Thanks for the review. I recently sent a friend to buy a SVS subwoofer and he loves the subwoofer (it's got that pretty gloss finish too), but also really enjoyed the buying experience.
I'm curious about the cone construction. Anyone from SVS ever surf the board?
It sounds like they are doing something called visco-elastic dampening by using paper with a glass-fibre matrix on top. Basically you take two materials that have a modulus of elasticity (how much a material 'stretches' under load) about a one order of magnitude apart, and it can tame the fundamental frequencies of the cone (or bridge, or boat, etc). To do this, often means adding mass (elasticity and density have a pretty strong correlation), which is bad for speaker sensitivity... so paper and FRP make sense...
Young's modulus/modulus of elasticity for paper varies depending on type, but, generally its in the range of 1-2GPa. Fiberglass can easily be in the range of 10-20GPa, which is perfect. Again, both greatly depend on type of fibers, but, that's enough for just a hunch of why they might layer paper with FRP on top: to be able to use viscoelastic dampening without killing sensitivity.
The reason to do that is if the fundamental frequencies get excited, it will cause a humming and really pull away from the quality of the sound. Since the voices sounded life-like, they seem to have got this figured out!
Another benefit of laying FRP on top is to add thickness (if you double your thickness, you quadruple the stiffness).
Main thing when it comes to engineering and material selection, is its less about the actual material and more about the application. Sometimes the most expensive material, isn't the best for the job. So, if it's paper, doesn't mean it's bad.
Looks like cool speakers!!