WmAx;530365 I listened to the 3.7 said:
very few[/I] people are capable of interpreting that data even if it's available to them. To do such requires extensive knowledge of how measurements are performed and to be knowledgeable of the credible perceptual research that correlates specific measurements with human perception/audibility.
-Chris
How do you know that the differences you heard b/w the Thiel and your "reference" were due only to cabinet resonance?? The drivers, cross-over, and cabinet shape (i.e., baffle) are all different too, correct?? Also, Thiel speakers are phase-coherent and time-aligned. How do you know that doesn't account for the difference??
Here again, you suggest that you can predict how accurate a speaker will sound based up on a small handful of measurements. ..How do you know that all such relevent measurements have already been developed?? People clearly hear differences b/w speakers that measure identically. Why??
So, recognizing that present day measurements likely fall short of quantifying all the nuances that differentialtes one speaker from another, why do you give such short shrift to actually listening?? ...To me, the Paradigms sounded more like the real music I'm used to listening too than the other speakers to which I listened. ..And I've listened (and played) a lot of live music in my life.
As for cabinet resonances, all that matters is that they are inaudible. ..Taking them from inaudible to non-measureable may not be worth the costs required to achieve. For a speaker built to sell at a given price point, a designer needs to spread costs across a bunch of pieces that make up the speaker - including cabinet, cross-over, cones, magnets, etc. etc.. The Paradigm Signature S8 v.2 retails for about US $7,000. ..Though definitely NOT an inexpensive speaker, it still is not a price-no-object design.
Though you've not seen measurements that relate to cabinet resonances, you did laud Paradigm for the fantantic drivers in the S8 v. 2., including the Be tweeter (you remarked it's one of the best you've seen meausured). Well, assuming that they didn't develop the drivers and tweeter by accident, it's not such a stretch to think that qualified engineers that developed these have given similar consideration to cabinet design and, as such, they've taken care to reduce cabinet resonances to the point of being inaudible. ..Your position seems to be that until you've seen evidence to the contrary, you're going to assume that the cabinet likely sucks. Why?