Hi Trelja
Yep, there are so many great speakers out there in that modest price range that sound great against the walls, and then you walk into a friends house and it's a heartbreak, cause you know what's going to happen when they turn the system on.
That gets back to the OP. Who was the guy who told this guy it's ok to throw that speaker in a room that hasn't a prayer of gelling with the speaker. It's not the speaker designer's fault and it's not the end users fault, but somewhere in the chain of that research and purchase something went horribly wrong. Now he's got a very expensive work of art and unless he does something drastic he'll never get to enjoy their magic.
Obviously there are going to be bad designs out there. But I'm sure there's that perfect setup that the designer had in mind where the speaker sings with the music the designer used to build his sound with.
I get the after calls, lots of them, where the listener is stuck "what do I do now". It's not a fun time for them, unless the system is nothing more than a trophy to start with. I have built walls ontop of walls and floors ontop of floors to help as much as can be, but it makes you just sick to hear a mismatch, and you know someone in the loop was giving "talk" and not walking them through the process properly.
There's a little part of all of us who walk, when we read an obvious mismatch in the making. But I think that's why we need to keep pushing to raise the bar on advice. It's not about the person who comes up wanting to be known as an authority, it's about our friends who deserve to have their dream system, dream match, dream music and the ability to make everything they want to hear a success. Good post!
Michael Green
www.michaelgreenaudio.net