I will have the good fortune of having a true transmission line loudspeaker in my main system for the weekend. It will allow me the opportunity to compare and contrast these two alignments in my room, using my system.
Heretofore, my experience with TL bass is that it has been able to achieve more realistic deep bass than ported speakers. Unfortunately, in only one circumstance have I heard them in what is a "good" room in the past. The pair I am considering did not impress me last year, which I in part attributed to the room, but it turns out the line was incorrectly damped and the crossover values were wrong. With the corrections, the bass was improved to a point, but I still feel they were up against the limitations of them being in a difficult room.
My room, being smaller, and possessing boundaries which should definitely show the speaker in a more favorable light, and also being familiar to me, will allow me to get a better handle on things.
One concern I do have is that the achilles heel of the AtmaSphere amps is there lack of low frequency sock. If I begin to feel this is taking away from the experience, I will be switching in the Jadis and/or NAD 2600A to get a broader picture of things.
Personally, despite all the discussion back and forth, I think Sean has laid out some very cogent arguments in this thread. The inherent benefits in the sealed alignment's ease of design and transient response make me wonder why the high end has gone so far in the direction of ported speakers in the past 15 years.
From memory, things were more balanced between sealed and ported in the past. I am unsure of how accurate the conventional wisdom of ported speakers gaining 3 db of loudness over sealed speakers is, but that is normally one of the first arguments thrown out there. I have been under the impression that the resurgence of tube amplification and musical tastes of late account for the scales being tipped in the way they have been, or at least a fair amount of it.
Heretofore, my experience with TL bass is that it has been able to achieve more realistic deep bass than ported speakers. Unfortunately, in only one circumstance have I heard them in what is a "good" room in the past. The pair I am considering did not impress me last year, which I in part attributed to the room, but it turns out the line was incorrectly damped and the crossover values were wrong. With the corrections, the bass was improved to a point, but I still feel they were up against the limitations of them being in a difficult room.
My room, being smaller, and possessing boundaries which should definitely show the speaker in a more favorable light, and also being familiar to me, will allow me to get a better handle on things.
One concern I do have is that the achilles heel of the AtmaSphere amps is there lack of low frequency sock. If I begin to feel this is taking away from the experience, I will be switching in the Jadis and/or NAD 2600A to get a broader picture of things.
Personally, despite all the discussion back and forth, I think Sean has laid out some very cogent arguments in this thread. The inherent benefits in the sealed alignment's ease of design and transient response make me wonder why the high end has gone so far in the direction of ported speakers in the past 15 years.
From memory, things were more balanced between sealed and ported in the past. I am unsure of how accurate the conventional wisdom of ported speakers gaining 3 db of loudness over sealed speakers is, but that is normally one of the first arguments thrown out there. I have been under the impression that the resurgence of tube amplification and musical tastes of late account for the scales being tipped in the way they have been, or at least a fair amount of it.