Anyway, all expensive and cheap speakers’ sounds in the world are ear hurting veiled and inducing Tinnitus. Only my Antero speakers are a safe from Tinnitus.
I work in professional market speakers. I would never ever make such a false claim, especially something health related. Only way your speakers are going to prevent Tinnitus is if they do not play loud.
One Reviewer gave the Borresen M1’s "Best Of Show"
Here are some things that same reviewer said in another Borresen review:
I did this for nearly every other model in the Børresen line-up. Depending upon the specific upgrades between models, such as driver complement and materials, I heard steady improvements in clarity and a stunningly low noise floor as I moved up.
A noise floor? On speakers? Does this reviewer even know what noise is? For me that makes everything he says questionable.
How did the unorthodox speaker positioning work out for the Børresen Z1 Cryos? In my usual speaker position, which is 2-3′ from the rear,
He means front, and 2-3 feet as many know is not nearly enough to get rid of SBIR
What are those thin panels on the wall supposed to do? They won't work low enough for SBIR, and they are too small even at 2-3 feet to block much of the rear reflections. Is he intentionally not making his room very good?
Is this the current state of professional audio reviews?
There are some very very significant claims for the M1, especially at that price. Lots of claims of amazing sound, but I can find that for almost any product. Their claims all relate to technical proficiency. Low distortion, low resonance, and I think good dispersion is implied. You don't verify that listening in a random room. You do verify that with a measurement system. So where are their measurements? I am very very suspect that they have not provided any.