cd318, quite a long marketing dissertation for a easily solved problem. All he says about our hearing is correct. Our ears are primarily location detection devices. They evolved to locate danger. His analysis of speakers is correct. This is the major problem for horn speakers like the K horn. The drivers are at significantly different distances from you ears.
The "easy" solution is to use one driver and no cross over. Not so easy.
The only transducer type that has been able to do this successfully is the full range ESL. Trying to do this in the analog domain with conventional drivers is difficult and only really effective at one location. At higher frequencies say the midrange to tweeter crossover it is more difficult to match things up then at much lower frequencies with longer "slower" wave lengths like a sub woofer crossover.
The "easy" solution is to use one driver and no cross over. Not so easy.
The only transducer type that has been able to do this successfully is the full range ESL. Trying to do this in the analog domain with conventional drivers is difficult and only really effective at one location. At higher frequencies say the midrange to tweeter crossover it is more difficult to match things up then at much lower frequencies with longer "slower" wave lengths like a sub woofer crossover.