That's not a spinorama. Given your long ramblings on the 705P thread and elsewhere, strong insistence on superior 8260 measurements to everything else, and unwillingness to send your speakers in for measurements, my conclusion is that you're just trolling.
What's not a spinorama?
Sure, there's not a continuous color transitioning plot like Amirm can create, which would be great, but we're talking about measurements that show horizontal and vertical dispersion by the same manufacturer. Seems fair to me.
As far as not sending in my speakers, I've offered in another thread, and called Genelec to see how much their boxes were so that I could protect them better than how they were sent to me.
My apologies that I don't have $190 for the box plus shipping and insurance.
As far as the measurements being generally superior, typically the following things are mentioned, and I'm open to being wrong if I'm missing something:
-Accuracy on axis is +/-1dB vs +/-1.5dB for The Ones.
-Bass extension measurements show things flat to 28 hz which is lower than The Ones, or JBL measurements of the 7 series.
-Horizontal dispersion measurements are smoother off axis than the speaker that came after it (the 8351)
Concerning your 8341:
-Vertical dispersion is significantly improved compared to the 8260.
-Horizontal dispersion is smoother than the 8351 or 8361.
Your speakers are great, and there are probably other measurable ways I haven't looked at that they are superior to the 8260. Hopefully that doesn't come off as trolling or close minded, I genuinely like what you post here and on reddit, and it's great your speakers scored higher than any others here.
My frustration is with two things I perceive as underlying assumptions:
-JBL/Harman speakers are the best because they did the research. (Genelec seems to have beat JBL here at their own game, I'd like JBL to stop resting on their laurels.)
-Newer speakers are better. (Which as a general, all encompassing statement is wrong, as can be seen comparing the dispersion of your speakers to the 8361, the latter if which is more ragged off axis. Could be better stated as "this newer model can go louder," or in the case of the M2 that many got mad about, clarifying and saying "this speaker goes louder, and it goes so much louder in the bass region that from a practical standpoint it has more bass extension than a Genelec 8260 even though the latter has measurements that look like they'd indicate the opposite.)
I can live with that last part, and am glad it was explained.
Part of this attitude though stems from "experts" or people with experience not being aware of other options and trying to inform me in their ignorance.
-A 32 bit OS can only address 3.5 to 4GB of RAM... And then I as a teenager proceed to use 8GB of RAM loading Ubuntu Linux with PAE onto a computer and it tells me it can use 128GB of RAM.
-You have to frequently defragment your hard drive, it's just how they work... No, it's a software issue and can be minimized using partitions formatted to NTFS, EXT4, etc.
-Freezing a steak ruins it and if you don't let it rest all the juices will leak out. Kansas State University found frozen steaks to be 10% more tender, and Food Labs noted they brown easier when frozen without frost.
-Coffee is bitter and acidic. Just the way it is... No, that person just hasn't had cold brew and doesn't know how the two compare.
-You can't get bass out of small speakers... Typically these people haven't heard a Phantom nearfield, or dismiss it because it's a "lifestyle product" instead of conceding the point that it goes lower than anything similarly sized.
Prove something and I'll believe you or concede the point. Arguing general points and what is "better" (which I do when something isn't settled,) is just banter and entertainment in part. Sure it gets heated sometimes, but that's how things go when things aren't settled, and sometimes when they are.