Several Polk audio speakers, which supposedly scored well in Floyd toole's listening tests for off axis response. Plenty of speakers without waveguides or intentionally designed constant directivity have beaming issues with high frequencies, for example, here is the response off axis of a b&w 703
As you can see, after around 5k the response starts dropping, ending up 6dB down at 10khz, and 12dB down at ~14khz.
Any driver will narrow its dispersion pattern as the wavelength gets closer to or smaller than the drivers diameter, that's just physics. The only way to prevent that is either coaxial drivers, waveguides, four way designed speakers with xover frequency matched diameter drivers, or constant directivity horns.
Like you said, most domes will not hold an identical FR curve across a large range, wave guided speakers and horn loaded speakers (when designed for constant coverage/directivity) do. It makes a huge difference whether or not the sound that bounces off the first reflection points is similar in timbre to the direct sound. Floyd Toole has spoken a lot about this. Its also nice to be able to sit off axis and still get a similar response. This is even more important in my room since there are more seats off axis than on. Its just my center falls short of that same off axis response of the bookshelves.
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