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My statements are factually correct. ATC do have low distortion at higher SPL than most speakers which is a distinct advantage. I agree that at moderate SPL levels the differences in performance become small.
3.3KHz in the bigger models and on SCM19 or 20 I believe the grafted 3" dome operates up to 2.8KHz - in both cases this means that you are getting much more even dispersion through the mid range. This is a fact.
So the highly prevalent two way speaker designs with 6" woofers generally tend to have a mid range scoop due to the narrowing of the off axis response in the upper midrange (many people like this sound as it emphasizes treble and bass).
These ATC speakers, particularly the SCM100A are simply the best speakers that I have heard for the money. They can produce dynamics like no other speaker in its price range and sound as good at crazy spl levels. I have yet to hear any distortion and compression from them and I have owned speakers costing twice as much from TAD etc
There is no better monitor or Hi-end speaker period.
Harmonic distortions are a percentage of output. They go up and down with SPL level. So it is constant.
The heart of the mid-range (the true mid-range) is in the 300Hz to 500Hz range. A driver that is a true mid-range driver designed to really cover the mid-range will handle a range from just under 200Hz to 1kHz. Above those ranges are not mid-ranges. And the 300Hz to 500Hz is the one area that you want to avoid a crossover point. You don't want dissimilar drivers, with a different offset, and a phase shift to be in that region.
As a designer I had a hard time understanding why they designed a speaker with so much surface reflection from the front baffle. And as a listener I had a hard time getting past that. That element alone is not at all good for imaging and sound stage.
Distortion is measured (at safe volume levels) as a percentage of output but you will find that with speaker drivers the distortion will increase at greater cone excursion or higher SPL. Here is an example of increased distortion at 95 db SPL. At 50 Hz the distortion is -22 db when at 95 db SPL compared to -27 db at 90 db SPL. This will get worse at even higher SPL's. It even shows how the tweeter is compressing quite badly (probably thermal compression).http://www.soundstagenetwork.com/measurements/speakers/wilson_wattpuppy8/
I don't think many people would agree that the mid range is so narrow. As for speaker design philosophy, I am sure everyone has an opinion but suffice to say that ATC have stuck to practically the same design for 30 years or so. It may not be totally conventional - if you consider the most popular two way design to be "conventional" (6 inch woofer up to somewhere between 2.4 or 4 KHz and a tweeter above that) but it certainly works well enough.
Keep in mind too that these studios are using these for mixing and listening for their own preferences. They aren't like us wacky audiophiles that are trying to recreate a 3 dimensional sound stage.
AJinFLA,My statements are factually correct. ATC do have low distortion at higher SPL than most speakers which is a distinct advantage.
Are you by chance the Ashley James that used to work at ATC?
And sticking to facts, here is a list of some users. The relevance being that these are mostly musicians and audio professionals
Where is the ATC data like this?Notice the non-linearities at 5k with the direct radiator bling dome, at 95db?