I noticed the R measurement had these were dips all the way through the spectrum. So remeasured and labeled it number 2.
Yup! That first one was very strange: some type of weird comb-filtering going on there, as though you had a highly reflective surface close to the speaker. Or perhaps some type of feedback path through your sound system. But either way, it's no use, so I dropped that one, and use the "dirty-2" version instead.
OK, so, here's the issue: Your levels are still too low!
MattE--Event2020--FR-20-20k--1..3-oct-smoothed.png
That's the full spectrum graph, from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with 1/3 octave smoothing. Red trace is left, right is green, both together is blue. As you can see, both the red and the green barely even touch 80 dB, yet 80 dB is supposed to be the AVERAGE level, with peaks and dips above and below. Ditto for the blue curve: it should be varying around the 96 dB level, but it hardly even touches that anywhere. As best as I can tell, all of your levels are about 4 or 5 dB too low. I can't say why: it could be any of several reasons, but they all relate to calibration. Are you absolutely certain that you "SPL Meter" button at the TOP of the REW main window, played pink noise at 80 dBC SHOWN ON YOUR HAND-HELD METER, then clicked on the "Calibrate" button on the REW SPL meter, selected "Use REW speaker cal signal" from the pop-up box, clicked "OK", then typed in the level "80.0" in the "SPL Reading Calibration" text box, and clicked "Finished"? 100 % certain? Those two levels MUST match! And you must have both meters set to "C" weighting and "Slow"? That's the only thing I can think of that went wrong.... you made a mistake at this point. Maybe you had one meter set to "A" and he other to "C", or you mistyped the number, or some such.
The next strange thing I noticed is that both your JBL and also your Events have a serious roll-off in the high end, and it is very similar. You can see on the graph above that above about 10 kHz, everything takes a noise-dive, and drops about 10 dB over the top octave. It's not the speakers, because roughly the same thing happens with both sets. It's not your soundcard, because the calibration file shows typical almost flat response for that. I doubt that it is the room either, since I can't see how it could do that, to such an extent. I would suspect something else in your signal chain... maybe something in your computer operating system is applying filters to your sound path? Maybe a mic pre? Console? Settings on the speakers themselves? Faulty measurement mic?
OK, now on to the left vs. right issue: The problem is NOT your speakers, since both the JBL and Events show pretty similar results. Here's the two traces for just the right channel (I adjusted the levels manually, to get them in the same ballpark)
MattE--Event2020-AND-JBL--FR-20-20k--1..24-oct-smoothed.png
The light green trace is your JBL right speaker, and the dark green trace is your Event right speaker. Both are smoothed to 1/24th octave. It's pretty clear that they both show the same general response curve, with that huge dip in roughly the same place and roughly the same level, between aprox. 100 Hz and 150 Hz.
And here's the same comparison for your left side:
MattE--Event2020-AND-JBL--LEFT--FR-20-20k--1..24-oct-smoothed.png
It's not quite so clear here, but you can still see that the general shape of the curves is about the same.
So your speakers are good. That means it is either a channel problem (something else in the signal chain is altering the signal: not likely), or the room. It seems to me that the only choice here is that the room is somehow very different acoustically when viewed from the left and right speakers.
I tried comparing my original test to the new ones and see if there was a correlation, but I'm just not sure.
There is. See above.
Could it be a matter of the cheap stands and a possible resonant floor fighting me?
Possible, but I'm not convinced. However, it is certainly worth trying different stands, just to see if anything changes. If you have the time and inclination, then by all means stack up some cinder blocks instead of those stands, and do a test. You don't need to be accurate down to the millimeter here! The problems are so large that even a rough approach will show if the stands are an issue or not.
And maybe I'm still not being accurate enough with my measurements.
I don't think your measurements are at fault! This is way too big to be due to you not setting the speakers or mic exactly. This is very substantial changes, so it's almost certainly not to do with your measurement or setting up skills.
Is there anything else that is noticeably different on the left and right sides of the room, as you stand there and look around? Something prominent that is off-balance, such that the left and right sides of the room are not mirror-images in some way?
One final graph: here are two curves showing the DIFFERENCE between the left and right speakers in both cases:
MattE--EVENT2020-AND-JBL--LR--Difference--18-22k.png
The red curve is your JBL speakers, and the light blue curve is your Event 2020's. As you can see, here too the general shapes of he two curves is similar, thus implying that the Left/Right channel imbalance is NOT due to the speakers themselves, but something else.
- Stuart -