That mirrors advice teajay gave me, to stick with soft dome tweeters.
It may help to understand, a lot of the magic is in the MTM array. Eric's design philosophy is grounded in low mass/low stiction. Using an array of very small drivers (tweeters) to cover a range usually reserved for larger drivers (midrange) lowers mass tremendously and explains the extraordinary sound of Moab, Encore, Ulfberht. Double Impacts get a lot of that by having roughly half the MTM array. Then as you go down the line the same principle applies its just tapered off with smaller arrays, until eventually there is no array its just the drivers.
At that point his advantage is still there, because its still involved in selecting the drivers and crossovers and especially the cabinet. Guys hate me for pointing this out but the reality is most speakers are made for women, women don't want to see a speaker, so most speakers are way smaller than they should be. This makes it hard in so many ways. Eric avoids all of that with his designs.
This all adds up to a bottom line which is what nwres just said get the largest Tekton you can. But that advice sounds almost too simple to be true, which is why I take the time to explain all the reasoning behind why it is true.
It may help to understand, a lot of the magic is in the MTM array. Eric's design philosophy is grounded in low mass/low stiction. Using an array of very small drivers (tweeters) to cover a range usually reserved for larger drivers (midrange) lowers mass tremendously and explains the extraordinary sound of Moab, Encore, Ulfberht. Double Impacts get a lot of that by having roughly half the MTM array. Then as you go down the line the same principle applies its just tapered off with smaller arrays, until eventually there is no array its just the drivers.
At that point his advantage is still there, because its still involved in selecting the drivers and crossovers and especially the cabinet. Guys hate me for pointing this out but the reality is most speakers are made for women, women don't want to see a speaker, so most speakers are way smaller than they should be. This makes it hard in so many ways. Eric avoids all of that with his designs.
This all adds up to a bottom line which is what nwres just said get the largest Tekton you can. But that advice sounds almost too simple to be true, which is why I take the time to explain all the reasoning behind why it is true.