Corinium the Roman slottted into Herman the German's lair just so. Size and posture felt ideally proportioned for the room. With the taller pointy cones in front, the baked-in rake manifests to give the speaker a slightly racier or sprung profile.

Here we see the exposed soft dome and carbon-fibre mid, the former a predictable kiddie magnet so keep the magnetic grills attached if roaming fingers threaten a dent.

We already knew of the vertical slot port in the rear. A closer look at the mid's 'breathing bore' showed it to be…

… larger than expected and internally closed off.

Finally a closer look at the single binding posts and black outrigger feet supported on Hifistay multi-stage ball-bearing isolators for floor and resonance protection.

"This Tectona pair has ~20hrs on it to improve some up to 100hrs but most of the heavy lifting has already been done. The first 10 hours are most of it, then it's more your brain learning the speaker. If you aren't getting the bass and the mids don't balance, you may need to shove them nearer the front wall. They can be 40cm off and still okay. I always think that either you have them 1/3rd into the open similar to how you have them or near the wall. Those are the two good locations. At the Bristol show we put them near the wall to maximize listener space. How you have them, the imaging should be really nice. They are designed to be listened to on the midrange axis. They will be a little lighter and not as focussed on the tweeter axis. From what I can see of your chair, you should be okay. The midrange vent is covered by a metal mesh, there are two foam pieces at strategic points along the port to let the driver breathe a little but to damp out any quarter-wave resonances in the tube."