Why perfect speakers dont exist the truth revealed


Dear Audiophile music lovers,

The reason that perfect speakers do not exist will hereby be revealed. So a perfect speaker would be a wall made of concrete. It would have two or perhaps three small holes in it. The drivers would then be placed inside these holes. Linkwitz riley 24db octaves and you're done.

Now the problem is, most audiophiles do not have a spare wall in their home which could be used to construct such a perfect speaker. Keep in mind that the other side of the wall would have to be infinitely big. It would have to be a very big space which would contain an infinite amount of fibreglass.

Now lets compare that to what speaker companies are selling us. We are being sold cheap nasty mdf boxes which ring like a bell. They use a minuscule amount of polyester stuffing inside which doesnt work and they call it a day. 

That is the secret to why perfect sound cannot be achieved. Its because we are being lied to. A $100k Magico makes no sense when you realize that the same money could be used to build something approximating the perfect speaker. 

The magico speaker still only uses a cabinet that is a few inches thick at best. My speaker invention would be ten times thicker at a fraction of the cost!

Wake up and smell the coffee folks. That is the reason we are all in this predicament. We are all craving perfect sound. Some of us are even in denial about that. But perfect sound can NOT be bought. The only solution is a CUSTOM tuned by hand system. 

Kenjit,
~audio guru bar none ~
kenjit
@ricmci, he took so long because he was banned.  thats what happens when you call everyone here stupid and inferior and basj the speaker industry from end to end.  Some of us don’t find it entertaining at all
Kenjit represents that aspect of Audiophilia most every one of us finds absolutely idiotic and repulsive. 
Thanks Kenjit, spreading your brand of 
meh to the rest of us. 
I know nothing about speaker design, so didn't really follow the concrete wall idea. Is the thought just that a speaker should be in a rigid non-resonant enclosure? 

If so, it sounds like a quick and easy backyard project for a DIYer (not me). Just create a simple mold with spaces left for the drivers and the wiring. Fill with concrete and allow to harden. Put in driver and wiring and try it out...

I can't believe it would sound good, but it could prove out the concept..?