Hi JohnnyFamous,
Fullrange magic: listen to your average two-way design. Very often, there is a mis-match between the tweeter and woofer in tone, level, phase, etc. Of course there are excellent two-ways out there but the best ones are really expensive.
A fullrange driver can do midrange really well. It can sound really coherent (no crossover phase shift, no center-to-center spacing issues). On the right music, like acoustic, female vocal, small ensembles etc. they can sound stunning.
There are also a few fullrangers which are amazing all-around performers -- great bass, great midrange, great treble in a well-designed box. These tend to be the less efficient of the fullrangers but everything's a trade-off.
Fullrange magic: listen to your average two-way design. Very often, there is a mis-match between the tweeter and woofer in tone, level, phase, etc. Of course there are excellent two-ways out there but the best ones are really expensive.
A fullrange driver can do midrange really well. It can sound really coherent (no crossover phase shift, no center-to-center spacing issues). On the right music, like acoustic, female vocal, small ensembles etc. they can sound stunning.
There are also a few fullrangers which are amazing all-around performers -- great bass, great midrange, great treble in a well-designed box. These tend to be the less efficient of the fullrangers but everything's a trade-off.
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