Bombaywalla --
They take an interesting approach, Brodmann Acoustics, and seem fairly priced. Never heard them.
One of the more memorable sonic demoes I've had came from the Peak Consult Kepheus at their home facility in Denmark. The twin Audio Technology 5" midrange units presented some of the most natural (and dynamic) mids I've encountered - certainly coming from cones - just as they are beautiful and coherent sounding overall. Although steeply(!) priced it's beyond me why these handcrafted speakers aren't referred to more often, if at all in the "audiophile arena;" it can't be the high price, for that alone seems to have its drawing power all by itself. One suspects that what sounds natural simply isn't interesting enough..
But in the end, to my ears, nothing trumps the ease, tone, clarity and relaxed power from a well-implemented waveguide/horn, preferably conical variants, and larger cones. This sums it up nicely:
http://www.newworldeconomics.com/archives/2013/111713.html
"It's just the physical nature of the elements involved" - indeed...
They take an interesting approach, Brodmann Acoustics, and seem fairly priced. Never heard them.
One of the more memorable sonic demoes I've had came from the Peak Consult Kepheus at their home facility in Denmark. The twin Audio Technology 5" midrange units presented some of the most natural (and dynamic) mids I've encountered - certainly coming from cones - just as they are beautiful and coherent sounding overall. Although steeply(!) priced it's beyond me why these handcrafted speakers aren't referred to more often, if at all in the "audiophile arena;" it can't be the high price, for that alone seems to have its drawing power all by itself. One suspects that what sounds natural simply isn't interesting enough..
But in the end, to my ears, nothing trumps the ease, tone, clarity and relaxed power from a well-implemented waveguide/horn, preferably conical variants, and larger cones. This sums it up nicely:
I am amazed today that 99% of all "audiophile" speakers are the basic "monkey coffin" cones and domes in a box that have defined the industry for the last forty years. This is fine for general consumer stuff, but, no matter what the price, you can only get so much out of a 5" cone midrange and a 1" dome tweeter, and it isn't enough, in my opinion, for even modest ambitions. It's just the physical nature of the elements involved.
http://www.newworldeconomics.com/archives/2013/111713.html
"It's just the physical nature of the elements involved" - indeed...