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I'm skeptical, especially about the 16 Hz piece, but after living with Sonos for a year quite happily as our whole-house system, I know that amazing things can be done with class D amps and cleverly designed drivers.
I haven't looked closely enough yet, but is the center driver a tweeter or a full range?
It hasn't been long (weeks?) since I found a thread on another site where folks were discussing the idea of using vacuum to fool drivers into 'thinking' the cabinet space was larger than the dimensions would suggest. Don't recall which site it was, but everyone agreed it was a great idea, but everyone also bemoaned the difficulty (and likely expense) of maintaining that vacuum seal.
From the third entry "Once the music started, this system was by far the most telling in terms of performance. Although they were playing music unfamiliar to me, I was immediately struck by how solid and tangible the center vocal image was -- as rock solid and tangible as I've heard from the very best stereo system. The sense of space was also exceptional, which was likely due to the Phantom's excellent dispersion capabilities, but also because of the very deep bass it's capable of -- speakers that reach down toward 20Hz almost always recreate a greater sense of space than speakers that stop an octave or two above. Then there was the superb clarity and the complete lack of annoying, irritating distortion artifacts. Even at high volume levels, the speakers sounded as clean as the company's amps. So if you've ever heard their amps, then that should definitely pique your interest about looking into either one."
BTW, is the price listed for one or two?
This might be a crazy idea, but has anyone here organized a group co-buy of equipment to audition amongst the co-investors? Let's say 10 folks chip in 1/10 of the $$ for a unit (or 2). Then, once each partner has had his/her turn, sell the unit to whomever wants it? Sure, I know there can be all sorts of problems with this, but surely there are enough veteran 'crazy audiophools' to try such a scheme(?). Sorry, gang. It must be the holiday spirit that has gotten into me. I'll get back to my usual self lickity split.
So after reading the links and white paper, I honestly see no revolution here. It appears to be nothing more than a long stroke, very low sensitivity driver with a TON of EQ applied to let it go low in a small enclosure.