I wouldn’t say it’s a waste of a midwoofer, maybe just a compromised implementation of it. 60% of the entire soundtrack is anchored to the center, therefore greater demand is placed on the center than any other speaker in your setup. A second woofer gives an extra 3dB of headroom, ensuring it can better handle those demands. My setup consists of two rp 150ms for the left and right, and a rp 250c for the center, because of the extra woofer, my left and right speakers are calibrated at 3dB louder than the center to match. Since the horn loaded tweeter can already play stupidly loud in comparison to the direct radiating woofers and has likely been turned way down with an L-pad, it’s the woofers that have greater demand placed on them. Even with a low xover point, the range from 100hz-1khz is the most demanding for two reasons, for 1, a majority of content falls in this range, and two, it’s generally the point where woofers see their lowest impedance, requiring as much as two to three times the power as the upper midrange and treble. Adding a second woofer ensures the center can cope with those greater demands without distortion.
It wouldn’t necessarily have to be an mtm, a tmm with woofers arranged vertically or horizontally would actually work better. If you’ve got a set of tmm towers, a 2.5/3way mmtmm or a similar is needed to keep up with those towers in a home theater setting. The center channel should be the biggest, baddest speaker in your setup in my opinion, and should have more headroom than even the left and right speakers.
Unfortunately, all speaker designs involve a compromise. The only way to completely avoid off axis issues is to use a coaxial alignment, but then you have to deal with greater inter modulation distortion, most home theaters use LCD displays vs perforated projection screens, so the center has to fit below the tv. This either requires a compromise in size, for example, a small bookshelf paired with large towers, or a compromise in driver orientation. It also depends on the behavior of the mtm speaker off axis, and how far off axis your seating goes. For example, I don’t experience any nulls or cancellations up to 45 degrees off axis with the center I’m using now. All of my main seats are within 25 degrees of center axis, with the worst seat being about 40 degrees off axis, so it would make no difference if I were to use a tm design. An mtm design that only managed to remain uniform out to 30 degrees in a larger room with seats further off axis would be an issue however.
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