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Yep, the main purpose of the center channel in a movie is to anchor the dialogue for listeners sitting to the side.The tri-center can apparently sound better than two Maggies alone, but a regular center doesn't, if you're sitting in the sweet spot.With planars, many people like diffusion rather than absorption at the first reflection point behind the speakers. Elsewhere in the room it's optional unless you're sitting too close to the rear wall, in which case you can use absorption. First reflection points at the sides aren't heavily illuminated but they do get some depending on speaker angle so you can use absorption or diffusion if you're far enough away (a QRD diffuser really needs about 8' or so of distance to work). Elsewhere in the room absorption and diffusion aren't necessary unless the room is too bright or has slap echo.
The tri-center can apparently sound better than two Maggies alone, but a regular center doesn't, if you're sitting in the sweet spot.
When you say tri-center do you mean three speakers for the center channel plus the typical L+R front speakers as opposed to a single center speaker centered between the L+R speakers? How is the latter setup bad if you're sitting in the sweet spot?Doesn't room dimensions come into play if the tri-center consists of five front speakers? What would be the minimum distances between the speakers assuming the extreme L+R speakers are 1 or 2 ft away from the side walls?