • GR Research LGK 2 Frequency Response.zip
    60.4 KB · Views: 157
Last edited:
I'm not sure what the 'a joke' part was
That it is a "little giant killer." It doesn't work as a speaker for hi-fi use so I don't see it killing anything, at it size or larger.
 
Not providing a review sample is completely understandable, but doing it because "I don't know how to listen to a speaker, don't have the right treated room" is complete arrogance. If a speaker design only sounds good to specially trained listeners in treated rooms, it isn't a good speaker. There are $100-200 bookshelf speakers that eat the LGK 2.0 for breakfast in terms of directivity, distortion, and bass extension. JBL Stage A130 in particular.

The 1/3 octave smoothing they use is particularly telling, even my homemade measurement rig can do gated results down to 180Hz, and only needs 1/24 octave smoothing afterwards due to proper microphone calibration and stand design.
 
Very interesting. On first glance the measurements sans distortion look good for a single driver. No treble resonance like many Fostex. But the distortion and that induced "warble" observed in listening then paint a much less attractive picture. I don't listen to my Fostex at a high volume, but have never observed those problems.
 
For less money you get a Revel M16; high end looks and superb sound quality. And my god this thing looks like pieces of particle board nailed together.
Thanks Amir
 
Reminds me of a small set of speakers I built using some 3” JBL in-dash speakers I had left over, and they kind of sounded ok, but the resonances and the distortion are indeed a killer. I remember them having a muddy sort of droning quality at higher volumes. Not exactly the paradigm of fidelity, and a stark reminder of why getting distortion and resonances in check matters so much. If the speaker is playing it’s own tune then the response doesnt really matter much at that point.
 
As far as Danny goes, I think one commenter in one of his YouTube videos said it best with “money makes people say the darnedest things.” Indeed it does. From his cable audibility reviews to his dismissive tone of other objective reviewers.
 
Last edited:
To be fair it only uses a tiny 3" full range driver. If all you want to do is listen at low volume, and have a really small room, it'll do fine. If your definition of hifi requires the ability to go loud and have lots of bass then that will create a skew against speakers like this and it's happened several times before in Amir's subjective reviews. If you can't go loud with bass he doesn't like it.

I mean high-pass it at 120Hz add a subwoofer and it'd do a lot better.
 
To be fair it only uses a tiny 3" full range driver. If all you want to do is listen at low volume, and have a really small room, it'll do fine. If your definition of hifi requires the ability to go loud and have lots of bass then that will create a skew against speakers like this and it's happened several times before in Amir's subjective reviews. If you can't go loud with bass he doesn't like it.

I mean high-pass it at 120Hz add a subwoofer and it'd do a lot better.
I would say it’s more along the lines of the speaker being able to behave within its passband. Its easy to tell a good speaker even if it doesn’t have much bass. It just sounds like it needs a sub since the response rolls off fairly early. This thing generates quite a lot of distortion across its response range.
 
This is a review and detailed measurements of the GR Research "Little Giant Killer" (LGK) 2.0 bookshelf speaker. It comes in various forms from a kit ($313) to fully finished pair ($1,038). Our DIY expert @Rick Sykora built my sample using the flatpack ($100):
View attachment 211673
Rick had to do the round over on the two edges per company recommendation as the flatpack is supplied with sharp edges. The build is superb and solid. Here is the back with the famous "tube connectors" and slot port:
View attachment 211674

Internal structure is complex due to that port so unless you are a serious woodworker, you need to get the flatpack.

The main driver is a tiny "full range" 3 inch unit. This allowed the cabinet to be small which I appreciated. Then again, there are plenty of active speakers which are the same size. Here is a comparison to the Neumann KH80DSP which sells for the same cost:
View attachment 211675

They are almost the same depth as well. Of course, the Neumann comes with built-in amplifier and DSP which the GLK 2.0 lacks.

Subjective claims in company video claims sound that is smooth and beats many larger speakers (hence the name).

You may be wondering by now why the title has the word "joke" in it. I reached out to company asking for a sample for review. Company owner, Danny Ritchie answered me saying he had no interest in providing me one. And that he and others think my reviews are a joke because I don't know how to listen to a speaker, don't have the right treated room, etc. On measurements he said he already provides them so nobody needs more information. I explained to him why his measurements are insufficient and again he repeated that nothing more is needed and that measurements like distortion are useless.

Anyway, we were then forced to purchase a pair for testing.

Measurements that you are about to see were performed using the Klippel Near-field Scanner (NFS). This is a robotic measurement system that analyzes the speaker all around and is able (using advanced mathematics and dual scan) to subtract room reflections (so where I measure it doesn't matter). It also measures the speaker at close distance ("near-field") which sharply reduces the impact of room noise. Both of these factors enable testing in ordinary rooms yet results that can be more accurate than an anechoic chamber. In a nutshell, the measurements show the actual sound coming out of the speaker independent of the room.

Reference axis is approximately the center of the tweeter.

GR Research LGK 2.0 Measurements
As usual we start with our "spin" graph:

View attachment 211676

At first this looks radically different than what the company shows:

View attachment 211687
I have circled some of the reasons the two graphs look different. Danny is using improper and heavy filtering (1/3 octave) for his measurements. This gets rid of the myriad of variations you see in my graph. He also uses gated response to get rid of room reflections which in the process removes any resolution below a few hundred Hertz. This is why his graph starts at 200 Hz rather than 20 Hz.

Rick was kind enough to post process mine to his resolution and chart dimensions and correlation was good.

Back to the spin, on-axis response look fairly flat. There is a notch where I think his baffle step loss filter is but is narrow so likely not audible. Overall, a good showing there.

Near-field response shows cabinet/port resonance interference:
View attachment 211678


The single driver is too large compared to a typical tweeter. This means that the sound starts to focus/beam as frequencies go up. This shows up in a number of measurements starting from early reflections in the form of high frequency loss:
View attachment 211679

Predicted in-room response (far field) as a result shows similar droop:
View attachment 211680

Still, this is a reasonable response.

Back to beaming, we see it clearly in the beam width and directivity plots:
View attachment 211681


View attachment 211682
The picture is nearly the same vertically due to use of a single driver:
View attachment 211683

So has the company cheated the laws of physics? Well, not quite. Let's look at distortion at 86 dBSPL:
View attachment 211684

Note: both left and right at the same graph at 86 dBSPL. Not 96 dB. Right one simply zooms out to show that distortion has risen to nearly 100%! Now, some of that is beyond the reach of the speaker but looking at the left graph we see that massive distortion reaches out to nearly 500 Hz. Second harmonic of that lands at 1 kHz where our hearing starts to become very sensitive. So bass distortion is likely quite audible.

Worried that it could not handle 96 dBSPL, I lowered the level to 90 dBSPL and ran the distortion test again:

View attachment 211685

Near the start of the sweep, speaker started to crackle which then went away above that frequency. Clearly it can't handle that but even 86 dBSPL is poor as I showed earlier.

Impedance is higher than average for the class which is good:
View attachment 211686

Something strange is going on as far as resonances though for the graph to become rough below 200 Hz. My measurements here are quite high resolution compared to what others run so this may not be visible in other people's tests.

Company shows a CSD/waterfall which looks clean. Mine does not:
View attachment 211688

Every peak in frequency response will cause time domain ringing which my display clear shows. I can however just change one number and get what the company shows:
View attachment 211689

Here is the company measurement:
csd.jpg


What did I change? I moved up the bottom of the graph 4 dBSPL! This is why I say be careful with waterfall displays. It is so easy to lie with them. Or misuse them (intentionally or not).

Finally, here is the step response for fans of that:

View attachment 211690

For those of you who stop here and not read my subjective tests, I highly suggest that you make an exception and read on!

GR Research LGK 2.0 Listening Tests

I used my RME ADI-2 DAC as the source to drive a Topping PA5 which in turn powered the LGK 2.0. Listening setup was near-field.

By this time, I actually expected the speaker to sound good (based on spin data). Boy was that not the case. At any listening level above faint music, there would be this nasty warbling sound to vocals which would progressively get worse with volume. I am talking about way below the point where it crackles. The only time this was not super audible was if there was no bass at all. My female tracks are not bass heavy but the bit they had, caused this speaker distort so badly that it was unlistenable. I have tested over 200 speakers and never heard a speaker with such poor response.

By chance I had my desk lamp above it so could easily see the shadow of the driver below the cabinet. As soon as I would see any vibration in that shadow (due to the cone moving), the game was over. And again, this happened at very modest volumes with me sitting just 3 feet/1 meter away from the speaker!

Suspect bass being the problem, I took out the EQ tool and put in a sharp high pass:
View attachment 211691

This managed to get rid of significant amount of that warbling effect. But then there was so little bass that one was left thinking the sound was just too thin. That aside though, the tonality now shone through and I had little to complain about in that department. I did put a bit of the boost where that notch is and thought it improved the response subtly. To aid more in power handling I also pulled down that bass hump. This helped a bit more but now I had so little bass.

With the EQ in place, I could play at modest levels but sound was boring, and distortion still present. Unless you were playing something that as instrumental/higher in frequency range, nothing sounded clean and without distortion.

Conclusions
Ah, little giant killers... who doesn't want to see an underdog win? Put in a spokesman in front of the camera that tells the nice story and you just want to believe it. I know I believed it a lot more than what I experienced with the speaker. Yes, the tonality is good overall. No, you can't take a midrange+tweeter driver and pretend it can play bass at the same time. It simply cannot. How on earth anyone can say this speaker is usable let alone high-fi is beyond me.

Is Danny this oblivious to distortion? This is not subtle stuff folks. Measurements show extreme amount of distortion and listening tests easily bring out the same. And of course physics solidly predicts it as well.

There is a reason my acoustic measurements from day one have included distortion measurements. And why I listen for dynamic behavior in my listening tests. Hi-fi is about enjoyment and there, you want to have some volume. The LGK 2.0 simply cannot go there. The driver seems to be designed for a boombox or something with matching electronics to control what it can or cannot do. Sticking it in a box and calling it great is one of the biggest farces I have seen in audio business!

I know some may say I am biased to not like GR Research stuff. But I have given positive marks to another speaker kit of his. Importantly, I back my opinion with measurements and science/engineering of the design, not empty boasting. All the arrows point to the same thing. This speaker is simply a bad idea. Had the company spent time measuring distortion and getting feedback from others with better hearing, they would have no doubt gotten the feedback that the design was not feasible.

Yes, the tonality is good but without dynamics of any nature, it is a useless attempt.

For the same cost as these finished, you have tons and tons of choices of speakers including the aforementioned Neumann which runs over this speaker as if it is not there. I don't see the angle of "DIY" here either. Gluing a flatpack is not going to give you much satisfaction when the finished performance is this horrid. If you want to do that, build a larger speaker with proper design. This dog simply don't hunt.

Needless to say, I can't recommend the GR Research LGK 2.0. As I noted, it is the worse speaker I have heard.

-----------
As always, questions, comments, recommendations, etc. are welcome.

Any donations are much appreciated using: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/how-to-support-audio-science-review.8150/

Hi,


Here is my take on the EQ.


Please report your finding positive or negative!


The following EQs are “anechoic” EQs to get the speaker right before room integration. If you able to implement these EQs you must add EQ at LF for room integration, that is usually not optional… see hints there: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...helf-speaker-review.11144/page-26#post-800725


The raw data with corrected ER and PIR:

Score no EQ: 3.6
With Sub: 6.6

GR Research LGK 2 No EQ Spinorama.png


Spinorama with no EQ:
  • As a fun project, if it were cheap that would be OK but at this price...
Directivity:
Better stay at Driver height
Horizontally, better toe-in the speakers by 10deg and have the axis crossing in front of the listening location, might help dosing the upper range.
GR Research LGK 2 2D surface Directivity Contour Only Data.png
GR Research LGK 2 LW Better data.png



EQ design:

I have generated one EQ. The APO config file is attached.

  • The EQs are designed in the context of regular stereo use i.e. domestic environment, no warranty is provided for a near field use in a studio environment although the LW might be better suited for this purpose.
  • In near field the score might may accurate
Score EQ Amirm: 3.4
with sub: 6.6

Score EQ Score: 4.7
with sub: 7.6

GR Research LGK 2 EQ Design.png


Code:
GR Research LGK 2 APO EQ Score 96000Hz
June092022-114633

Preamp: -0.7 dB

Filter 1: ON HPQ Fc 53.07,    0.00,    0.91
Filter 2: ON PK Fc 124.86,    -2.99,    1.64
Filter 3: ON PK Fc 2365.35,    -2.64,    0.39
Filter 4: ON PK Fc 1647.49,    3.09,    5.07

Spinorama EQ Amirm
GR Research LGK 2 Amirm EQ Spinorama.png


Spinorama EQ Score
GR Research LGK 2 Score EQ Spinorama.png


Zoom PIR-LW-ON
GR Research LGK 2 Zoom.png


Regression - Tonal
GR Research LGK 2 Regression - Tonal.png


Radar no EQ vs EQ score
Large improvements
GR Research LGK 2 Radar.png


The rest of the plots is attached.
 

Attachments

  • GR Research LGK 2 2D surface Directivity Contour Data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 2D surface Directivity Contour Data.png
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  • GR Research LGK 2 3D surface Vertical Directivity Data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 3D surface Vertical Directivity Data.png
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  • GR Research LGK 2 3D surface Horizontal Directivity Data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 3D surface Horizontal Directivity Data.png
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  • GR Research LGK 2 Normalized Directivity data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 Normalized Directivity data.png
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  • GR Research LGK 2 APO EQ Score 96000Hz.txt
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  • GR Research LGK 2 Reflexion data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 Reflexion data.png
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  • GR Research LGK 2 LW data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 LW data.png
    134.2 KB · Views: 99
  • GR Research LGK 2 Raw Directivity data.png
    GR Research LGK 2 Raw Directivity data.png
    434.4 KB · Views: 97
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