Hi Fernando -
You're spot on. You'd achieve the number one goal of having an identical model serve as your center channel. Rotating it 90 degrees would be for the most part fine because as you mention there aren't redundant drivers. And lastly, the only compromise is as you said within the crossover region. The steeper the crossovers, the narrower and less audible this compromise would be.
Another lastly (I rarely settle with just one), is that if your TM speaker's drivers are widely spaced they may not image as well as a rotated center. A few "main" speakers space out their drivers to make the soundstage taller, although I don't like this practice as it tends to undermine the driver integration and overall imaging. I love big soundstages, but not by gimmickry.
All in all, it should be nearly perfect and a fine compromise for the benefits you'd get.
Cheers,
Chris
Chris,
i enjoyed your presentation at SOTA and talking with you there. If a TM speaker is going to be placed on its side, then you need to make sure it has even order crossovers. Odd order crossover will result in a tilt to the lobing error of 15 degrees. Not a good thing for a center channel speaker.
As I said at SOTA, the center channel speaker is the toughest of all, and far more often than not really lets the side down. In order to have speech intelligibility many users are forced to run the center too loud, which destroys any chance of having a realistic acoustic perspective.
The speech discrimination band is 1000KHz to 2500KHz primarily. This is just the region that crossovers and driver displacements cause maximum impairment of speech quality. Ideally a full range driver would be optimal here. However I know of no full ranger that would have acceptable spl and bass performance in an enclosure small enough to be a center channel speaker.
I think at present the optimal solution is a coaxial center driver. That is my solution. It is to use the
SEAS Prestige T18RE/XFCTV9(H1333) coaxial driver. I use two of them in a TL. The second driver, the top one on the picture, does not have the tweeter connected. It is the fill driver fed from a separate amp via active crossover.
The TL being non resonant adds to the excellent speech clarity. This unit is also an fine music reproducer with an F3 at 45 Hz 12db per octave roll off. It is a joy to listen to vintage mono recordings through it.
Now this SEAS unit is available in an excellent kit speaker, the
LOKI kit.
I have recommended this unit previously and will again here. It is an accurate very neutral speaker. If your mains are good neutral speakers it will match fine. It makes no difference if this speaker is on its side or vertical.
I have now found a driver that closely matches the Thiel/Small parameters of the bass/mid speaker, and you could use a couple either side to increase power handling below 500 Hz and correct the step response.
I'm convinced that at this time coaxial speakers work best for the center channel, especially as regards speech clarity.
At SOTA the only rig I considered that had excellent speech clarity were the Pioneer speakers, and they used coaxial drivers.
I will hopefully have time to write my report on the sound quality on offer at SOTA over the weekend.