Is the 2.5 way speaker the ideal home speaker?


Time for what I hope is another fun thread. 

One type of speaker which is actually pretty common but which gets little press / attention here on audiogon is the 2.5 way. 

A 2.5 way speaker is almost a 3-way, but it isn't. It is a speaker with 3 drivers, but instead of a tweeter, midrange and woofer (TMW) it lacks a true midrange. The "midrange" is really a mid-woofer, that shares bass duties with the woofer. Often these two drivers are identical, though in the Focal Profile 918 the midwoofer and woofer were actually different drivers with the same nominal diameter (6"). 

The Monitor Audio 200 is a current example of the concept, but I am sure there are many others. It's also quite popular in kit form. One of the most high-end kits I know of is the Ophelia based on a ScanSpeak Be tweeter and 6" Revelator mid-woofers. I haven't heard them, but I am in eternal love with those mid-woofers. I believe the original plans come from the German speaker building magazine Klan Ton. 

However many other kits are also available

But regardless of kit, or store purchased, are you a 2.5 way fan? Why or why not? 

Best,


Erik 
erik_squires
Hi Erik, fun post!
The most truthful, most honest, most excellent answer is...

The IDEAL SPEAKER is the one you most enjoy listening to, be it single-driver, 2-way, 2.5-way, 3-way, whatever-way.

I am glad and honored to be able to provide this Public Service Announcement.

Tom
Post removed 
Hi @kijanki - I think you are confusing an open baffle and beaming.

Open baffle speakers behave like you describe, with a complete null at the sides. Boxed speakers do not.

The issue with frequency vs. angle is not related to delays, phase shifts or comb filtering, since the sound is coming from a single surface there cannot be any (unless it breaks up and stops acting like a single surface).

The reason you have "beaming" where the frequency response rolls off to the sides is due to the surface area. The larger the driver, the lower it will beam. This has more to do with the waveform. At very low frequencies, the wave is like a semi-sphere. It radiates in all directions, but at high frequencies it is flat, and mostly travels straight ahead.
 
Hi @donvito101 -

The term 2.5 way is a term of art. The difference is in the filters on the upper woofer. Here it is:

2.5-way : Has NO high pass filter.
3  -way: Has both a high pass and low pass filter.

What is confusing is that in both a 2.5 and 3 way there are 2 crossover points.