Why not more popular?


A couple of years ago, I got my first set of open baffle speakers. I've owned a few pairs of Magneplanars and many box speakers over the years, but my current speakers are the first true open-baffle speakers I've owned. 

I am absolutely smitten with the sound. Musical, dynamic, powerful, and an amazing deep, open, airy sound stage, with none of the weird boxy resonances or port huffing that I've heard from so many box speakers. 

What I don't understand is why there are so few speaker companies making open baffle speakers, and why are they not more popular among audiophiles?
jaytor

Showing 1 response by berner99

Non-box speakers often have qualities that I didn’t think one could find in box speakers eg a certain openness, etc.
Non-box speakers:

—open baffle dynamics (earliest Dahlquest DQ 10), spatial audio, pure audio project, tri-art etc.
—electrostatics eg Martin Logan.
—Maggie’s
—omnis eg ohm, $25k space pods, etc
—Bipoles (old mirages). 

Clayton Saw (spatial) says his business is booming. If you like electrostatics eg Martin Logan, you like them, but they have been around forever and have nothing to do with the current popularity of open baffle dynamics eg spatial audio.
Interestingly, I bought a pair of bookshelf speakers (LSA) which have wide dispersion and have some of the same qualities