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I'm beginning to think you are a bit loopy in your campaign against Spatial Audio. Paudio was used by Danny Richie in his Super V etc models. That has nothing to do with Spatial Audio. I have yet to hear you say you have listened to the Spatials.
PDR,With all due respect, no, not exactly and the devil is in the details.Watch this video: https://vimeo.com/162323536And I asked Clayton directly and this is what he said:There is a machined aluminum transition lens at the base of the cone to couple the compression driver wavefront to the cone.This detail is terribly important. This is what gives the design the unique narrow horizontal directivity of 80 degrees. Other open baffle coaxial designs cannot claim this.
Yes, of course, many people would be interested in this upgrade as well. However since that is a different subject from the whole point of this thread, can't we agree that it would be better to start a new thread dedicated to that subject, which is an entirely different matter than the subject of this thread?
By comparison the Trio 15 has instrument placement on a vast, open stage that is deep and wide and airy
So, imo... full range/ob can sound excellent but the "open stage" created is the effect of room reflections. While this can sound pleasing the side effect is greater perception of the listening room acoustics vs the acoustics and spatial cues in the recording. I have found full range/ob sounds much better to me when the back wave is attenuated quite a bit... or eliminated entirely. Even if the back wave is eliminated you still have a speaker that has much wider dispersion pattern throughout the midrange vs a waveguide speaker, which makes room acoustics more important and lets the room potentially get in the way to a larger degree. Waveguides/horns eliminate most first reflection issues and take the room out of the equation to a greater degree. This makes the electronics, cables and AC power even more critical because if it doesn't have very high resolution the spatial cues in the recording will get buried in the noise floor or smoothed out by warm-sounding distortion. TBH, most systems are not up to this task, even big $ systems. OTOH, if you do have a system that can reproduce fine detail it makes it easier to achieve a 3-D, immersive soundstage without room acoustics getting in the way. This is assuming a recording with this information present of course. I'm not saying you can't achieve a 3-D immersive soundstage to some degree with a fullrange/ob speaker, just that it's more difficult as the room is a much larger factor vs waveguide speakers and a great majority of the time you won't be able to achieve as good of a soundstage vs a waveguide speaker.