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There's no real difference in the driver integration per se from an engineering standpoint-- probably just a difference in the inherent characteristics of the drivers, and perhaps differences due to the radiation pattern of an MTM vs. an MT.
Please keep us posted.
In any event, I'm having a house guest this weekend who's bringing a pair of 1801's I built for him several years ago. They use the W18 and the 0W1. I'll be able to compare it with the towers using my volume compensated A-B switch box. If the difference is in the woofer, I should be able to hear it. I'll give you my candid opinion.
I didn't really hear more detail out of the 1801's.
And I didn't hear a wider soundstage out of the MTM's. If anything, the 1801's seemed to throw a little wider image, but that could easily be the hotter tweeter setting. What I did hear was a greater sense of focus and depth to the soundstage with the MTM's. When you sit exactly in the middle, everything locks in like a vice. My guess is that the MTM radiation pattern is partially responsible, with a lower level of floor and ceiling delayed reflections in the critical upper midrange.
In the deep bass department, the MTM's could take more power below 40 Hz and didn't suffer from port noise, but in normal use I'm not sure there would be a big difference in bass.
Well, if they basically outperform the Ellis 1801s, even if maybe only slightly, then for $1500 they sound like an incredible deal!!!
I expect they'll sell like pancakes.
Hi--could you clarify this a little. I'm not quite sure where we might be disagreeing. Or how the crossover network comment applies. Both speakers use a 4th order acoustic low pass (and both are very simple and at the same frequency), so the resulting phase shift shouldn't have any differential impact on the sound of the two speakers.