Unsound - right on. Dunlavy took them to task and Vandersteen chided in an interview. Thiel chose to not respond as a policy, but discussed it with John. The biggest
problem with them is their (usually) 50" mic distance, which does not
allow the wavefront to integrate, and then JA reading in to the ragged scan, which was caused by the technique, not the speaker. They published excess phase charts on older models, which are near zero, and even at 20kHz, they drift less than
10°. In our development measurements, all models (in my time, and
probably later) fell within that 10° from minimum, except the CS5, which
was <5° (plus Jim published a time delay spec which I remember being in
the microseconds.)
Andy - I don't remember using "phase coincidence" or "time coherent", since I find both terms confusing.
The separate drivers are placed in 3-D space to sum properly when listening at 35"±~4" and greater than 8', optimized for 3M / 10'. That is a stated constraint, which we believed to be reasonable for real people in real listening situations. A lot of the confusion revolves around magazines/reviewers not being able to measure in those real-world situations.
Here's the Stereophile measurements of the CS1.5: https://www.stereophile.com/content/thiel-cs15-measurements
Regarding Vandersteen, I plead ignorance of any particulars. Richard didn't go places that were unfriendly. He knew the pitfalls of those measurements and had plenty of sales to side-step that playing field, although he and JA were on the best of terms. From everything I have read, he was pursuing the same expression of minimum phase as Thiel.
Andy - I don't remember using "phase coincidence" or "time coherent", since I find both terms confusing.
The separate drivers are placed in 3-D space to sum properly when listening at 35"±~4" and greater than 8', optimized for 3M / 10'. That is a stated constraint, which we believed to be reasonable for real people in real listening situations. A lot of the confusion revolves around magazines/reviewers not being able to measure in those real-world situations.
Here's the Stereophile measurements of the CS1.5: https://www.stereophile.com/content/thiel-cs15-measurements
Regarding Vandersteen, I plead ignorance of any particulars. Richard didn't go places that were unfriendly. He knew the pitfalls of those measurements and had plenty of sales to side-step that playing field, although he and JA were on the best of terms. From everything I have read, he was pursuing the same expression of minimum phase as Thiel.