I'm considering DIY to save some $$$.
Jim Holtz Statement Monitor was highly rated may be 13 years ago?
Are there any recent owners of the Statement series who can chime in?
The ribbon tweeter once $80 is $135 now and drivers are also old. Are they outdated?
Not a statement owner, but an owner of a speaker that uses the same midrange - Tang Band w4-1337SD. That midrange is NLA. Some have claimed the SDF model (ferrite motor, not neo) is a drop-in replacement and others have said the differences are noticeable but subtle. Who is right? Is the replacement better/worse?
Next point. I have listened to speakers others have raved about and thought they must be tone deaf. If people rave about speaker X, in this case the statement monitors, there’s no guarantee you will have the same taste in sound they do. You could build them and hate them or you may love them. That’s the risk with AIY vs DIY.
If you have the ability to DIY, you can change the design until you do love it. If you do not have that ability and you’re stuck with AIY, you’re also stuck with how the speaker sounds. If you hate them, you risk having little resale value too.
Many years ago I advocated for people to go the DIY route to save money. After building my own speakers and buying used speakers, the best value and least risk is buying used speakers. I would use my speakers as an example, Revel F206. After adding up paying full retail for drivers and crossover parts, it was about the same price to buy the used Revel speakers…and I would still have to build the speakers and design the crossover!
If you want to go the DIY route, go for it, it could be a fun learning experience. If you want to go the AIY route because you like woodworking, go for it, it could be a fun project. If you want to go the DIY/AIY route to save money, don’t - buy used.