There aren't many loudspeakers in that test, but the measured Genelec 8351A
is the winner in nearly every category (if you take the time and look at
the data, e.g. homogeneity and smoothness of directivity across frequency
and angles, distortions, etc.)

Am Do., 10. Jan. 2019 um 02:24 Uhr schrieb Sven König <s...@lokaler.de>:

> On 01/09/2019 02:27 PM, Bruce Wiggins wrote:
> > Hello Sursounders (and Happy New Year!)
> >
> > For many years, we've been running our Sounds in Space research symposium
> > using lots of old passive minipod speakers (as Peter Lennox had lots of
> > these at the time of our first symposium, an we've been using them ever
> > since https://www.podspeakers.com/)
> hi bruce,
>
> kef ls50 were suggested before but if the budget is tight you should
> also consider kef q150.
> for ambisonics the kefs are actually the only speakers that are really
> usable when you need a big sweetspot because of their wide and even
> dispersion. i've never understood why in so many places adams, genelecs
> or neumanns are used - their dispersion is really poor.
> here's an interesting comparison:
> https://www.princeton.edu/3D3A/Directivity.html
>
> sven.
>
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