Did the title get your attention Tyson?

Really though, Tyson is admittedly very sensitive to top end brightness and so am I. So he did a little tweak to his V-2's to soften them up a little more to his liking.
He outlined it very well right here:
http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=86681.msg845739#msg845739He also thought that my Super-V's at the show were a little hot too.

So it motivated me to see what result he was getting with that foam tweak.
Tyson gave me a couple of pieces of that reticulated foam that he used in front of his tweeters while he was at the show. So I thought I'd drop it in and see what it was doing that made him like it so well.
I don't have my listening rig set up yet and may not yet for a while as I am just too busy to get to it. But my measuring system is always set up and ready for action and it only takes me a few minutes to take some measurements. In fact I did all of it quicker than the time that it takes me to write all of this.
Anyway, I took some base line measurements then inserted the foam piece as instructed and took another measurement.
The Red line is with no foam and the Green line is with the foam.

The response shows the difference. It clearly soaked up quite a bit of output in the lower range of the tweeters response and also some energy across the board. If you want to lower the output in that range then this will do it.
Guys, the great thing about building a kit like the V-2 is that you can easily adjust it to sound any way that you want. And if Tyson is in heaven with this response that's fine by me.
I might experiment with a very small amount of this stuff to see if I can maintain a smooth response but just drop a little bit of the edge off at 1.5kHz. Who knows. I might like how it sounds too.
Thanks Tyson!