
edgewound
Audioholic Intern
A speaker system can measure flat from DC to light, yet still sound different based on the physical design, driver types and sizes, horn loaded or direct radiator, compression drivers vs cones and domes, crossover design slopes and filter types chosen.
Not only that, the physiology of the listener is also taken into account. Harman voices their speaker systems to appeal to a certain market. Case in point...The JBL Everest II was required to be a three way speaker to appeal to the Asian market regardless if it sounded the same as a two way or a three way. The 045Be supertweeter rolls in at 20KHz. Cover up the tweeter and it sounds no different, because the 476Be compression driver was flat to 40Khz. Greg Timbers told me this at CES when the Everest II made it's debut.
So...I said "No".
Not only that, the physiology of the listener is also taken into account. Harman voices their speaker systems to appeal to a certain market. Case in point...The JBL Everest II was required to be a three way speaker to appeal to the Asian market regardless if it sounded the same as a two way or a three way. The 045Be supertweeter rolls in at 20KHz. Cover up the tweeter and it sounds no different, because the 476Be compression driver was flat to 40Khz. Greg Timbers told me this at CES when the Everest II made it's debut.
So...I said "No".
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