"I thought the best results were whatever sounds best to you in your listening room"
@chayro, I agree that actually listening is the final arbiter. Well Richard Vandersteen did exactly that with his speakers in two seperate rooms. He found that springs resulted in "dynamic compression " and "smearing".
It does raise the spector of speaker enclosure construction, rigidity, internal bracing and resistance to resonance and vibration. Given the differences between his Vandersteen cabinet implementation and say Tekton or another speaker, could this be responsible for his outcome variance compared to what others report?
It seems logical that speaker cabinet design and construction is a significant consideration to explain the relative effectiveness of springs versus the alternatives.
Charles
@chayro, I agree that actually listening is the final arbiter. Well Richard Vandersteen did exactly that with his speakers in two seperate rooms. He found that springs resulted in "dynamic compression " and "smearing".
It does raise the spector of speaker enclosure construction, rigidity, internal bracing and resistance to resonance and vibration. Given the differences between his Vandersteen cabinet implementation and say Tekton or another speaker, could this be responsible for his outcome variance compared to what others report?
It seems logical that speaker cabinet design and construction is a significant consideration to explain the relative effectiveness of springs versus the alternatives.
Charles