Stereo, I don't doubt the aim for an advanced sound. And I imagine the 3s sound phenomenal. If you were a vinyl afficionado such as myself, with 10000 lps, would this spkr in effect NOT be the one to choose because of the need to go digital at a critical part of the chain. It would go against the grain with me to "digitise" the sound. Or is a digital XO more subtle than this?
So, you don't like horns - the 3s doesn't sound like any other horn. Is it indeed closer to Magico's flagship Q7, or is it totally in a class of it's own? Hard to talk about comparisons I guess when an item is in a class of it's own.
Btw, what is "BoM"? Thanks for your patience, just trying to get a handle - now where's that lottery ticket?!
Sorry, I cannot help with the lottery ticket ;-)
BoM stands for "Bill of Material". It means the cost of all components composing a product (without cost for manufacturing, product development, sales, marketing, etc).
I am ready to bet that a turntable feeding the system through a top of the class ADC like the Pacific Microsonics Model 2, with 192kHz sampling cannot be distinguished from direct feed. Actually, I would even bet that you will gain sonically by recording the turntable feed onto the HD of the server, with the speakers disconnected, and then play the digital copy of your LP from the server. Air movement while playing music induces vibrations which are detrimental to the reading of the stylus... we keep focusing on anti-vibration platforms, but in particular in case of turntables, airborne vibrations are also a significant problem.
Of course, that's will be possible only with a top notch digital XO, with full synchronization between channels. This is very difficult to achieve with most of the commercially available solutions, which have been more designed with cost optimization in mind. That's why we are integrating the XO in the Conbrio itself, it gives us total control on quality of implementation.
Keep in mind that there are also problems with any analog XO. Any caps, resistance or coil in the signal path will degrade the sound. That's why serious companies like Magico invest in very pricey Mundorf XO components such as the M-Caps Supreme Gold, to try to preserve the source as much as possible (don't want to start a bashing exercise, but talking about BoM, I can give you names of very famous loudspeakers companies who invest less in the full speaker BoM than what Magico would pay for their XO... but that's lead us to a completely different topic, which is how much the view of 90% of audiophiles is completely distorted on what is "good design" and "good value for money"... just read this forum). You may find a pure analog path as more "pure": again, it may be the case or not, it just depends on quality of implementation.