Suppose we have hotel room + no room treament + extreme (45 degrees) toe-in. Recipe for disaster, especially when it comes to imaging and soundstaging, right?
Here are some online comments about such rooms.
From RMAF 2013: “Just amazing. This feels like a real performance. I haven’t heard such a focused soundstage at this show period [written late on the last day of the show]. Absolutely phenomenal. Easily a contender for best in show.”
“This room had the most locked in-soundstage and imaging I have ever heard bar none with dynamics to match. The sweetspot is just an incredible experience and really musical top to bottom. And, amazingly, they did it with zero room treatments."
“Listening to these guys in wildly suboptimal positioning was exhilarating. The sound stage was huge, I mean really wide, with good detail and killer dynamics.”
From Newport Beach 2014: "...musical, with a warm, full sound; focused images in spite of abundant room sound; and a remarkable dynamic ease."
“The way the speakers threw images way high, as well as their amazing three-dimensionality, was quite impressive. “
From Axpona 2016: “With the right audio gear [this recording] successfully renders the essence of (IMO) one of the greatest 3 or 4 concert halls on earth, the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. I’ve heard music there, and there’s truly a sense of sound being present in the air around you. The multichannel rendering gets this aspect right; so did the [speakers toed-in 45 degrees], nearly to the same degree, despite the presence of only two channels... what I heard was the unique acoustic signature of the Concertgebouw.”
From RMAF 2018: “Best Sound Cost No Object AND Best Value in Show. A beautiful, rich, better than life tonality combined with incredible speed, transparency, soundstaging and precision. Along with best-in-class room-integration.”
So, why didn’t these overly-toed-in speakers totally suck (especially at soundstaging) in untreated hotel rooms? The answer is very simple: They were designed to be used that way, and thus they reaped the benefits @erik_squires describes above without any appreciable downside.
Incidentally the reviewer who said "This room had the most locked in-soundstage and imaging I have ever heard bar none" has been described as an "imaging and detail freak", and the one who said "Best Sound Cost No Object AND Best Value in Show" claims to be "a tonality freak." So the set-ups weren’t making significant trade-offs between different attributes.
Duke