It's refreshing to hear Ian is placing more importance on cabinet bracing (at least for Bryston products) these days. In my last conversation with him, he was quite adamant about using less bracing to lower the frequency of panel resonance which is the exact opposite of what most (if not ALL) credible loudspeaker designers agree upon.
That's not quite true, Gene, though I'll grant you it's the conventional wisdom. With increased rigidity comes increased Q of cabinet resonances. Too often speaker designers fall into the trap of building cabinets that are basically just massive bells.
In truth, d
amping is far more important than rigidity in loudspeaker cabinets. Go back to the old
Harwood and Mathews BBC paper, which is still the best empirical treatise on loudspeaker cabinet design.
IOW, except for subs (where the cabinet can be made stiff enough to push resonances out of the passband), the smart way to do a cabinet is relatively thin walls with constrained-layer-damping, inner-wall damping pads, lossy adhesives, etc. Alan Shaw's "cracked bell" approach on his Harbeth speakers (screw-on front and rear panels) makes some sense, too, though it's hard to cleanly implement.
Now, I suspect the Axioms (and Brystons) don't exactly have cabinets engineered to the degree of, say, the old Snell XA References in terms of faithful application of the Harwood principles, so perhaps you were more railing against Axiom cheaping out on cabinets than anything else.
The question is, did those Dunlavy buyers KNOW that the drivers were CHEAP when they bought them?
IOW, if we told all those buyers right before they bought those speakers that the drivers were only $17 each, would they still buy the $25,000 speakers?
The Vifa D27TG-35 Dunlavy used was more like $25 in the late 1990s.
The same tweeter (renamed, due to the Tymphany divorce; ScanSpeak got all of the Danish tooling and renamed the old Vifas they kept in production) is now
about $50.
And yes, it was common knowledge. Likewise, go back and find Ken Kantor's comments on the ~$30 Seas tweeter used in his flagship, the NHT Model 3.3. While not $20k, the 3.3 is, in real terms, more expensive than the base Bryston Model T. (And much better finished. And, alas, much better designed. Sad that an expensive loudspeaker introduced in 2013 loses out to similar-class loudspeaker introduced ca. 1993 on that...)
Well...it would appear that OPPO's prices are becoming more in line with the likes of Krell & Lexicon....fwiw..
Huh? Their current standard universal disk player (103) is in real dollars cheaper than my Oppo 83 was several years ago.
Thanks both of you for the NRC and (presumably) internal measurements. The measurements clearly expose the flaws of the design, which to be fair are shared with every other loudspeaker with the same midrange size and tweeter flushed on a 180deg waveguide.
While the data are poorly presented, look at the midrange off axis rise (what I call the "midrange mushroom cloud") from 2-5kHz, where the tweeter's pattern is much wider than the midrange's. That radiation pattern inevitably leads to an excess of midrange energy in the room, compared to a well-designed speaker, such as the aforementioned Revel Salon2 or KEF 207/2.
***the KEF 207/2 would require quite a bit of thought but then the KEFs are much more expensive than $6495. ***
The KEF 207/2 also doesn't come clad in plastic, and the curved cabinet is a lot more expensive to construct than a box.
But I'm curious, like for like (i.e. the Model T clad in veneer finished to the KEF 207/2's standard), what is the price difference?
Expensive speakers are luxury items. IMO, they should be appointed like it.
Probably wouldn't know what Axiom is or even existed. Or they would probably view them as just another not so great mass market brand like Polk, Pioneer, Infinity ect... Not worthy of being considered "good sounding".
Polk (current LSiM line is quite good), Infinity (various over time), and especially Pioneer (EX line, TAD) make far more interesting loudspeakers than Axiom ever has...