Recognizing that everything is a matter of taste, I've heard things that I thought were good and bad with ALL examples of basic speaker technology and driver materials, so I wouldn't avoid anything in particular. There are certain particular technology/materials that I tend not to like, but, even then, there are exceptions. I am actually amazed with how wide a variety of approaches to design are available and have their fans. If any particular design were outright superior, the market would have converged on that approach, but, that has not been the case.
Even more amazing to me is how viable REALLY OLD gear is in direct comparison with anything currently available. I have yet to hear a midrange driver that I would take over a 1939 Western Electric 713b compression driver and a decent horn.
As for all of the rest of audio gear, I cannot think of any one particular design that I would categorically reject. There are designs and types that I tend to prefer (low-powered tube gear), but, that does not mean anything else is crap to me. I really like the sound of tape recordings, but, I would never own a tape machine because I am way too lazy to thread tape; aside from this, I could adopt anything.
Even more amazing to me is how viable REALLY OLD gear is in direct comparison with anything currently available. I have yet to hear a midrange driver that I would take over a 1939 Western Electric 713b compression driver and a decent horn.
As for all of the rest of audio gear, I cannot think of any one particular design that I would categorically reject. There are designs and types that I tend to prefer (low-powered tube gear), but, that does not mean anything else is crap to me. I really like the sound of tape recordings, but, I would never own a tape machine because I am way too lazy to thread tape; aside from this, I could adopt anything.