Despise conventional dome tweeters


I despise conventional dome tweeters! Is it just me who cant stand their nasal sound with added coloration of the baffle and rear pole piece reflecting the back waves, back forward...?
lonestarsouth
I tend to listen first to systems. Then, when I hear something I like, I dig in to understand the technology behind it and why it delivers the sound it does.

I think its counterproductive to get too obsessed with a particular tweeter design alone. You have to look at the whole system and how everything sounds together, be patient and listen for a while to really hear what's going on.

Tell us what tweeters/systems have you heard that you like and I suspect you will get a slew of recommendations of things to try.
Well okay, I guess I was a bit brash...

This is where I come from. My high-end journey started out with QUAD 57 ESL speakers (no-brainer!) but I had to let them go as they too up too much space.

Roxy, I should have included the next few lines: Please note that I use the word "conventional". My B&W P6 speakers had the most lovely tweeters; io, they disappeared in the sound-scape. They were most certainly not conventional. Metal alloy dome, very powerful magnet, small baffle space and good weight behind them (well coupled).

The QUAD 21L speakers have "conventional" tweeters and they draw too much attention to themselves.

Spendor S9e speakers have bloody fine tweeters.

B&W 704 have sexy tweeters.

Sonus Faber Cremonas have elegant tweeters.

Yeah... I am p!ssed. Pardon that. I just cant stand a bad tweeter. My quest continues for better speakers.
Crossovers and overall integration of the design is the key, not whether its a dome or not.. They can work in the right application just as well as any other driver that somebody puts the magic behind to optimize its capability.