According to the graphs above by ADTG, not a single model can maintain even a +/-3dB spec above 200 hz. I agree with you that below 200 hz shows the only significant changes, as all 3 models measure almost identically above 200 hz. But I've seen
2-way bookshelf speakers that measure better than this.
Apologies for my lack of photo hosting, currently, but here is a link to a graph of the
JBL M2 Frequency Response for comparison. I've only heard these once, and they were not set up beyond being connected to a CD player on the long 20'+ wall of a closed room. Other than bass booms near boundaries of the room, they sounded the same everywhere, it was truly incredible.
But despite that, a fair argument against the M2 is that compression drivers are not known to convey the 'emotion' (whatever that metric is
in music the way a RAAL ribbon can, for example. That's highly subjective, and measurements can't tell us that part. But they do show a speaker that remains completely neutral across the frequency range.
True, the combination of good on and off axis performance yields higher preference ratings in double blind, monophonic, testing.
My point of mentioning the on axis sound as a positive, does not detract from my previous complaint that the sound changed as I moved across the couch, despite the stereo listening situation. Not even the masking effect of stereo could hide that issue.
That's interesting that they changed the diaphragm on the mid range. The measurements posted by ADTG don't show much change in frequency response. But obviously these measurements are insufficient to understand how it sounds off axis, so I will take your word for it!
More recent listening has started making me wonder about your point on TL's music renditions. It would seem that the bass propagation of a TL is more closely related to musical instruments than other designs. We've been listening to a lot of live music lately, and have just been in love!