Keith_W
Major Contributor
Not necessarily. It depends on the design and beamwidth. But typically commercial horns beam a lot. Meaning the get gradually narrower and narrower the higher you go and frequency. The result is then a very small sweet spot which you typically hear at audio shows. These are poorly designed horns IMO.
I am under the impression that whether you like wide directivity or narrow directivity is a matter of preference and your room, and that what is important is that the off-axis response remains smooth. For e.g. if you have a narrow room, wide directivity would mean a lot of early reflections, so a narrow directivity speaker would be better. Is this incorrect?