I was pointed out to Hans Deutsch website and I read everything he says, by translator. Typically, the efforts in this direction never were successful. There are plenty of the companies using acoustic, or mechanical, or electronic feedback to provide excursion compensation. There are companies who built so get along magnetic gaps or super short coils in order to keep drivers visiting constant magnetic situation. Is there very companies back in 70s who cancel suspension of drivers by applying positive current feedback to amplification and then holding the diaphragms in damping neutral zone. Is there some people in companies who introduced to drivers some obscenely compliant suspension. Like super fine leather of super fine thinners. I think all of them are completely legitimate directions to Luke but all of them accomplish the same things to drive primary residence outside of audible region and if a driver do enter primary residence then they control it electrically. It looks what Hans Deutsch that is along those lines when he electronically canceled driver resonances and inflict them but active changes in real time in crossover. Of course it is elegant. I really would like to see how he maintains face linearity while he do this but it is extremely difficult to predict how t might sound. It should be experienced in properly implemented proof of concept. I never heard it but I certainly would like to hear it. If those loudspeakers have US presents it's my refund to try them. I would like to point out that concept is well known but so far it did not become to the best of my knowledge and dominating concept for installations of this big objectives. Is it highly possible that Hans Deutsch might have good idea but doesn't have good clientele base to implement his topology or his vision at the food 100% fidelity to own topology, as so far what I have seen and the pictures are relatively small loud speakers reach might be good only for girls with banjo.
"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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