Are exotic speaker cabinet materials overrated?


Seems a lot of speaker companies are coming out with new non resonant cabinet materials all the time. Wilson especially seems to be inventing a new M X V material every year. Other top speaker companies seem to be staying with MDF even when their speakers match the above mentioned speaker company prices. Do these exotic materials really contribute to a better sound or do they add an unnatural quality to the sound. 

 

hiendmmoe

@yoyoyaya  You're right, basic concrete is not a good choice. However, there are additives that can be mixed into concrete that makes it an excellent material to use especially when creating special shapes. It also requires a mold. The complexity becomes far greater.

Polymer modifiers, Latex/Acrylic polymers

  • Increase tensile strength
  • Increase internal damping
  • Improve adhesion between aggregate and cement

Pros for speakers:

  • Reduces brittleness

  • Adds loss factor (less ringing)

  • Improves edge integrity around driver cutouts

MDF is not “cheap” — it is acoustically well-behaved.
Concrete is not “high-end” unless engineered to avoid its own strengths.

The only advantage concrete may have is for molding shapes. MDF remains a superior product if properly braced and dampened.

Adding substances to Board Materials with the intent to improve the board materials Damping Factor, is known about for a long time in circles where there is a importance on such matters being aired.

Modellers Putty from the Brand Newplast, measures with a Damping Factor that is 50% better than Plasticene.

Newplast added to Board such as MDF has created a DF of 0.3, which is very attractive, but intrinsic properties for Dissipation is not attractive when measured.  Dissipation of most board type materials coated with a material that improves the DF, does not produce a board type that match's a RIDWB intrinsic properties.

Control of resonance through Dissipation is an extremely attractive intrinsic property for a material. High Damper Factor alone does not win over, hence Plinths for TT's using such a design have been Superseded in use for many years, where Dissipation is also a highly valued area of the designs. This same practice is now very evident that it is extending into Structures used for Speakers. 

@gdaddy1 thanks for the details. you do this when you have 5 sides of the cabinet glued and b4 the crossover instal?

also my son and I recently put together a Parts Express C- Note and decided to cut our own 3/4 inch BB in lieu of the 1/2 inch mdf you can get if you order the cabinets. 

I would think that availability is a significant concern for those using exotic woods. A guitarist friend of mine who was a performance major at CCM, had a Brazilian Rosewood guitar. It was the envy of every other guitar major in the conservatory because Brazilian Rosewood is under protective status. 

Additionally, my understanding is that acrylic glass is pretty much non resonant. My power amp is made from sheets of acrylic glass with aluminum heat sinks. Its also aesthetically pleasing to look through the acrylic glass whenever the amp is powered up.

Lastly, my previous speaker tech made me a pair of headphones. The value in this headphone is its 50mm driver. The hardware is plastic. I was talking to my local dealer and he advised me to make wooden supports for the drivers, claiming they will sound better. I guess that's my next project.

@simao The North Creek Music (George Short) Glop recipe is a 50/50 mixture of their soft glue and drywall compound. I’m not sure what NCM Soft Glue is or what a commercially available product might be, but have heard Aleene’s Original Tacky Glue is a close substitute.