The point of SOTA speakers like the Magico and Wilson is to push the limits of what we can do to reproduce live music at home. Even their designers will admit that they have not reached that point, and so they continue to tweak. At their level, those tweaks are increasingly expensive. I mean, you can design an enclosure, but you still have to build one to see how it actually will sound, and after milling out tons of aluminum, you find no improvement? Well, back to the drawing board. I wonder how many expensive prototypes Magico went through before finalizing their design and building the first one. For a comparatively new company, they have certainly stepped up and taken a run at the best. Whether they are, I will never know, since I have neither the funds nor the inclination to make that evaluation. But I do appreciate the effort being made, and the risks taken and hope to see the downstream results of their research and development to more affordable products, either by Magico or others.
I think companies like PSB have used some of their concepts in speaker enclosures to make better speakers at reasonable prices, ie syncrony and imagine series, with layered enclosures and curved sides.
I think companies like PSB have used some of their concepts in speaker enclosures to make better speakers at reasonable prices, ie syncrony and imagine series, with layered enclosures and curved sides.