Tech
Ruark Talisman-R Makes Its European Debut at High End Vienna 2026 and Brings the R710 With It
Back at AXPONA 2026, the Ruark Talisman-R was my second favorite loudspeaker of the entire show. Not my second favorite “affordable” loudspeaker. Not my second favorite “interesting British thing hiding in a room people should have visited.”
My second favorite. Period.
The short list included ATC, Quad, Opera, and DeVore Fidelity; and somehow the Ruark Talisman-R, expected to land under $2,000, was right there with them.
That should make a few far more expensive loudspeakers look over their shoulders.
At the time, Ruark was still keeping some of the details close to the vest. The Talisman-R was not expected to be available until September, and while the compact floorstander sounded far more finished than “forthcoming product” usually suggests, we still did not have the full technical picture.
Now we do.
The Talisman-R has made its European debut at High End Vienna 2026, and the timing is not accidental. Ruark has also launched the new R710 Music Console, the more powerful R-Series component we were told about in confidence at AXPONA — the one being developed specifically to give the Talisman-R the drive, control, and system simplicity it deserved.
That matters because the Talisman-R was already being demonstrated with the smaller R610 at AXPONA, and it did not sound underfed. It sounded bold, articulate, wide, and far more composed than its compact footprint suggested. The R710 changes the equation by bringing substantially more power and a more serious all-in-one platform to the party.
The original story was that Ruark had revived one of its important loudspeaker names and built something that looked like a lifestyle product but behaved like a proper hi-fi speaker. The Vienna story is sharper: Ruark now has the matching electronics to turn the Talisman-R into a complete system.
And not some sad beige “just add speakers” lifestyle rig that apologizes for existing.
The Talisman-R Specs Are Here, and the Little Brit Has Teeth
The new Talisman-R is a compact two-way floorstanding loudspeaker rated at 87 dB sensitivity, with a 6-ohm nominal impedance that dips to 3.8 ohms at 5kHz. Ruark recommends amplifiers between 50 and 250 watts, which makes the arrival of the R710 rather convenient.
The speaker uses a 27mm silk dome tweeter with a neodymium motor and a 17cm / 6.5-inch Ruark NS+ long-throw woofer with a treated fibre cone, 35mm two-layer copper voice coil, and Strontium ferrite motor. The crossover is set at 2.2kHz and uses an optimized second-order design with premium audio film capacitors and low-loss inductors.
Bass output is handled by a dual-flared tuned bass-reflex cabinet with decoupled baffle technology. Cabinet volume is 14.5 litres / 0.51 cubic feet, with a tuning frequency of 42Hz. Ruark specifies frequency response at 40Hz to 22kHz in a typical room, which is exactly the kind of number that made the AXPONA demo feel more convincing than its size suggested.
Physically, the Talisman-R is very living-room friendly for a floorstander: 850mm high, 210mm wide, and 250mm deep, or roughly 33.5 x 8.3 x 9.8 inches. Each speaker weighs 17.6kg / 38.8 pounds. That is substantial enough to feel serious, but not so heavy that you need a friend to help you move them.
Connections are via dual gold-plated 4mm multi-way binding posts for single-wire or bi-wire use, compatible with banana plugs, spades, or bare wire. The removable magnetic grille uses acoustically transparent fabric, and buyers can choose between a Fused Walnut veneer baffle with Charcoal cabinet and mottled fabric grille, or a Satin Charcoal lacquer baffle with matching Charcoal cabinet and grille.
Each speaker ships with a quick start guide, adjustable rubber coned feet, and adjustable carpet spikes.
The Bottom Line
The Talisman-R gives Ruark Audio a proper floorstanding loudspeaker again, while the R710 supplies the power, connectivity, and system simplicity to make it feel fully current in 2026.
The Talisman-R impressed me at AXPONA because it sounded like a speaker built by people who still understand tone, scale, and restraint. It did not chase fake detail. It did not need a room full of glowing monoblocks and emotional support cables to make its point. It just played music with confidence.
Expect a full review once Fidelity Imports gets a pair into our hands. If the Talisman-R lands near $2,000, it could prove to be one of the stronger high-end floorstanding speaker values of 2026. And based on what I heard at AXPONA, the Ruark should not be locked into Ruark electronics only; it sounded like a speaker that will respond well to a range of properly matched amplifiers.
For more information: ruarkaudio.com
You must be logged in to post a comment Login