Given a wide baffle width of 500mm, the signal coming from the back of the panel travels an additional distance of 250mm and arrives at approximately 0.73ms on the horizontal plane at ear level, longer for other planes. For a 250mm baffle, the time is reduced to half.
If we don't use a rear tweeter, this would only happen to the mid-bass drivers. For a 6.5", it would happen only below about 800Hz. Perhaps in that case, the delayed sound does not cause much problem. But still, it may damage the original sound.
I am wondering if this "delayed" sound causes the loss of image, or the backwaves bouncing off the rear walls cause it. Or perhaps, the "delayed" sound gives the OB characteristics, that the sound is more open and live?
In any case, I do suspect that narrow baffle would sound better than wide baffle, if other parameters are the same.
In reality, my NaO speakers sound really superb. I have definitely no complain about its imaging capability although I have not compared it side by side to other high-end monopole speakers. In fact, I prefer the overall sound quality of the NaO over any other speakers I have listened to, including many high-end speakers with insane price tages.
If I have to split the hair and pick something, I would say that I suspect dipole speakers might have higher diffraction magnitude than closed box conterparts. I measured a bump of 3dB on axis at 2kHz, then turned the panel less than 15 degree, and that bump was completely gone. There were some long discussions on whether dipole speakers reduce or increase the diffraction on the diyAudio forum in the Beyond the Ariel thread, but the result was not conclusive.
My new pair of speakers are open back dampped, angled U-frame and I will start working on them next week. I hope the stuffed (with high quality sheep wool) U-frame would get rid of the "boxed" sound so that they sound the "same" as a flat baffle, which should retain the OB sound, while the backwaves are significantly dampped to reduce the "delayed sound", and a large curve at the front baffle of 75mm radius would reduce the diffraction effect to the minimum.
Regards,
Bill