Thank you for the response, I read the article and must admit that when it comes to looking at the charts, I am not sure that I totally understand the meaning of it. You did not recommend using the center channel but rather the regular bookcase speaker? I will have to do some measuring to see if that will work. Why not the center channel? Is the speaker you suggested better than the next model up?
Thank you
There are a few important speaker measurements, but the 2 most important measurements are the on-axis frequency response (FR) and the off-axis frequency response (FR).
The standard tolerance for linearity (thus accuracy) of a speaker is to have a FR that is +/- 3dB from the reference point, which is usually the Sensitivity point (like 90dB, 89dB, 88dB, etc.) from 1 - 2 meters distance.
The NHT Absolute Zero is +0.82/-0.94 dB from 200Hz - 10kHz!
That is even less than +/- 1dB (remember +/- 3dB is standard, which plenty of speakers cannot even accomplish).
The only speaker I know of that has a better FR is the $22,000 Revel Salon 2, which is +/- 0.5dB.
Now just because the Absolute Zero has such an great FR does not mean that the models above it are better or even AS GOOD!
So personally, I would not take a chance. Unless someone measures the higher models and get better results, I would not take a chance. I just doubt they can do better than +0.82/-0.94dB!
As you can see, the Center speaker did NOT do as GREAT as the Absolute Zero:
An average of axial and +/–15-degree horizontal responses measures +1.88/–3.90 dB from 200 Hz to 10 kHz.