French speaker maker Triangle has a knack for making affordable cabinets sound like they cost a lot more, and the new Solstice range looks set to continue that tradition. Launched on June 22, 2026 and available since this month, the three-strong lineup deliberately straddles two camps: people shopping for their very first hi-fi system, and seasoned listeners who want more out of their gear.
The common thread running through all three models is a brand-new 25mm horn-loaded tweeter. Horn loading is a classic trick for boosting efficiency and giving treble a more direct, focused delivery — and it gives the whole range its distinctive character.
At the top sits the Solstice 8, a three-way bass-reflex floorstander. Alongside that horn tweeter you get a 16cm midrange driver and a pair of 16cm concave-cone woofers handling the low end. Bandwidth stretches from 38Hz to 22kHz, with 130-watt RMS power handling, so it has the muscle to fill a decent-sized room. A pair will set you back US$2799 (£1999 / €1999).
If space or budget is tighter, the Solstice 3 standmounter covers the basics in a two-way bass-reflex enclosure. It mates the 25mm horn tweeter with a 16cm cellulose midrange driver, reaches 48Hz to 22kHz, and copes with 90-watt RMS. Expect to pay US$1349 (£999 / €999) per pair.
Rounding things out is the Solstice C3 center channel, aimed squarely at home-cinema duty. It’s a two-way design pairing the horn tweeter with two 16cm cellulose midrange drivers, and it comes in at US$750 (£579 / €575).
The logic here is easy to follow. Cellulose cones, horn tweeters and bass-reflex tuning are well-worn Triangle ingredients, and the shared driver complement across the trio means you can build out a coherent system one box at a time. Start with the Solstice 3 for stereo, add the C3 and a second pair down the line, and you’ve got a tonally matched surround setup.
- Solstice 8 — three-way floorstander, 38Hz–22kHz, 130W RMS, US$2799/pair
- Solstice 3 — two-way standmounter, 48Hz–22kHz, 90W RMS, US$1349/pair
- Solstice C3 — two-way center, US$750
It’s a smartly pitched range: approachable enough for the curious beginner, but with the kind of driver engineering that gives more demanding ears a reason to keep listening.