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I have decided to post this because so few speakers now are sealed. The majority of the market is ported in some way. ACI,ATC, AR and AFAIK Duntech was/are sealed systems. I think sealed offers accuracy, detail and speed advantages over ported. But this is not about sealed vs ported, as I have heard good examples of both.Does anyone have information about 80's and 90's AR speakers? The sealed models from the mid 80's up to the TSW [Titanium Solid Wood] series especially.Thanks and cheers.
Thanks for the reply!I have an additional "suspicion" if you want to call it that.I feel that it is possible that when a driver becomes highly efficient [IE ported/eminence] that is damps too quickly. That means, I feel the most detailed drivers/speakers seem to invariably the least efficient.I have heard horns of all kinds, and while not to my taste, I never found any of them as revealing as sealed/less efficient designs. [The good one that is]. they have ...
Do the AR110 and 210's count? These were 2-way bookshelves I bought at Circuit City many years ago. The 110 had a 6.5" driver and the 210 had an 8". I would not say they were warm, though. Kind of sterile and possibly harsh. However, they held together exceptionally well at extreme volumes. I had them connected to an Onkyo integrated amp... and I had that same HK 6550 as well. These were replaced by DCM Timeframe's.... which were ported dipole's... different story there.They can be used on a vari ...
That least efficient are the most detailed is (or was) a very popular thesis in Britain. I don't know that it ever was. In the 70's when hifi really got going, the BBC developed the ls/35a and Kef. They were designed to replicate the polar pickup response of a microphone, in reverse. The subsequent designs became the "BBC sound". A lot of it was the crossover design with a voicing in mind. I cannot explain B&W , I have never been a fan. But there is no longer a typical "British" voicing. ATC, PMC, Tannoy and others are more neutral all the time. I just don't believe you are going to see a mass market here for klipsch anytime soon. I always suspected this was launched by manufacturers of inefficient speakers who couldn't do efficient and needed some rationale to whitewahs their own failings. Again, I believe it is a deign aspect, not a limit. Tannoy has not been inefficient. I don't think Brits in general care for horn speakers like Klipsch or in-your-face hard metal sounds. My humble old Kef 103.2 could do quite a lot, given that my flat is solid concrete and brick. I mean floors, walls , ceilings, everything. A set of klipsch, JBL or other over-efficient design would not work as well. There is a serious limit on SPL and a large amount of "shoutiness" I don't think there's any direct link between ...
There may be, I am still not convinced there isn't. Not until I hear a horn system that is as seamless, uncoloured and non shouty as other designs. BTW: the 18k JBL horn system is again, a horn. If you have a lot of space, and treatment you might like them. If you are not a horn fan, they still sound like horns, albiet not with the ferocious pain of something like klipsch.
I would have to say that you should give a listen to some the top horn speakers out there before completely writing them off. I'm not a fan of horn speakers, but must say I was impressed by my very brief listen of the JBL K2-S9800WG's ($27K). I have also been told that the Avantgarde speakers do not have the typical "horn-y" sound. If you get a chance to audition them, be aware that the Duo's and Trio's are supposed to need a fair amount of room for proper convergence of the drivers.