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If they sound good, who cares how they measure?
The only way anyone gets the pretty flat graphs is by measuring in an anechoic space or taking a tiny slice in time before room reflections come in,
neither of which are represenative of what you will actually hear.
Nothing is neutral or flat in real world practice. I just don't think the phenomenon exists, and I wonder if it is even desirable.
If flatness correlated 1:1 with sonic satisfaction then everyone would be installing wire floors and 3 foot fiberglass wedges in a barn. But what IS flat?
but I wouldn't doubt for a second that if I did the same test in my own room it would be the rocky mountains. Bare drywall will do that to a fella.
I'd rather we drop the on axis FR analysis and use an average of 0, 15º, 30º, 45º & 60º (weighted if you prefer) it would be much more correlated with what we hear. Making a speaker flat on axis doesn't mean all that much if we listen off axis.
Measurements of the Mackies were taken in our anechoic chamber. ...The Mackies were just outside of +/-3db with some rather rough peaks and dips that were a little too close to one another.
Actually the people that use these for mixing have them at the end of their mixing board aimed right at them (typically), so the on axis response is very representative of what they will hear.
I have measured many speakers that are very accurate. We won't even release a speaker that doesn't fall within a +/-2db range and some of my work easy falls within a +/-1db range. Is accuracy desirable? Certainly.
Are you really listening in a room with bare drywall?
The recording engineers that are using them for mixing. That's who.
Big diaphragm dipoles like Magneplanar 1.6s are just not the kind of loudspeakers that are going to bench-test ruler-flat. That bit of softness at the extreme top, that bit of added energy in the upper mids, a small bit of suckout in the crossover region (these are two-ways, after all), and the emphatic authority of its mid-to-upper bass combine to give you a sweet, slight tly-darker- than -I ife sound (unusual for Maggies, which tend toward the dry, bright, up-front sound of magnet-driven plastic). There is nothing egregious about this balance (indeed, the 1.6s measure flatter than other Maggies); it just isn't textbook.Don't give it a second thought. Rulerflat frequency response is oversold. Better the lightning transients, the superb dynamic scaling, the remarkable spaciousness, the nearly world-class inner detail, the single-driver coherence, and sheer presencing power-all of which the Maggie 1.6s have in abundance.