caesar, do you think that speaker designers "go with their gut" when making decisions and that "all rational arguments go away"?
Peter,
It's a very interesting question. I honestly don't know these guys. Obviously every speaker has to adhere to the principle stated by the Bacon quote:"...Nature to be commanded must be obeyed...". But design is not based on pure science. Every designer has to take into account:
- usability/ practicality of room real estate (big difference in usability in a monitor vs magico horn, or the big Scaena with airplane engine sized subs)
- cost (other than the highest priced model in the line up, there are usually compromises)
- aesthetics (I wonder how many people are
subconsciously turned off by Vivid giya, or the nola set of seemingly disparate set of drivers / shapes in their semi open enclosure
- material availability (aluminum for some guys, diamond woofers?)
- manufacturing capabilities
- marketing (I think we talked about that enough for now)
Add to that, brands are co-created by marketers, reviewers, fans, and users of the product. Many brands change over the years.. Some designs may change to meet the market desire (magico s class?), while in other cases it may be the "designer knows best". ...
Surveying some more popular designs, It seems - and I could be very wrong - David Wilson travels to Vienna and tries to voice his speakers like live music. ditto for jurgen reis. ditto for genesis, evolution acoustics, and scaena .. not sure about Wolf, but per DaveyF thread he thinks he got the music right (and I'm sure the other guys have egos just as big and wouldn't release a speaker that was not their best at that moment , per the constraints. Andrew Jones may be more pure engineering based, and likewise, with Dick Dickey of Vivid.
I wonder how Beethoven interacted (and iterated) with his harpsichord designers...
Just some initial thoughts, as my kids are yelling at me and interrupting. If i think of more stuff, I'll chime in.