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The comparisons in the review to the $22,000 Acoustic Zen Crescendo Mk2 and $24,300 YG Acoustics Carmel 2 were surprising.
By: Terry London, March 20, 2017Because of my respect for Alexander's brilliance as a designer, I was quite intrigued and excited to see what his creative mind had come up with. I asked him if he would explain, in laymen terms, what the differences are in his new approach compared with other speaker designs. His response was, "I discerned that, when source masses (i.e., the musical instrument, orchestra, or human voice) and speaker masses do not align correctly, the overtones and harmonic content contained within the source must be skewed, diminished, damped, and lowered in the output in relation to the (algorithm) of the fundamental tone(s) contained in different musical instruments. Live music contains energy, electricity, and a dynamic component that loudspeakers have missed replicating because they are not based on the algorithms that support the fundamental harmonic content/structure of the instruments they are reproducing."
Eric Alexander of Tekton is certainly one of the most interesting speaker designers out there.
Yet, from all reports I've seen his speakers sound really good.
One thing that puzzles me is the description of the Double Impact as a 4 way speaker. I'm guessing that one of the tweeters has a different crossover frequency