Alright... I spent about a hour adjusting the angle of the top baffle to time align the drivers to a person sitting 9 feet away with their ears at 38 inches above the floor. This eliminates the need for a delay on the tweeter and serendipitously it time-aligned the midrange to the woofer, so without even planning it, these speakers are now perfectly time aligned with a perfect impulse response if the listener is sitting exactly 108 inches from the tweeter with their ears exactly 38 inches above the floor. Sometimes I get lucky!
Next I recalibrated the crossover to get as smooth a response as I could through the two octaves around each of the crossover regions, which was from about 200 to 800Hz and from about 1,400Hz to 5,600Hz.
I then put the mic exactly 1M from the tweeter perfectly inline between the tweeter and the ideal position for the listener's ear for each channel, and captured these response curves:
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Chart 2: Left & Right speaker responses from 1M with no smoothing (software captures as 1/128th octave)
Take a look at that... those are completely unsmoothed response curves from loudspeakers in a lively room!!! Above about 2,000Hz they are as smooth as can be had!!!! That demonstrates the power of a good baffle design, tweeter placement on said baffle, and proper countersinking of the tweeter's faceplate into the baffle face. WOW!
No, seriously, look at that again... This is what makes a well designed baffle superior to all the common and more acceptable boxy rectangle speaker cabinets in every possible way!!! Damn!!! I am bragging about this one for some time, folks.
Anyway, here's the same data smoothed with a 1/3 octave filter:
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Chart 3: Left & Right speaker response curves with 1/3 octave smoothing from 1M
This is what manufacturers would use to market their products (if they ever show a response curve at all). The only real difference is these datasets were created in a less than ideal room, so the bass is clearly not consistent between the two. There's a slight dip in the 180 - 310Hz range, but otherwise they are very smooth and balanced.
More importantly, the response from about 60Hz to over 15,000Hz is smooth and flat. I am always ranting on and on about the importance of accurate and clear midrange, and one way to help get accurate midrange is to have a flat response throughout that range. These speakers are doing it well, I'd say.
Bass extension of the 11" woofers in this room is very good as well. The left speaker in this case is 4.5 feet from the side wall and 5 feet from the rear wall and has a IEC bass limit of 20Hz while the right speaker is away from all side walls and is 5 feet from the rear wall has a limit of about 23Hz. That's pretty impressive!
I then put the microphone exactly in the center behind the ideal listening position by about 6 inches so the direct line of sight between the mic and the tweeter would pass through the earlobes of a seated listener and made a single combined measurement to get an overall in-room response.
View attachment 8629
Chart 4: Stereo pair frequency response from listening position, 1/3 smoothing
This was very surprising measurement as I usually get very bad comb filtering from mic not being exactly the same distance from both speakers, but in this case all my care to place it perfectly paid off and I got a flat response almost devoid any comb filtering.
From this response I could argue these speakers are capable of a solid response of 24 - 18,000Hz +/-3dB with a bass limit of 19Hz.
Later I will make dynamic measurements to see how loud they should be able to safely and comfortably play. Capturing the impulse response is difficult to do as the software I use doesn't do decent snapshots, but I'll try to get that as well.
I am currently letting good music play through them for a bit then I'll go do some critical listening with the "Flint's Super-Spectacular Loudspeaker Auditioning CDs" to see if I want to adjust them any more.