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And... Like Joe Cocker says... You can leave the grill on, please... That's the Avalon way..!Imperial
Real world sound sources do not produce out of phase front and rear sound waves, therefore dipoles (planars or open baffles for example) cannot be "The Most Realistic."
No unamplified musical source is produced across a tall source, therefore arrays are not "The Most Realistic."
Nearly all unamplified musical sources are "point sources," therefore all drivers should be in close proximity.
Real world sounds aren't colored by grills/enclosures.
Real world sources can be extremely dynamic and very loud. More efficient speakers tend to score better on these counts.
Real world sources do not change phase or sonic characteristics as frequency changes, therefore the less damaging the crossover and the fewer crossovers/drivers used the better.
JLM,A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Your understanding and interpretation of physics, sound propagation and all things speakers is mediocre at best. You consistently persist to repeat things, even after your been proven wrong. I don't get it. You aren't interested in expanding your knowledge, just validating the (inaccurate conclusions) you've drawn.Your latest post here only highlights your stubbornness. It's full of so many inaccuracies it's not even funny, and is basically meaningless to the discussion of loudspeaker performance.Cheers
I have no problem with JLM's post at all. He has clearly stated his reasoning process for the priorities he has regarding audio reproduction. He has applied his criteria to his loudspeaker purchasing decisions and owns a single driver loudspeaker system. I think the information he has given us is valuable because it tells us what he considers important in music reproduction. What I would be interested in knowing is what aspect of single driver performance he feels could be improved upon. In other words whats missing and needs to be added to broaden the appeal of single driver speaker systems. Scotty
... do you mean Randy Newman ("you can leave your hat on")?