Hi Paul,
I have a time / phase aligned, and room corrected system at the listening position by way of digital crossovers processed through my Mini DSP using a mic that has a 30Hz-30KHz sensitivity range. Let me first speak to the basic principle of time alignment. You are correct, all frequencies being played travel at different speeds to your ears. Assume that the microphone is your ears. It has captured that moment in time of the recording when all those different frequencies met. You want to reproduce that at the listening position so that you hear what the microphone heard. If you time align the speakers, all the frequencies hit your ears at the same moment in time so you then hear the same “time distortion” that the microphone picked up. You are hearing what you would have experienced live. If the system isn’t time aligned you are compounding distortion by the variation in wavelength speeds. The highest sound we can hear is a sine wave about an inch long and the deepest sound we can hear is a wave 25ft long, they travel at very different speed so the higher sounds need to be delayed and the lowest played first. If one wants to truly create a “realistic” experience the system needs to be time aligned. This is not quackery as some have suggested but one of many important pieces of the puzzle in music reproduction. The speakers and their interaction with the room combined with their time / phase alignment are the factors with the most impact on creating a 3-D Holographic image “like being there.” I think physically aligning the system by ear would be next to impossible and the manufacturer can’t do it unless they tell you exactly the distance you would need to sit for them to be aligned as will as how far apart the speakers should be placed. I can turn off time alignment and room correction with a click of the button. Without time alignment the system is flat, with it I would put my listening experience against the most expensive system you can find. I hope this explanation helps.
Thanks,
Steve