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with the 1801 theater setup, I've had several people get freaked out, thinking that the sounds from the movie were real.
The only problem with many of those older speakers was the foam surround. I believe foam is the best surround material, but many types of foam will rot fairly quick. It's quite common for older speakers to have very "holy" surrounds.
By the way, here's a picture of another 1801 based 5.1 setup Jim Salk recently completed for a recording studio.http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=32014.0
build a mbow1 and turn it sideways
-have Dennis design a wider, perhaps mtm with the same speakers to somewhat timber match the 1801's
-take a shot in the dark and build another diy kit from GR or Selah or someone and hope it matches enough for HT. This selah would work size wise and it uses Seas drivers, but a ribbon tweeter: http://www.selahaudio.com/id14.html and it is 4 ohm, my system
-take a shot in the dark and buy a commercial speaker and home it is timber matched enough to the 1801's
And its very interesting that you find the tweet more important for similar voicing.
I also apologize if I offended anyone working in an MTM center channel marketing department. But, please consider that my comments actually offer very laudable praise for being able to successfully sell a very questionable product .
Correct me if I'm wrong, but are you referring to the phase errors caused by the difference in arrival time from each woofer at the cross-over point, causing nulls as you pan left or right of center?
If I understand you correctly, if I were to take a MTM center channel and tip it up vertically, these problems should be nullified?