LVB, These are all good points. I would add that each Magico M Project weighs 400 lbs so the carbon fiber side panels were not used to make a light weight speaker. I think there is also an aluminum frame and perhaps panel underneath the CF sides. I've helped to move a pair of these speakers. The are not that large, but they are really heavy. Mass is certainly part of the design.
Yes, the diamond dust deposit is so thin as to not add much mass to the beryllium tweeter. Magico is not the only company doing serious research and development, but considering that they are only ten years old, their design and manufacturing efforts to date are pretty incredible. Just look at Jeff Fritze' factory tour photographs. They have an incredible production facility.
Mep can refer to me as a fanboy if he wants. It won't bother me a bit.
Peter...it's eminently reasonable and actually perfectly ok to be a fan boy of a particular brand or company and to have pride of ownership in the wares of a premium quality producer of high-end audio gear, which Magico clearly is. It's eminently unreasonable to state that Magico is the only speaker company that is doing anything innovative and the only company that is at the cutting edge of audio engineering and that consumers of all other high-end speaker brands are being duped and paying premium prices for technologies that have been around for ages (like soft dome tweeters, aluminum drivers and wood enclosures etc...), which is what LVB was initially stating. Here is his quote:
There is no comparison between Magico level of technology then just about any other company in the high-end today. The only one that comes close will be Vivid, but with a much inferior enclosure. It is a shame consumers don’t seem to have enough understanding of these products and their merits to really understand what is real development and what is just smoke screens. Machining cones out of aluminum, using silk dome tweeters is VERY low tech, BTW (no matter what kind of fancy name you give it).
And further he nonsensically states:
Most “mid-fi” companies like Ravel (Harman) and Paradigm have more technology in them then most high-end loudspeakers. However, since they are built to a very “controlled” price point, their execution leaves a lot to be desired (cheap materials and components, crapy cabinets, etc). The results can vary. Magico is the only company that I can think of that actually do have real engineering, real manufacturing and no, or minimal, price constrains. It is a unique proposition, and in my opinion the reason to their success.
Wow. There's fan boy drinking the cool aid and then there's LVB who's lost the plot completely and reads Magico's press copy and surmises that every other speaker manufacturer is a sham, utilizing old and tired technology and charging premium prices for it, and Magico is the
only that has
real engineering, i.e., cutting edge technology.
I see he then amended his comments in a subsequent comment where he said:
I did not claim that Magico has the secret sauce, and I will not argue their sound merits, people like what they like (look at the different reports from Axpona on the same speakers - go figure). But when it comes to technology I think that they are ahead of the curve, surely not trailing anyone I know.
Still drinking the cool aid but there is a subtle shift in his point. Not quite as dismissive of other high-end speaker companies and the consumers who buy their products but of course Magico still reigns supreme. I am ok with a person having that view point by the way. I am not ok with saying that none of the competing high-end speaker companies are doing anything cutting edge with driver technology, speaker enclosures, crossover networks, etc...because that is factually flat out wrong. From the top of my head I would say that companies like Raidho, TAD, Rockport, YG, Wilson, Sonus Faber, Focal, Kharma, KEF, Audio Physics, Ascendo, Steinheim, Zellaton, Evolution Acoustics, Revel, Tidal, etc...have all pushed the envelope on one or more aspect of speaker design and continue to do so based on core principles of engineering excellence, innovation, and a fanatical pursuit of quality production.
Anyhoo, it's all good. It's good to be passionate about the brands you own. I have no problem with that. But when you have to tear everybody else down to feel good about yourself, that's when it gets a bit sad. That's the only point I was trying to make. Had LVB just continued on praising Magico and Alon to his heart's content without adding in the dismissive and quite inaccurate remarks about
all the other competing high-end speaker brands, than I would have never chimed in.