Stated differently, is it possible to design a cone speaker that performs well *AND* has benign impedance and phase angle curves? And is also reasonably sensitive??yes! Roy Johnson of Green Mountain Audio has been doing this for a long time now. He's well known but not an audiophile household name like, say, B&W. But his speakers are all cone-driver types & they are often 6 Ohms & they have very little phase shift in the 200Hz-8KHz band (we're talking 10 degrees or less) & outside this band the phase shift is more but nowhere near the speakers that are members of the Society for the Cruetly to Amplifiers. Green Mountain Audio speakers are easy to drive - a 30W/ch RM10 from Roger Modjeski will drive many of his stand-mount speakers to sufficiently high SPL. The Green Mountain Audio speakers are in the 90dB sensitivity range.
here is a link to his Rio speaker design notes:
http://greenmountainaudio.com/storage/speakers/rio/Rio-Design-Concept.pdf
i realize that no phase plot is given but one can assume from the flatness of the impedance curve that the phase is also relatively flat (note that wild impedance curves & wild phase curves are related - when you see one, you see the other. Do an empirical check to convince yourself).
here's a review of the Callisto speakers on 6moons:
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/gma2/callisto.html
The Green Mountain Audio speakers always sound like music on all your genres of music. I recently heard them again at RMAF2013 & they once again delighted. Stereophile gave Green Mountain Audio some very good press:
http://www.stereophile.com/content/marigo-whirls-green-mountain
Roy Johnson on the left (& Marigo Audio Labs owner on Ron Hedrick on the right).
For me speakers from the company are really the best & I can't seem to listen to any other type of speaker as they seem "broken" to me (my understanding is that the Apogee Scintilla also has a 1st order x-over).
No financial or otherwise implied relationship with Green Mountain Audio. Just a happy former owner.
Thanks.

