First, I gotta say, Miro, that it drives me goofy sometimes the way everybody always assumes that a larger woofer automatically equals more and/or better bass. That's *maybe* true, if and only if, all else in the speaker system design and the design/construction of the woofer element itself is equal. The material out of which the cone is made, the cone's shape, the size of the dustcap and voicecoil, the size of the magnet, the amount if power driving it, the crossover, the design and construction of the cabinet in which it sits, and the combination of all those factors factored together all play into it just as much as the diameter of the woofer itself. I've heard some loudspeakers with 6" woofers that deliver tighter, punchier and *more* bass than some 10" designs. And vice versa, btw. Size is not everything.
That's all fine...I agree that there ARE all kinds of monitors and that JUST speaker size is not the only way to judge/pick them.
However, I did specifically say a wide-bandwidth, larger monitors VS a dinky computer setup. With that, I've identified that one is potentially a better design….so let’s put that aside.
But now, let’s take two identically designed/engineered (as close as can be) monitors, where the one with the 5" speaker rolls-off the low end a lot faster and more dramatically than the one with the 8" speaker.
With that in mind...the type of low end that you put in the room is going to be different with each set of monitors, is it not?
Therefore, even though the room has the same base modality in both cases...if one speaker is not putting out much of anything below say… 80 Hz, and the other is pumping flat even down at 40 Hz...that will change how the room "hears" what each speaker system is outputting...will it not?
So, if there was say…a bass null at 47 Hz…it will be more obvious if your are pumping lots of 40 Hz material than if you were hardly pumping anything much below 80 Hz.
I know these are very specific conditions…and your overall points are well taken…
but all other things being as equal as possible…bigger speaker size often = more low end and more extended low end, and that can be something to consider if you are in a small room VS a huge room since low-end waves will not build up as much/quickly in a huge room as they could in a very small room (bass trapping considered).
Third, who cares what the woofer diameter is anyway? Your ears can't tell the diameter, and your eyes can't tell you what a speaker sounds like. When you think about it that way, worrying about woofer size seems kind of silly. I'd recommend auditioning speakers with blindfolds on…
Well…just considering the *size* may not the whole point.
It’s just that in most cases…a big 8” is going to perform better in the low end than a dinky little 4”!

I’m sure there are some exceptions…but most are usually just self-serving myths!
