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In Reply to: RE: What attributes make a driver a good match for a SET? posted by claudej1@aol.com on May 20, 2017 at 09:13:14
The loudspeaker cabinet.
This part is really a problematic component. It plays its very important role in
separating the sound
from front
and backside of the units.
Any attempt to mix them, no
matter how, will result in wrong reproduction.
Follow Ups:
As far as I can see, the "expert by self proclamation and publication," to whom, you bow, is merely parroting the design philosophy of B&W, whose many designers have come up with clever ways to maximize their custom moving coil driver performance in various sealed/ported box configurations, including their "Matrix" box stiffening methods, which are technically sound......no pun intended.
Then you use this unpublished parrot writing whose author did not withstand the peer reviewed aspect of the Audio Engineering Society as a basis to criticize something that has been BUILT successfully by others who have, obviously, a broader band of knowledge regarding all speaker types, including the B&W offerings, which are more space heater than loudspeakers with their limited dynamic range and flammability when a 30 db watt amplifier is employed in an attempt to derive a single acoustic watt of output without gross IM distortion or burning the house down.
On the cheap AN FR.
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