boyacrobat, let's take the Schoeps mk5 for example, Frequency range: 20Hz - 20kHz (omni), 40Hz-20kHz (cardioid), why do you think this cardiod does better than the omni on mids and highs in general? In addition to a slight bump in the high end response on paper it is at least in part it's because the card has
less response in the extreme low end and therefore in most environments would tend to emphasize the resolution of mids and highs, less bass response = higher average loudness of mids and highs, more bass coming from an omni would tend to
deemphasize the mids and highs by putting their relative gain lower in the mix, decreasing resolution, which is exactly what rockymtnryan specified has already happened and he doesn't want. You are correct about the response being wider and I never disputed that fact, but, your logic on whether this would help rockymtnryan to emphasize mids and highs at an indoor Widespread Panic show at distance I believe to be flawed.
I think the most obvious difference when listening to the recording is that you will hear more bass with the omnis
Too much crowd chatter drives me nuts.
These being my points really, it's a practical application question. Crowd chatter aside(which I despise as well), I have recorded omnis alone indoors and in general, in my opinion, they don't fare well at a distance. Most people I see running omnis indoors are running them in support of hypers or cards so as to have adjustable stereo and crowd effect, much like descreet M/S recording with it's capacity to adjust stereo effect after the fact. Due to increased crowd noise and what in general seems like a more pronounced fall off in high end at distance(sometimes due to the exact extended frequency response boyacrobat spoke of). I tend to feel they would fare worse in the situation specified, rockymtnryan already isn't getting enough mids and highs. If mids and highs are what are needed, I would generally think you would want to move the other way, and go to a hyper(or aim at the stacks

). Just my 2cents.

my dsd captures in raw are brilliant
my audiogate dither to 16/44 of some of them
are strange.
Interesting you say this. I have definitely had at least one show I can remember I thought dithered strangely in audiogate from DSD and I had friends listening to it to see if they could hear the odd quality I was hearing. I'm at about 200 shows on an MR-1 now and use audiogate for most of my dithering, WAV has always dithered fine on the shows which I used it with no remnants, anomalies, or weirdness using TPDF or Korg Aqua. The only truly appreciable difference I have found(other than that one stange dither) is that with 1 bit the highs may remain a bit crisper and clearer as opposed to post decimation wav, this is the nature of the beast though, even at DSD's lower sampling rate of 2.8mHz it's sampling at over 10 times the sample rate of even 192kHz wav. Wave format is, in fact, lossy compared to DSD and one should not expect the brilliance found in a properly rendered DSD recording out of wav. I just wish DSD was a more usable format, rendering support, as I'm sure you have found, is sorely lacking across the board except in Sony products since they are one of the players in DSD. Obviously the Korg recorders can render as well but I found using my MR-1 to render all my DSD to be a kludge.