I have heard Vandersteen 3A speakers, which are carefully built with time-aligned drivers and use carefully designed 1st order acoustic (not electrical) crossover slopes. They can cast wonderful sounding images, but only over a very narrow range. Even if I sat in the center of a sofa, if I slightly shifted my head to a different position, the image could vanish. I wondered where I could find an audiophile-grade head vise
.
Not many commercial speakers have been built with cabinets that allow physical time-alignment, and I've only heard the Vandersteens. The Vandersteen crossovers were carefully designed to have 1st order crossover slopes when acoustically measured. This was done to achieve time and phase alignment of drivers They are far from the simple 1st order electrical crossovers commonly seen. Vandersteens have many more parts in a complex arrangement. I've seen photos of them, but never did see a schematic.
My old original speakers, JBL L-100As, designed without anything resembling modern speaker or crossover design, could cast images, only if I sat in the middle of my sofa, only with enough tow-in, and only if the volume was high enough. FWIW, they did have extremely simple 1st order (electrical) crossovers.
When I first heard some Dennis Murphy-designed speakers, they created images that astonished me at the time. They imaged over a much wider range than Vandersteens, they lacked any physical time alignment of drivers in the cabinet, and used 4th order Linkwitz-Riley crossovers. All drivers on either side of a 4th order L-R crossover are in phase with each other, but out of time by 360°, one full wavelength at crossover frequency. Dennis Murphy strives to modify the slopes on either side of a crossover so that the roll-off slopes are as symmetric as possible, given the drivers. (He also carefully selects drivers for this same reason.) He believes his efforts in phase alignment pay off, but time alignment makes little, if any difference, that listeners can hear.
As the OP
@Mike Up said earlier in this thread, all of his speakers can create images with enough care in speaker placement & listening position. Some could do it only over a narrow area, and some could do it over a much wider area.To invent an imaging metric, imagine how wide a seating area – how many sofa cushions wide – would allow a listener to hear images with a pair of speakers. Instead of sweet spot, let's call it the
Sofa Cushion (SC) rating
.
If those Vandersteen 3As had a SC rating of <1 (less than one sofa cushion wide), the JBL L-100As (with enough tow-in & enough listening volume) had a SC rating of about 1. When I replaced them with Salk SongTowers, their SC rating was at least 3 (my sofa is not wider), in the same room, with the same music. And good imaging was created regardless of listening volume. Obviously, time-alignment – alone – is not the key.