Roy,
I truly do that you are here to discuss your speakers and that you are taking the time to answer so many questions. I am, however, disturbed by apparent thrust of the assertions in question. I have no desire to put words in your mouth, and certainly welcome you correcting any wrong paraphrasing here, but you seem be be saying the following things.
You seem to be asserting that no speaker designer (except yourself), no reviewer, no recording engineers, basically no one can tell that time coherence is "clearly better". I don't understand how you can assert that it is clearly better, and yet that reviewers will not hear it.
I further don't understand how you can assert that other speaker designers (Roger Russell:Lead speaker designer for Mcintosh and Electrical Engineer, or Joe D'Appolito Ph.D and chief engineer for Snell, or Dr.Floyd Toole of Harmon Kardon, or Arnie Nudell of Infinity and then Geness) lack... how did you put it? "do not know the sound of live instruments" and "do not understand the math"
Seriously? You assert that Floyd Toole doesn't know what a live instruments sounds like and doesn't understand the math involved in acoustics? The man quite literally wrote the book.
Further: in a world with single-driver headphones, single driver planar speakers, and indeed a number of single-driver floor-standers: that these same people with literally decades each in the field have no experience with coherent sound?
Beyond that: you've asserted that an industry which has experimented with and makes Walsh-cones (another with no electrical crossover BTW), ribbons, domes, inverted domes, horns, electro-static drivers, planar-magnetic drivers, air-motion transformers, and one of my favorite "neat-o" technologies: plasma; is too conservative to try placing the tweeter a few inches back?!?
And yes, I really do think most speaker designers do not have an intimate knowledge of live sound.
I'm sorry: but what I'm hearing from you flies in the face of all reasonable thought. It seems to assert that, with the exception of you personally, every speaker designer throughout history is an ignorant rube with with bad ears, no understanding of math, no experience with actual instruments and an unwillingness to experiment: this despite the fact that there are other real-world examples of exactly what you tell me no one does.
- Paul Barton of PSB is a violinist.
- Roger Russell used to bring live instruments into McIntosh's labs for evaluation and demonstration of speakers and testing equipment.
- I can't speak to the designer: but Bower's and Wilkins has been the mainstay monitor of the world's largest recording studio for more than a decade. I assume Abby Road has some experience with live music.
The thought that speaker designers have less experience with live music than I do seems absurd. Do you have something other than conjecture to back that up with?
You claim to have extensively studied the exact threshold for when phase incoherence causes a problem: but you haven't put up the studies. Your site discusses the importance of measurements to make coherent sound: but you then avoid presenting them to others to measure (indeed, making FR, waterfall, and cabinet resonance charts of your speakers available).
And this is sadly consistent with the testimonials of the new posters who showed up to post in favor of GMA. Feel free to point out where I'm wrong but not a single one said a single negative thing about any GMA speaker; nor did a single one say a single positive thing about any other speaker line.
The message being "everything GMA makes is perfection, no one else gets a single thing right"... and a message like that tends to say a lot about the messenger.
Then there's Maui-man... Someone asserting decades of recording who doesn't, even when asked, make a single plug for his work and who, when called to task (say: over phase-inverted L/R signals) simply says nothing at all.
I seriously started this thread because I was pondering buying some used Europas off Audigon to give them a listen. The only thing that really stopped me was an uncertainty about the resale-ability should I dislike them (I've done this with an awful lot of speakers the last couple years and sold the ones I didn't like)... unfortunately, GMA doesn't come up for sale much so I had no idea if I'd be able to recoup if I didn't like.
At this point, and unless there's some major change, I'm avoiding the entire line like the plague. The rampant negativism toward every other design, combined with the ridiculousness of many of the assertions has left a very bad taste in my mouth. (and I'm the the group of potential customers that has put out in excess of $20k on AV gear in the last 12 months, and one that's very vocal in promoting what I like)
Jerry, earlier you remarked that I wrote "reviewers don't care about sound quality". No, I meant reviewers don't care about time coherence. I should have made that more clear, sorry.
What's the functional difference? If coherency = better sound then a reviewer that cares about sound quality will comment positively; and if coherence doesn't = better sound than why do I care about coherence?
And to your last question-- there is no one spot nor a 'best spot' for that microphone to be placed, because it does not hear music the way we do, nor do we hear test tones the way it does.
Well that's a darn shame since everything I play on my speakers was recorded on a microphone.
I realize this post has turned into something of a rant, and I'm very sorry that it's come to that... but what 3db has called candor, I'm seeing as rhetoric.
I'll give you an easy way to counter much of the thrust of my rant:
What is it that your speakers have had to sacrifice, relative to other design options, in order to get what you felt was important to add. What is at least one of the major sonic weakness of the design you have chosen over some other design.
Ribbons, for example, tend to sacrifice low-frequency response and become very room and position dependent because of their bi-polar nature. A front-driving cone suffers off-axis performance in comparison. A uni-driver (generally) suffers a great deal of distortion from a need to do more than a single driver can do, but a multi-driver system has issues with integration, and timber-matching as well as positioning problems related to axis (sounds different when your head is tweeter-aligned than then when it's woofer aligned).
Do you assert that you have achieved perfection in sound reproduction? Or have there been sacrifices that you have had to make relative to other designs? Name at least one.