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Jim, of the 3 speaker options, which would you say has the warmest or sweetest midrange? Is there one you would pick if you were going to be listening to a lot of solo vocal or small-scale choral material with mid-level production quality?
Do you have an opinion on the importance of the HTS crossovers optimized for on-wall placement? I'm not sure how to weigh the optimized HTS crossovers vs. the higher resolution of the HT2 without such crossovers.
QuoteJim, of the 3 speaker options, which would you say has the warmest or sweetest midrange? Is there one you would pick if you were going to be listening to a lot of solo vocal or small-scale choral material with mid-level production quality?Jim gave a fantastic answer. Please don't think that anything that I am saying disagrees with Jim. On the solo vocal or small scale coral, I would think that the SongTowers would win out since they image so well. My HT1's image well too, but not as well as the SongTowers. On all of the other sounds, I don't think that the SongTowers could keep up to the HT2's. Although the SongTowers are very clear, I do think the SongTowers have a slight warm veil that it gives over the music compared to the HT's.
Well, having spent time with both the HT2's and the SongTowers, I don't think the depth and wideth of the SongTower's sound stage is related to the MTM format as both speakers are MTM designs. I think it has more to do with both the smaller midwoofer diameter (as Dennis said) and the narrower front baffle.