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On my VR4JRs, they sound super inert and well braced with the standard rap, but with your ear up the cabinet they definitely "Toooonn"for about a second.I'm sure that some additional bracing/damping would, as WGH found, really improve the speaker.
Some like Wilson use composite materials that they claim are less resonant than even very thick MDF panels. It is hard to argue their point about other materials being potentially superior to MDF, however if you have checked their prices lately you definitely pay for these composites as well.
Why stainless steel? While it is possible to make a good enclosure out of MDF, stainless steel is vastly harder, stiffer and denser. In short the result is extremely low distortion, excellent bass and midrange tone with the absence of coloration.
Given the thickness of the stainless used there, and depending if there was any crossbracing, they would in fact not be stiffer than 3/4 MDF, and would be prone to ringing. The real benefit in this design would be the curved sides and rear of the enclosure on the backwave of the driver, also the minimal baffle diffraction outside of the enclosure at higher frequencies. But the high resonance of the sides would be detrimental unless the sides were damped with another material.
The interior was damped with 1/8" foam matting.
I beg to differ on 3/4" MDF being anywhere even remotely close as stiff as 10 gauge stainless steel.
Your assumptions are merely assumptions. You’d have far more credibility and the benefit of knowing what you are talking about if you had built them out of both materials.