In the Stereophile blog coverage of the show the VMPS RMD 60 is shown without the constant directivity waveguide. Was it demo'd this way, or is the waveguide still part of the design?
http://blog.stereophile.com/rmaf2007/101407vmps/
Hi Russell,
Thanks for the link, below is the pic from it.
The RM v60 is a very sophisticated speaker, and as such has many elements to adjust the sonic properties.
It has the twin L-Pads to create balance between the tweeter, the MR panels, and the woofer section.
It has the foam wedge that can adjust to very specific degrees of dipolar/open baffle charachteristics, to monopole.
And it also has the CDWG's which offer either a very "directional" presentation when off, to a highly dispersive radiation when they are on.
When "off" the neopanels and tweeter will direct the sound to a focused sweet spot, equidistant between the speakers, and present "stunning" imaging and soundstage from that postition, as well as incredible detail and resolution.
When they are "on", the sound of the tweeter and Neopanels is then "dispersed" in a rather constant directivity over the frequency range covered by those drivers.
This then increases the "Sweet Spot" vertically and horizontally to allow a soundstage and imaging to be "set up" from a much wider listening area, but at a small expense of some detail and resolution.
All of these elements, are used in consideration of your listening preferences, and the psychoacoustics of the listening room.
Smaller live rooms, can sometimes create too many or too much early reflection(s), and this might suggest that the CDWG be removed to reduce such room distortion.
below the picture is a quote by Jason Victor Serinus from the Stereophile article your URL pointed to.

I was impressed by the extremely full-range presentation of the VMPS RMD-60 loudspeaker ($9950/pair) paired with the VMPS Very Solid Subwoofer ($1850)—especially with the system's admirable bass control.