*cough* baffle step *cough*
Here, try a video:
26:40 "At low frequencies, it's omni directional"
Baffle step is relevant to loudspeaker design, but both you and Beave are ignoring/denying the contributions of the room in which the speaker is playing.
#43 "I agree. Localization of sound is related to the phase of the frequency when it hits the ears. As such, if you are located near the half wave length, you won't hear it. Likewise, the frequencies WHOSE wavelengths are larger than the room induce standing waves which create areas of high and low pressure - which becomes a function of time - delay as you put it."
I expanded on and agreed with what Beave said, and he chose to discredit it. I offered discussion which is beneficial to the forum, and even you, a moderator, encouraged his disrespectful discourse.
Apologies to
@ematthews for the thread jack. The only downside with Floyd's research is that much of it flies in the face of conventional thinking about speakers and about room acoustics. But it's firmly rooted in science, making it repeatable.
If you, or anyone, took acoustic measurements of their room, as well as physical measurements of the boundaries of the room and calculated the modal frequencies, you would find peaks and dips that correspond to those frequencies WHOSE wavelength match the dimensions of the physical boundaries - Room Modes. I cite that to prove the control the room has, which seems to be the sticking point in this silly debate.