DT speakers have decent sound quality by most accounts, but they are notorious for fudging their specifications.
They appear not to know the first thing about bass tuning and how ported and ABR enclosures work.
Take a look at this from Home theater review.
"The ProMonitor 1000 has a 1" pure-aluminum dome tweeter, and below it a 5.25" BDSS driver. Set into the top panel is a 5.25" pressure-coupled passive radiator. According to DefTech, the radiator moves out when the BDSS driver moves in, effectively doubling the radiating area and resulting in better bass response. DefTech claims the ProMonitor goes down to 42Hz, unusually low for an enclosure that measures only 10.9"H x 6.25"W x 6.5"D, though they don’t specify how many dB down the speaker’s output is at 42Hz."
That is not what should happen at all, and would result is bass cancellation and very poor output.
The whole point of designing a tuned system is that there IS phase inversion, such that the phase from the rear of the cone is inverted at tuning.
In a ported enclosure the port output should be IN PHASE with the front of the woofer cone.
Likewise an ABR should be in phase with with the front of the woofer cone, and ABSOLUTELY NOT move in the opposite direction!
One thing I do know is that Audyssey is really good at setting the correct crossover point.
If what Def Tech says about those speakers is correct I would expect rapidly falling output below 200 HZ, and falling at 36 db per octave to boot.
The shear quantity of incompetently designed junk out there just astounds me.[/Quote][/Quote]