Let me start off by saying, nothing I'm about to say is meant with malice. Merely making a few counter points to things you have said. So please, knives and daggers down
My biggest issue with your points thus far are that you are jumping from point to point to point without every really backing up any of them. Then the statement above is a bit ambiguous at best.
I'm too lazy to go back and quote every single thing I want to bring up so I'm going to paraphrase. Please correct me if I've made a mess of anything.
You bring up a ton of examples about the design process and how certain speaker designers spent countless years and effort honing their respective designs. However, this the design process, not the process of literally assembling a speaker. Yes it would be extremely difficult for a DIY'er to start from scratch and build a speaker that can compete with the very best on their own. That's a long and arduous process that can take years of experimenting. In that sense I kind of agree with you. However, you then take that point and extrapolate to other areas that IMHO do not apply this, your original point.
Next you (and I mean this is the nicest of ways) sort of meandered into the materials used for said building of a speaker. So you then jumped from design to the construction process. Definitely not the same. This is arguable at best. If we're talking about materials, I truly believe the DIY'er can get well within inaudibility to what the professionals can do. They have access to Balsa and carbon, we have balsa and can make carbon fiber. They have this or that, DIY'ers counter with this or that. From a purely material standpoint, I think DIY'ers can get well within inaudibility when it comes to materials of the cabinet.
If you're talking about cabinet shape, then it get's trickier. I think the average DIY'er is well beyond his abilities to create such shapes or work with the materials necessary to match the best commerical speakers. However, let's examine the price point of these speakers. Now let's take the average person who is looking to purchase said speakers and all the money he or she has at their disposal. I think this person, with their vast monetary resources can make the fancy shaped speakers out of the exotic materials and give the high dollar speakers a run for their money in a blind test. Can they match or beat them? I have no idea, I don't have that kind of money nor do I know anyone personally who does. That's kind of an up in the air argument until some rich person decides they want something to compete with the best, but be one of a kind completely unique. Those people are probably out there, but until they come on the internet and share we're all left out in the cold on this one.
So now we have design process, materials used, and cabinet shape. I think next we'll tackle your unfair comparison, but quickly since it was already touched upon by jinjuku. You're comparing the best commerical offerings against DIY offerings that were clearly not meant to compete with them. Make a fair comparison and it will give more credence to your argument, or rather simply state "I have yet to see a DIY speaker that can compete with the best." No we should not only be looking at the lower priced commercial speakers, but it also doesn't mean anything to say that the $50K-$200K speakers sound so much better than the $3K DIY speakers. What does that prove? It certainly doesn't strengthen your argument. Best bang for your buck designs like the statements are clearly not going to go toe to toe with the kef blades. Find a DIY speaker that was built and cost roughly $25,000 to complete and then maybe we can compare it against the blades, which still run more than double that I believe.
Another thing that is unclear in your argument is what criteria we're actually comparing. Are we comparing cabinetry, design philosophies, sound, measurements, or some combination of some or all of these characteristics? In terms of measurements, I have yet to see a DIY design that was meant to be what you're asking for. Most DIY designs are to give the best sound for a certain cost point. I think part of the reason we don't see any/more no holds barred builds is because the guys doing the DIY designing aren't millionaires or billionaires. They're pretty regular guys who have to work within their respective budgets. Who's to say they couldn't design something that could compete with the best commercial offerings and be built by a DIY'er, or at least mostly constructed by a DIY'er?
Sound is obviously subjective, so to say that performance at level is unattainable is simply untrue to some extent. A guy builds a pair of speakers, they measure really well, they sound great, and he loves them. He hears all the speakers you mentioned and admits they are awesome amazing speakers, but doesn't notice a huge jump in performance from the ones he built. Who is anyone else to tell him that he's crazy and that these other speakers definitely sound much better?
Audioholics has even written that the importance of anechoic chambers is greatly overstated. As the years go on, they will become even less important as well as technology and software gets better. Currently, I wouldn't say they are obsolete, but you can certainly get darn close with what is available.
Another point you made that I think would be unfair is the electrostatic dare. Have you ever heard
these? Here's just one electrostatic DIY design out there. Whose to say these don't sound as good as the ML offerings?
I feel as though I danced around this point without ever actually making it. Guys with far greater resources than us can design a speaker and then release the design, either at cost, or for free. These are still DIY designs and can give DIY'ers tremendous quality, while "merely" participating in construction. A DIY'er can also take a well established design and tweak it to improve this or that, or use different materials in order to increase rigidity and make other improvements. The point of mentioning this, is that an industrious DIY'er can take these designs that many guys spent years on and combine some properties, make improvements to a certain design and end up with something that might be able to compete with higher and higher priced speakers. This sort of trickle down information really boosts the whole DIY hobby as well. I agree that there is still a gap, but a gap based on what? The lack of ability? I truly don't believe so. A lack of designs? I think this is a much larger factor. How many designs have any of us seen that cost tens of thousands of dollars and were meant to grasp at that last measure of performance? None that I've seen, but then again why would I? Those with the means to afford such a design have the money for a commercial design. Heck, if I had the kind of money that blowing $50K-200K on a pair of speakers wasn't a big deal, I probably wouldn't be making a lot of noise for a crazy DIY speaker to compete with the best of the B&M offerings. I'd just buy a pair and put them on the deck of my beachfront home to listen to as I napped in the sun
I promise you, if I ever win the lottery I'll beg Dennis or Linkwitz or somebody to design me a no holds barred DIY speaker to compete with the big boys. Until then I'll keep thanking my lucky stars that a $3K speaker can compete with a B&M offering that costs tens of thousands of dollars and be darn happy that a shmuck like me has a pair
.