Yes, I know--which means you don't have to remind me--that normally, this plea is 99% likely to fall on deaf ears, and even here, it may be 80% likely to be ignored. But I have to try. You see, I have a pressing hi-fi problem...a high-end handicap: I don't like loudspeakers with holes in them.
My ear/brain is sensitive to bass for some reason. I can hear standing waves, and I'm almost allergic to room overloading. Bass reflex speakers have always sounded wrong to me...or, more accurately, they sound anywhere from "almost just fine" to intolerably flabby and undifferentiated. What they often sound like to me is, "one note with an extra note." I live with 'em. I have to. But I don't love 'em.
Time was, the commercial speaker market was littered with actual acoustic-suspension designs. Time no more! Almost nobody makes them now. The last manufacturer I was aware of that was devoted to sealed box designs was Hales, but my guess is that Mr. Hales had ruined his upper-frequency hearing listening to rock and roll, because Hales speakers (the lesser ones I heard, anyway) were characterized by deliciously perfect bass and zingy, overbright, tipped-up treble. They're out of business now anyway. Another sealed design I know about is the old ACI Opal (at one time available as a kit!), and I'm on the lookout to hear a pair of those if the opportunity ever presents.
Meanwhile, I go on questing....
I originally "discovered" GR Research because the A/V-3S is one of the very few sealed-box speakers on the market. Of course for 2-channel music-listening it's not close enough to full range, which gives rise to a host of other problems that I should be able to cope with, but so far just, er, haven't.
So anyway, with the advent (sigh...) of the M-165X woofer, presumably Mr. R. is working on some new designs. Enter my hopefully timely plea: is there any possibility...please...pretty please...that just ONE, eventually, could be a more-or-less full-range actual true sealed-box design?
My perfect speaker would be a simple thing: anechoic -3dB point of 42 Hz or lower, sealed rectangular box, narrow baffle i.e., good imaging) and a conventional silk tweeter (or anyway not a metal one, or not a metal-sounding one); 8 ohms nominal impedance, 5 or 6 minimum, and 90 or better dB/w/m efficiency. (All of these parameters I've settled on over years of listening to hundreds and hundreds of speaker types.) One or two woofers, doesn't matter. Floorstander or stand-mounted, doesn't matter. Just no #$@! holes....
Simple, but elusive. Believe me, I know I am in the minority. I know this is probably another tilt at a windmill. But I have to try. "Don't ask and ye shall not receive." You understand.