This is a total non-answer. It sounds impressive until the reader realizes it says nothing at all of substance.
I'm not looking to get into a back and forth. Even Gene DellaSala agrees with the line I posted. I've seen him paraphrase it in one of his articles here.
For the specific answer you're looking for you'll have to write to the folks at Steyning but I wouldn't expect a response. Why would they divulge all their R&D?
What I do know is that if Bowers & Wilkins wanted to - they could easily make their 800 series measure so perfectly that they'd make John Atkinson shudder in awe. Yet they have chosen, based on their years of research to produce the 800 Series with "tailored" (as JA says) measurements that are not exactly perfect and often scoffed at by the dogmatic adherents. Yet when you actually listen to the 800 Series, all that goes out the window.
Even with those less than perfect measurements I believe they sound about as close to the real thing as you can get. Earlier this month I made a trip to New Orleans and went to a small place that had a live Jazz band playing. The group had an upright double bass, saxophone, trumpet, trombone, piano, drums and guitar. I sat one row of tables back. As soon as they started playing my wife and I smiled because this is exactly the sound I get in my LR. These speakers perfectly convey the energy and realism of how these instruments sound in real life. It doesn't get much better than that.
At least two other members on this thread have heard this line of speakers and it seems they'd agree with me. My point is there are things that speakers can do that cannot be conveyed onto a graph (at least not yet) and there are things that can be conveyed on a graph that may not be as important as some may think. Clearly that's how the folks at Steyning see it or maybe they just agree with one of John Atkinson's Golden Rules - "All Measurements Tell Lies" so they don't get bogged down with the individual details of picture perfect measurements but rather as Art Vandelay (is that you George
) said, they look at the big picture.
As far as I'm concerned they got the big picture just right because they have one of the best speaker lines on the market. Flawed measurements and all.
Peace