That's great for classical but if someone listens to a wide variety of music, that will be too well-damped. Not that there's anything wrong with listening to only one style but .5 is pretty dry-sounding for a lot of music.
You raise an interesting topic. First I should point out, that I did recommend Guiria to modify the enclosure to a Qt of 0.7.
However the question of highly damped speakers is an interesting, and I agree still a controversy in speaker design. So you have given me an introduction to giving my views.
I personally think the bass is not accurate in speakers that are not critically damped. That does not mean that all critically damped speakers sound right.
However the piano, bass strings, tymps and the bass pipes of the organ never sound quite right to me in speakers that are not critically damped.
What I will say is that a critically damped speaker leaves the rest of the speaker stark naked. In other words other faults will stick out like a sore thumb. So the spreading bass does provide a degree of cover for other ills. No where in the design is this more true than in the area of step/diffraction compensation. It has to be right on the money, and I believe requires an active approach. That is primarily why I developed such a unique approach to bass management and diffraction compensation.
The other issue, is that I have no doubt that highly damped speakers are much less likely to excite room modes as vigorously as resonant designs.
The more controversial issue is does the design matter. In other words is a critically damped sealed enclosure equivalent to a TL. My view is an unequivocal no. However I can't tell you with any certainty why.
Over the years I have rubbed shoulders a lot with pipe organ builders. They all firmly hold to a concept foreign to acoustic engineers. The concept is the encircling nature of the sound emitted by pipes. What they mean is that for a guitar, for instance, the sound drops quickly as you move away from it. However even the softest, quiet organ pipe is heard pretty much at the same level where ever you are in the church. An electric organ does not do this. I have confirmed this myself many times.
This holds true in this space here. The bass is highly uniform through out the room, even though there is no special acoustic treatment.
Now it is well known that I listen, apart from movies, to classical music almost exclusively.
However visitors have commented that the quality of the bass really sets this system apart from other systems they have heard, above all other parameters.
There is a retired mix engineer near here who has mixed for many of the famous. He brings all sorts of offerings here. One of his cuts have a couple of tuned guitars to produce a very low beat frequency, a la, the Tibetan monks. He just loves it. So this highly damped system seems to please across musical genres.
Anyhow you don't live that far away, once the summer lake season gets into high gear, you should treat yourself to a little R & R and bring any selections you wish. I think you would have an interesting time.