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....No single driver full ranges thou.dave
There are criteria for the competition, and I'm quite sure single driver speakers just aren't going to be competitive. I think I saw a pair in the background of one picture, and I believe all types are welcome, but they wouldn't be able to win the contest.
More likely PE wants to sell crossover parts
More likely PE wants to sell crossover parts also.
Why can't speakers just be small wireless balls that we place on shelves? UGH
Physics.
Did headphones while in college dorms - perfect there but in-room loudspeakers, even with all the challenges, are superior in theory and can be in practice.
Well, not according to everyone railing against rectangular boxes. 😅 I've had all types of boxes and panels except single driver and they all have their advantages. I'll be waiting for that perfect speaker with flat 20hz-20khz response, 0% distortion, totally non reactive load, unfettered dispersion, for $29.95 at Walmart. Until then we'll be bargaining with physics and available funding.
According to the laws of physics, size matters. The enclosure for the perfect speaker would be HUGE! A high-end, but still entry-level design would be dual 15" powered woofers, a 12-inch midrange, and a big-ass horn-loaded tweeter. If the enclosure is anything other than a rectangle, it will be double or triple the price, although primarily for aesthetics.
According to the laws of physics, size matters. The enclosure for the perfect speaker would be HUGE!
To get bass you need big.
The funny thing is that what you describe is almost exactly what I have in my upstairs system, the Spatial Audio X3's. Big horn loaded AMT tweeter. 12 inch paper midrange. 15 inch bass woofer. Just in an OB format instead of a box format. They make enough bass for me (strong to about 30hz), but if somebody wanted the bottom octave they could add a sub or 2.