I started designing and building speakers as an amateur in 1979. Over the next fifteen or so years I came up with many different ways to build a bad transmission line, and a few ways to build a good one.
In the mid 90's I tallied up the projected parts cost for my most ambitious design to date and realized that I could buy used Quad 63's for about the same price. So I did that instead. Subsequently I upgraded to SoundLabs and became a SoundLab dealer. Several years after that I returned to my roots and started building and selling my own loudspeaker designs.
Imo there are three big leaps involved in going from amateur to manufacturer:
The first leap is going from "I like my speakers" to "some other people like my speakers."
The second leap is going from "some other people like my speakers" to "some other people like my speakers enough to want to buy them."
The third leap is going from "some other people like my speakers enough to want to buy them" to "... and they are willing to pay a price that I can make money on."
Nothing brings me more joy than creating music...
For the past fortysomething years my creative outlet has been loudspeaker design. During that time I have only built three pairs of speakers that started out as kits, versus close to two hundred original designs (mostly failed experiments, some for home audio and some for prosound). My best speakers were always my next speakers, in my mind at least. I have always had more ideas than time, so I have tended to explore various roads less traveled.
For the record I was already doing my own time-gated spin-o-ramas three years before Floyd Toole's book came out. But this post is not about the technical side.
I'd really love to hear what people think, not so much on the technical criticisms of it all, but the more personal and spiritual aspects I described.
Interesting that you used the word "spiritual". There have been times when I felt like a loudspeaker design idea chose me, rather than the other way around. Have you ever felt like a tune chose you? Maybe something like that.
Imo music deeply listened to can be transformational, almost like a very-little-effort-required version of deep meditation. Imo for men music can play a particularly important role because it's a place we can go to feel things that normally we suppress. I get satisfaction from making a contribution to the signal chain for some people.