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It's impossible for any speaker to radiate in such a way as to avoid room acoustics problems.
Once sound gets into the room, it bounces around creating peaks, nulls, flutter echo, early reflections, modal ringing, and reverb in larger rooms. There is no avoiding this.
So in order of importance:1) The room2) The speakers
Interested primarily in scientifically verifiable evidence, not conjecture.
I'll ignore the tone of your post and simply show "scientifically verifiable evidence" as Before and After graphs below.
...and Mirage (now defunct).
http://www.miragespeakers.com/
Mr. Linkwitz is a damn genius as far as I'm concerned. If you think that's going too far, perhaps we can agree on "extremely bright." I happen to agree with him about speaker radiation etc. being more important than the room. Which has lead me to 4 speaker companies to focus my attention: Linkwitz, Duevel, Morrison Audio, and Mirage (now defunct). It's too bad about Mirage because they had access to some of the best speaker testing facilities in the world. Anyways, to understand what Linkwitz is saying, how he arrived at that conclusion, you have to be patient and read most or all of his website. It's a lot, but it's worth it, and in my opinion his website is one of the absolute best resources on the internet for truly understanding good loudspeaker design and implementation. For the record, he's not against room treatment, he simply says that the normal stuff in the average living room is sufficient IF you are operating properly designed speakers. He also says his speakers are not the only ones; sometime recently under his "what's new" section he had a really good writeup (maybe even what the o.p. is referencing) where he named some names and I believe Magnepan "came close."
Floyd E. Toole in his book 'Sound Reproduction' agrees with the average/normal room concepts, but does offer advice for optimal use of absorption/diffusion. I do like much of what Linkwitz believes in, but can't accept the dipole concept.
Toole's big thing is the need, below the Schroeder frequency (that varies by room, but is roughly 110 - 160 Hz in most residential cases)
sound travels in waves, with the room behaving like pushing water along the length of a shallow bath tub. The waves rebound off the far end and depending on frequency and location can double or cancel out with other waves.
No amount of treatment or EQ can 'correct' for this. The solution is the use of multiple subs, distributed around the room. Search AC for 'swam'. Using a swam of subs, Linkwitz's Pluto makes perfect sense.
The speaker (IMHO) is still the single largest largest driving factor in sound reproduction. What really brought this home was exposure to speakers such as those made by ATC..
Experience tracking problems with you turntable???....ATC speakers is the answer!! cheers,AJ
Ethan, unless you can give some details about those graphs, they're not very helpful.