Ethan,
What I'm saying is that the Tact would have to do some averaging. The filters in the Tact simply can't respond to that many "wiggles" in the response curve. When I look at my ETF curves, for instance, and compare with the unmodified TACT curves posted by others, my ETF curves have way more undulations than the TACT. So, it's either my room is particularly bad or the TACT is smoothing the response. I think the latter is correct. The only way to know is to have someone use both TACT and ETF.
And for all you TACT lovers, here's another thing the TACT (and any other digital room correction system) cannot correct:
"It may not be obvious, but the DI [directivity index] is not correctable by any electronic means. That’s what makes it
important to design [speakers for good DI] correctly. The current fad for electronic EQ that yields perfectly flat axial responses
does not improve, or even change, the DI at all. In other words, this kind of EQ will not actually
change the results for the two speakers shown in this example very much at all. The curves of
Figure 4-6 on page 65 may become a little flatter, but none of the other plots will change at all. So instead
of having two speakers that look reasonable good and similar on axis we now have two speakers
that look perfect and identical on-axis. The problem is that the better one is still better and they will
still sound quite different. The EQ has not changed any of that. Its not even clear that it has improved
anything."
Page 71 of Chapter 4.
By the way, I had a chance to read more of this chapter. I can't wait for the book.