Ignoring any part of the measurement to suit ones own purposes(bias) is misleading and wrong. You wanted to ignore the part of the measurement that I was claiming is a resonance.
No, I wanted to ignore the part of the measurement just above the part that you claim is a resonance, the part where it dips, not peaks. Doing so makes the peak look more like a consistent rise in treble/tweeter response, which is consistent with Steve's observations.
A cone or dome or coax does not radiate equally in all directions. Combine that with floor and ceiling reflections that will influence the listener's impression, you absolutely need to know what the speaker sent out.
A coax in a symmetric cabinet radiates the same vertically as horizontally. In this case I think the cabinet isn't quite symmetric, but it's close enough to say that the vertical responses will be very similar to the horizontal responses. So we have a very good idea what the vertical response is for this speaker. If there's any doubt, look at JA's vertical plots for frequency response differential. It's nearly identical to the equivalent angles for the horizontal response. There are no huge dropouts in the crossover region.
You can't say that
at all about dome-over-cone speakers.
I agree this one is smoother than the LS50, but I counted from below 80 hz.
Huh? This was the plots for the LS50. It's flat within +/-3dB on axis, and at 15 and 30 degrees off axis. Its listening window is as well. Same goes for the R100.
Surely you're not saying speakers need to be within +/-3dB at 45, 60, and 75 degrees off axis?
Counting from below 80Hz, well, show me any speaker -
especially a small monitor - that's flat within +/-3dB below 80Hz. You've moved the goalposts substantially.