My understanding, subsequently, is that the Silverline designer has the forethought to lower the output of his product/tweeter precisely in the lower bandpass of the tweeter where diffraction effects will cause a rise and uneveness in the frequency domain. That's hip, but does nothing to remove the time and phase disorder to the signal when diffracted waveforms arrive late and combine. So, it is only in one respect that diffraction effects are being made more benign. In the other, time and phase error caused by the late arrival of diffracted waveforms (of the same information), this does nothing.
What is missing from Gear's eval and perhaps escaped his attention is the 3D roundness and transparency of space in a recording when diffraction effects are removed. Tho he did cite improved focus. Damn straight there is. Look at Gallo or Gradient loudspeakers, or Vandersteen. No baffle. Image like bastards. No diffraction is the reason. Gear misinterprets a loss of air. It's the very early reflection off his baffles and edges combining and reinforcing is what is missing. That, is a distortion to a recording. Further, it comes at a price to absolute dimensionality. Air is there, more naturally. Just as it was 'hesrd' by the microphone(s). So long as some guy in a booth hasn't f----- it up.
What is missing from Gear's eval and perhaps escaped his attention is the 3D roundness and transparency of space in a recording when diffraction effects are removed. Tho he did cite improved focus. Damn straight there is. Look at Gallo or Gradient loudspeakers, or Vandersteen. No baffle. Image like bastards. No diffraction is the reason. Gear misinterprets a loss of air. It's the very early reflection off his baffles and edges combining and reinforcing is what is missing. That, is a distortion to a recording. Further, it comes at a price to absolute dimensionality. Air is there, more naturally. Just as it was 'hesrd' by the microphone(s). So long as some guy in a booth hasn't f----- it up.