I agree...
my drums are mudless any need no eq post or pre...
and with normal cabs you are recording the sound inside the cab so thats why there is always going to be boomy -mud - phase so you wont have them 3 with the drums
dude .... you really need to get it thru your head that you're saying things that aren't true.
First ..... despite your repeating the mantra it is NOT true that when you mic a cab it's always boomy mud .... period. I've been recording for 40 years and all of it was thru regular cabinets and I've NEVER ..... not once ..... not ever ..... had a track that was boomy mud.
Secondly ..... it is NOT true that your speakers will never need EQ ..... every single one of your clips I listened to desperately needed EQ'ing. They all sounded thin and bright and I wouldn't consider any of them to be acceptable without EQ'ing.
Lastly ....... bass reinforcement that cabs provide is often a desired sound.
Now .... you do what you want but if I were looking at your product I would be so turned off by your non-factual statements that I would lose any interest I might have had in your product.
The things you're saying are factually and scientifically incorrect and you should shy away from them and concentrate on what your cabs
actually do which is provide their own unique sound.
That alone is something that your cabs genuinely DO provide. Another color on the tone palette for guitarists.
For a live player .... meh, I gig 250 nights a year. I can take my 1x12 cab and throw it in the truck (it won't roll around) and toss it onto the stage ( don't need any sort of stand) and since I tend towards open backed cabs it's gonna sound not that different than yours. Hopefully it'll not be as thin but it's gonna sound similar.
I definitely would never want to add dealing with a stand to my set-up routine.
But I might very well consider using one in the studio.
But not if you're gonna be V.P.- like in your stubborness to keep saying things that a ton of people are telling you are factually incorrect.
you dont want to hear your tone off the walls..its not your true tone..you only want to hear off the speaker..
another factually incorrect statement. First off ..... there is no such thing as true tone ...... different guitarists want different things and virtually EVERY top recording engineer uses a room mic for the specific purpose of getting the sound that bounces off the walls.
It IS a part of your sound.
My true tone, as you put it, is what I hear when standing or sitting in front of my amp. That's my true tone and it's what i want to capture and it includes the room interaction. It's rarely what comes out an inch in front of my speaker because it needs to get out into the room and have a chance to coelesce .
And your speaker will have just as much interaction with the room as any other cab.
You can't keep simply ignoring everything that people who clearly know a lot more about speaker design than you are trying to tell you. You get the same responses on other forums and keep ignoring them.
You are fundamently wrong in some of your statements.
I predict that your cabs will do ok IF you push what they actually do which is to have their own sound.
Saying factually incorrect things isn't a good way to sell them IMO.
Now ..... this is a tone thread .... it's not about your cabs ...... post some tone.