BTW I think whomever said that pro monitors do not have horns in them should look at what is on the pro/studio market.
Mechans,
I meant real professional monitors for mixing/mastering in a studio....NOT sound reinforcement or for nightclubs or concert or myriad of speakers with the monikor "monitor" or "pro".
I think you will find that horns were popular in the 50's but eventually fell out of favor (in professional studios) in the 70's as non-horn designs began to achieve sufficient loudness levels for use as main monitors (mostly used to impress clients by playing back what they just played in a very realistic fashion).
Horns are almost completely out of the professional studio market as far as I can tell. They are almost never used as nearfields and only rarely used as main monitors.
Anyway, don't take my word for it, after all, many of my most accurate statements have been totally discredited/contradicted/distorted by one or another of the "experts" on these forums so what's new...
Perhaps this, from a person who is passionate about the Altec Lansing 604 horn designs (famous in the 40's), may convince you;
Studio Monitor Evolution