Borresen X3 measurements


Borresen’s X3 measures pretty badly which contradicts a lot of the praise…
 

Detailed measurements in the video below. 
 

https://youtu.be/EfasOu928tQ?si=MdvDFWxYuSd4nStV

james633

IF speaker measures badly, but compensates the amp, combination may be fine. Say, marry bright speakers with rolling off highs of tube amp and get the neutral sounding system.

So would anyone buy a car that measures badly. Like does not brake well (speaker ringing) or sometimes does not accelerate (11 dB dips). For a 'character'?

@James633....... The X3 is not a tuning issue (rolled off or bright), the drivers simply don’t integrate and there is a lot of box noise.                                                                                                                                                                                       This statement is just NOT true...Michael Borresen is one of the most talented speaker designers in the world. If you can design and sell a speaker that retails for over 100K and people buy it....and I own them, you don't and probably have never heard them....There is no box noise. Borresen Basher...over and out.

I’ll take system synergy over measurements any day. I will take my ears over any measurements. If a speaker measures good, what does that mean? What amp did they use? A tube amp? A set? An analytical sounding amp or a warm sounding amp? There are some speakers that might measure well but I wouldn’t own them unless I had the warmest sounding amp, or I wouldn’t buy a warm sounding speaker with a warm sounding amp.

The biggest thing for me is to get a speaker sized right for your room without the need for extra room treatments or dsp to tailor the sound. I moved from a larger dedicated room to a medium size room 16’ in length. I had a very nice sounding larger speaker and even with using dsp and several super bass panels, the bass was overwhelming. In all of the audio shows I’ve been to for the last 25 or more years (ces, the show, rmaf, Tampa, and many others), the best sounding speakers have always been: revel, usher, raidho, Wilson, and totem.

I would have loved the Revel Salon 2 or Studio 2 speakers, but the bass would have to be tamed by panels or dsp. So I bought the newer release of Revel BE with the smaller woofer speakers that allow me to remove all the bass panels, still kept the ASC tube traps for corners, I stopped using dsp, and allowed me to get the speakers 1/3 of the distance into the room to get all the bass I need without using subwoofers.

 

Seems to me that how speakers sound should be the most important criteria.  We all have biases and preferences.  A speaker that is superb according to measurements but still does not sound "good" or "right" is not what we enjoy.  After all, the goal is reproduction of music, hopefully accurate, but it has to sound good.  Just my "two-bits" worth ... inflation, you know!