Compression driver too. Shame they give no +/- oit's almost like they can barely measure them.
looks much too shallow, surely they'll be loads of reflection from rear wall?
I would much rather have a wide cabinet than a deep oneSuspect the driver's better than the cabinet - looks much too shallow, surely they'll be loads of reflection from rear wall?
Maybe one day, with all these sophisticated materials, Magico will find a way to make a speaker that does musicnice ... all these different materials . beryllium of course been around for yonks . magico are using graphene now in some
A new carbon fiber side panel design, an all-graphene midrange and bass driver design, and the phenomenal 28mm diamond coated beryllium tweeter, previously found only in the M-Project, all come together in what is the most sophisticated loudspeaker we have ever created.
https://www.magicoaudio.com/m-series-m3
Suspect the driver's better than the cabinet - looks much too shallow, surely they'll be loads of reflection from rear wall?
Ah frequency range..probably because they will be eq'd flat as a flat thing in an install? They do an active dsp version too. Who knows.They quote a frequency response but without limits, ie is it +/- 1db or 3db?
Truextent/ Materion are the main manufacturer of pure beryllium foil hf diaphragms, they supply Radian, JBL, 18Sound, Beyma and Vue Audiotechnic to name a few. These are pro companies not usually associated with BS or foo.I suspect it's a Radian 3" on the back of those 15's They aren't cheap but the audible benefits are beyond question, TAD and Yamaha have been using vapour deposited Be domes for years. The cost is a barrier and there is active materials R &D across the industry to achieve similar or better performance at lower cost.
I've used 4" Truextent comp driver Dias in the past and still have JBL2435be's on SAM1 horns in daily use.
It's an omission for sure considering the price etc.Cooky, I'll assume they're 3db, seems reasonable