thoft - among your short list, the Dunlavy is phase/time coherent like Vandersteens and Thiels. The others are not.
brett - I don't know how many of 'us' have ventured into DSP / active, etc.
"That bass affect" is present in all reflex bass alignments. The 3.6 passive is in proper polarity, pumping out when the woofer pumps out, but it is a whole cycle out of phase - 360° phase shift, just like other reflex systems. That same 360° phase shift is present in most "modern" crossovers which use 4th order filters on all drivers. The ear-brain compensates or learns the phase lag. But Thiel fans tend to appreciate the lack of that phase shift and resulting naturalness of zero phase shift through the crossovers.
Among Thiel speakers, those with sealed bass (like your Kappa 8s) include the model 01, 03, 03a, CS3, CS3.5, and CS5 plus the PowerPoint / PowerPlane with the 6.5" PowerDriver. The others have either ports or passive radiators.
brett - I don't know how many of 'us' have ventured into DSP / active, etc.
"That bass affect" is present in all reflex bass alignments. The 3.6 passive is in proper polarity, pumping out when the woofer pumps out, but it is a whole cycle out of phase - 360° phase shift, just like other reflex systems. That same 360° phase shift is present in most "modern" crossovers which use 4th order filters on all drivers. The ear-brain compensates or learns the phase lag. But Thiel fans tend to appreciate the lack of that phase shift and resulting naturalness of zero phase shift through the crossovers.
Among Thiel speakers, those with sealed bass (like your Kappa 8s) include the model 01, 03, 03a, CS3, CS3.5, and CS5 plus the PowerPoint / PowerPlane with the 6.5" PowerDriver. The others have either ports or passive radiators.