Paradigm Persona series


I'm beginning to poke around and gather opinions and information about a "super speaker" to replace my aging Thiel 2.4s.  I like the idea of bass dsp room correction and I am a bit of a point source type imaging nut (thus the Thiels).  So among other choices I've been looking at the Paradigm Persona series specifically the powered 9H with room correction for the bass.  However I'm skeptical of the "lenses" i.e. pierced metal covers on the midrange and tweeter specifically because of Paradigm's claim that such screens "screen out" "out of phase" musical information.  The technology in the design seems superlative but I just can't get past the claim re out of phase information and the midrange and tweeter covers.  What could possibly be the science behind this claim?  It just seems like its putting a halloween moustache on the mona lisa given the fact that the company is generally a technology driven company.
pwhinson
AT, you are very wrong about VAndy guys not liking some of the Rockport speakers.  I've heard the Personas many many times with great gear.  They are tipped up on the high end and even dealers who sell many have said the same.  That's the sound that you are selling and many are buying and enjoying.  There' room for everyone.

That said, someone I know has a pair of Rockport Lyra's paired with over 400k worth of source, electronics, cords, cables etc...  They sounded very inviting with the reel to reel.  They weren't fatiguing in teh way the Persona's are to MY ears.  Do I still like Vandersteen's Sub Nine system with his own amps?  Yes, I do especially when paired with the Ayre KXR preamp or the Audio Research pre or the D'Agastino pre.  

What you have to realize is that many of us enjoy a specific speaker line or two, but can still enjoy a different flavor of sound.  I just don't like things that fatigue me and hurt my ears (not picking on the Paradigm's, just that type of sound in general).  Heck, I love the Harbeth's.  Can enjoy them all day long, but they don't do many things that I need on a daily basis when spending this kind of money.  JMHO 
@djverne

According to the NRC anechoic measurements the Persona’s 7 inch midrange starts beaming around 1500hz. The driver is crossed over at 2K. The Harman anechoic chamber also measured a sound power drop of about 5db in the 1.5-2k range in their measurements of the Persona.

https://www.soundstagenetwork.com/images/stories/loudspeakermeasurements/paradigm_persona_b/fr_456075.gif

A lot of companies won’t mate a 1" tweeter with a large woofer because of the directivity issues it causes.
This graph is of the bookshelf B model. Are there measurements of the larger models available somewhere?
I could be wrong but I thought the mid and tweeter were the same thru out the range? same with the front baffleAre we still talking about these speakers? They HAVE to be something special for all the attention they get.
They are the same except for the bookshelf Persona, as it has to act as a mid bass and not just a midrange.  The crossover points on some of the various models are a little different as well.

As I always say, anyone who thinks negatively (usually aggressively negative) of the Personas has heard them set up terribly, or are just against the Paradigm name.

Although there are also a group of industry people who are competing with Paradigm who troll the forums and create false negative buzz intentionally. 
I pity people who have not experienced the Personas properly.