Given how high the Neo3 is from the floor in the Super 7, has anyone here experimented with leaning your speakers forward? At my listening postion my ears are about at the level of the very bottom Neo10 and I sit about 10 feet from my speakers. I angled each of my speakers forward by putting a 1 inch wide 3/4 inch thick piece of mdf under the rear edge. The sound was immediately fuller, more focused and detailed.
I am not sure why it took me so long to try this given that I built in a 1/2 inch foward lean into the NX-Ottica monitors (I was a bit anxious about this coming from the shorter Super V's with tweeters just a hair lower than my ears). So I never really heard the NX-Otticas without a forward lean.
Anyway, if you have a low seat and you sit 11 to 10 feet or less from these amazing speakers this is a cheap enough tweak to try.
I think it would depend on the height of your ears in your Primary Listening Position to some degree.
Interesting that you mention this. Shortly after I got my Super 7's, I invited one of my friends from my local Audio Club over hoping for an additional point of view as I moved things around and made various adjustments (He is fairly well regarded as one of the true "Golden Ears" in the group. and not at all shy about giving his opinion). The very first suggestion he made was to raise the back of the speakers and aim the tweeters down a bit. He listened to a certain piece of music (I forget which) and said that the Vocals were "Too High" and likely due to the height of the tweeters.
I later measured the tweeters as around 44" and then the height of my ears when seated as somewhere around 38", so there was a bit of a gap. I then placed a small piece of shelving (covered with a microfiber cloth) under the rear of the speaker. This did result in voices being more focused height-wise. I also pulled out a different chair that was a bit taller (but not as comfortable as my regular chair). Helped in some respects.
On the other hand, I don't think the speakers are anchored to the floor as well, resulting in a decrease in overall focus of instruments.
May work further on it at some point.