I know the Stereophile review very well. It's 15 years old and from a pre-production or the very first series of the speaker.
Verified by REW measurements I have a very linear response 15 Hz to 12 KHz in my room, above 12 KHz the response rolls off slightly. Some of the roll-of is due to acoustic treatment of the room which also keeps the room's otherwise generally unpleasant decay under control. The Magellans are helped by dual B&W ASW800 subs with a crossover set at 60Hz.
Actually, I did not come here to discuss your opinion on my speakers but to get feedback about the self-inductance of the In-Akustik cables
but on the other hand it is quite entertaining.
I have heard a lot of speakers, owned a lot of speakers and did extensive in room testing before choosing these and they were superior to B&W 804 D3 and the Dali Epicon, though the latter came close in the ability to disappear completely and have voices come alive.
One word of warning should accompany the Magellans: They are very high! If the room has hard, reflective surfaces on floor and ceiling and the ceiling height is low enough that the tweeter and midrange is close to the mid-point both of the first order reflections arrive simultaneously smearing details and making the sound "hard" or shrill. They probably had a French castle in mind when designing them