Norman86 posted in another thread (uhm, moderators, how does one reference here?):
2 x 8" Celestion drivers in a custom cab, 200W power handling...
Celestion TF0818 drivers..
oh, and it's WAY too loud. I love it! ?
And yes, it's mine! ?
Two Celestion TF 0818 drivers for a 200 Watt 2 x 10” cabinet. These are Hi-Fi drivers, low-midrange, specified frequency response of 70 – 6000 Hz, sensitivity 94 dB. Rated power 100 Wrms. The interweb is full of horror stories about using Hi-Fi speakers for guitar, most of the arguments against it not well thought through, defeating themselves. The consensus seems to be, plug your guitar amp into a Hi-Fi cabinet (driver) and you will cause Earth’s atmopsphere to ignite in a supernova fireball, destroying life as we know it. Some even venture to say that guitar speakers are full on all the time, whereas audiophile type (read PA?) speakers have a on-off (loud-soft) job, so run cooler, etc. Sure. Listening to some heavy music, that Hi-Fi driver has to handle not only one guitar, but drums, bass, keyboards, more guitars, screaming (sorry, vocals) etc. And live gigs through a PA is not for sissy speakers, but they are full range flat response (like Hi-Fi) cabinets and run hard all the time. While the guitar amp/speaker is run just enough to monitor, being miked to the deck etc.
Note the TF0818’s frequency response curve, off-axis: It drops off nicely at 3KHz. The on-axis peak at 3 – 4 KHz is much like a guitar driver, so I would venture a guess that adding a “beam blocker” over the dome will result in a pleasing guitar speaker without shrill painfull treble. And the speaker will have a more “controlled” sound as well, if the user does not try to drive it into flubbering destruction.

Indeed, Celestion now markets a speaker for modelling amps, a true full range flat response speaker, the F12-X200. 60 Hz – 20 KHz. Look at that response curve:

It has a 97 dB sensitivity rating too. I would merely remove the on-axis compression driver to get the ideal “guitar” speaker. Note the catalogue blurp implies that this speaker allows you full control over your sound. So where are the Hi-Fi type speaker detractors now? The times (and requirements) have changed.