How come Horn + woofer designs are not more popular?


A couple guys on my audio discord really love the JBL synthesis 4367 and feel that all traditional 3 way tower speakers suck because they have poor bass response and are generally shy sounding. What I wonder is how come the majority of speaker makes do floor standers that are 3 way as oppose to the Horn +woofer design of JBL?

Is there any downsides to the horn + woofer design? Can a horn convey microdetail as well as a Be tweeter like say from magic A or S line? They claim 3 way floor standers are just trendy. But is there anything more to it then that?
smodtactical

Thank you very much pbrain for that in-depth reply.

"I think the in-your-face character of the M2 is mostly due to its higher directivity index across the audio band. That’s not atypical of horns in general."

I agree.

My study of acoustics and psychoacoustics and the implications of the size rooms we listen in at home leads me to think that all reflections should be spectrally correct; that early reflections (those arriving within the first ballpark 10 milliseconds) are likely to be detrimental; and that late reflections (those arriving after about 10 milliseconds) are likely to be beneficial. To clarify a bit about the early reflections, they have some benefits and some detriments: They can widen the soundstage and make the speaker less obvious as the sound source, but they can also degrade clarity and cause coloration. Just about everything that late reflections do is beneficial, assuming they are spectrally correct, and assuming you don’t have a significant room acoustics issue like slap echo. A sense of immersion and envelopment comes primarily from the late reflections, which come from all directions; the ear/brain system is able to pick out the ambience information already on the recording from these late-onset reflections, identifying it by its harmonic structure.

So in the shoot-out, with the single speaker far from both side walls, you had no early-onset sidewall reflections to possibly degrade the sound. Aside from the floor and ceiling bounces (which are subjectively relatively benign), all of the reflections were late-onset, and spectrally correct. So what I THINK is that the significantly greater amount of late-onset reflections for the Salon 2’s helped them to sound more natural.

With a more conventional stereo setup, left and right speakers being much closer to their respective side walls, I think the M2’s would have benefitted from their narrower radiation pattern reducing the amount of energy in those early sidewall reflections. But in all fairness, my understanding is that Toole finds these early reflections to be generally beneficial, while Geddes and Griesinger find early reflections to be generally detrimental, so there are well-informed differences of opinion on the subject.

My own somewhat unorthodox approach to horns involves fairly narrow patterns, and then additional drivers aimed such that their reflected outputs arrive "late" (more than 10 milliseconds behind the first-arrival sound). In other words, my best horns speakers might be called "polydirectionals", to use the term coined by the late great Richard Shaninian. I’m trying to minimize the amount of energy in early reflections, but then increase the amount of (spectrally-correct) energy in late-onset reflections.

It’s has not been obvious to me which is the most beneficial: Minimizing early reflections, or increasing late reflections. But the test you participated in seems to suggest that increasing the amount of energy in late reflections probably matters the most, which is something I’ve been working on. And THAT’S why I personally find this test so interesting.

By any chance will you be attending T.H.E. Show in Long Beach in two weeks? If so, I would REALLY welcome your brutally honest critique of what I’m doing. Imo your background makes you uniquely well qualified.

Duke

@mrdecibel --

But a question for gw _smith. What are you referring to when you say " large mid horn " ? and " that’s an 8 inch bass horn wrapped up in a very small space " ? I am a 50 year Klipsch Heritage veteran ( not an employee ), and I am not understanding either of these statements. Would you please, care to explain ?

Maybe you’ve received the answers to your questions in the meantime, but poster @gw_smith wrote the following:

If I may add, that Paul Klipsch’s Klipschorn was all about making a woofer that COULD keep up with that large mid horn! (thats an 8’ bass horn wrapped up in a very small space!!)

To begin with he refers to, I believe, a bass system that can dynamically, transiently, sensitivity- and otherwise sonically compliment the midrange horn of the Khorn in a suitable fashion for an overall more coherent presentation, something that could have more easily gone haywire with a direct radiating solution, certainly in regards to maintaining the traits mentioned just above.

He’s then referring to the 8 feet (not inches) long bass horn path of the Khorn that’s folded in such a way to make for a fairly compact design, relatively speaking; as 1/4 wavelength horns we’re still faced with significant sizes if we’re to go anywhere near 30Hz, let alone deeper.
I think JBL M2 have too low sensitivity 92dB  for horn + 15" woofer speakers.
This fact kills they advantages over box speakers.
Yes, they should have better high and low frequencies extension compared to typical horn speakers, 
BUT
They will never sound as dynamic and alive as 97-100dB horn speakers and you can't use them with SET amplifiers.
I listen mostly jazz and classical music, and for this kind of music low mass old 15" woofers like where used in: old Altec, JBL L200, Tannoy Silver, Red suit better. 
New heavy 15" woofers more suit for rock and pop music but they don't breathing and sound more simplified on midrange. 
Speaking purely subjectively, for me speaker brands highlighted different things.  As a musician, I prefer to evaluate audio with music that doesn't rely on amplification for its realization, hence acoustic instruments.  Since I was a young teen, I've loved the way piano sounds on JBLs (I've had a Steinway grand almost since then).  I was blown away when I heard Wagner on a pair of Bozak Concert Grands.  Strings always had an unmatched warmth for me on KLH.

I've owned and loved JBLs since a teenager (over 50 years ago!), acquiring a bass reflex system with D130s alone at first, adding "potato masher" horns around 1970.  I still have them, and recently hooked in a pair of O75s.  In the early 1990s, I lucked upon a Paragon and vintage McIntosh MC240 & MC275 amps.  At first, I thought the sound impressive, but a bit harsh with weak bass.  The harshness increased as one moved closer to the horns, of course.  Subsequently, I learned that the previous owner listened at less than a moderate level (he had a cheap L Pad attached to it for convenient volume adjustment!)  I added a graphic equalizer and used it for years until I noticed that the (stiff?) 150C woofers had blossomed.  I took the equalizer offline and added a pair of JBL 2405s in parallel with the O75s.

My friends, mostly professional musicians, never failed to be impressed.  However, for me, there was yet a ways to go.  Five years ago I installed a McIntosh MEN220, "Room Perfect" component—bi-amped with an MC2105 for the low end and the MC275 for the horns and tweeters.  After running the room correction algorithm, I found that a great majority of what I had perceived as shortcomings were essentially gone.  There's nothing like live music, but this system continues to give me a thrill.
Horns can be the last loudspeaker you would ever need to buy good ones are not obsoleted as quickly or at all like nearly all conventional dynamics and estats.  They hold up well with time unlike the many others and can be easily repaired or upgraded. Horn based systems are great at producing a near real sound that the other types struggle to produce. But they are large take skill and knowledge to set up and are a bit harder to source. The best in horns is fully horn loading and most consider this just a bit to much to pull off. So many of those who claim to have heard a horn system most likely only heard hybrids not full horn loading.