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Are single driver speakers limited to small groups/ensembles at moderate sound levels?
I've read glowing reports and reviews of single driver speakers for playing small combo jazz, chamber music, etc. Any comments on the suitability of single driver speakers that can handle gracefully and play musically Romantic classical symphonies at the sound level they require/demand? Opera? Choral works?
Honestly most single driver designs are best suited for small ensembles, but a few can do symphonies/non deep organ chorals, with various qualifiers:1.) How deep do you want the bass to go? (The vast majority are bass limited.)2.) How loud do you want to listen? (Most have limited Xmax, so are power input/loudness output limited if they do bass.)3.) How big is the room you're listening in? (Hard to generate a big sound in a small room, and a big room just makes it harder to play loud.)Note that even two or three way designs struggle with symphonic reproduction (organ can go down to 16 Hz, piano to 32 Hz; peak sound pressure for symphonic levels is 105 dB; really big rooms can lose 6 dB or more from the rated speaker efficiency). So with average efficiency speakers, say 88 dB/w/m, in a large room you'd need speakers capable of 16 Hz and able to handle 200 watts per channel.Single driver design fans with large symphonic or choral goals in mind usually have to compromise the single driver ideal and run their amps directly into multiple subwoofers that crossover to the single driver main speakers, or give up the deep bass/ultimate loudness.
The possible drawback of some dynamic compression and limitation to the kind of music played seemed off-putting.
That was a concern of mine too while researching the Omega offering. What was I giving up (with Louis' RS5 design) in regard to mid to sometimes higher SPL presentations? Turns out [in my listening environment]...nothing. These drivers shockingly deliver much higher sound levels than anticipated. So for me there is no drawback. Give Louis call, he can recommended a speaker design that could very well work for you.
FullRangeMan, you stated above..."No prob if you use pro audio FR drivers and they are very affordable."Are there any pro audio FR drivers/designs that actually sound generally acceptable to most music? Thanks!