I don't hear much difference, particularly when the wider pair are omnis.. but I do hear it somewhat when the pair on either side of the center position are directional mics forming something more akin to a near-spaced stereo triplet. I also hear it more when playing back using a center speaker, routing the center channel mic directly to that in an L/C/R speaker arrangement). Sometimes shifting the center forward just a bit seems to solidify and locks down the center of the stereo image a bit more, maybe because a wave front from directly ahead pings that mic a fraction of a second first, but that's speculation and could just be my imagination.
I'm sure I've written about this previously, but after wondering about and exploring center mic position a bit more last year, here's how I ended up with the current OMT suggestion of placing the center position around 15-20cm / ~6-8" forward in most situations. It's mostly a best compromise solution juggling a few different things, a way of doing minimal harm in the absence of complete data about which thing is most important, a suggestion that I've found won't cause more issues than it attempts to solve.
I see two primary variables that we are playing with here. One involves attempting to optimize for the coherent arrival of a planar wavefront pinging at all mics at the same instant. The other involves optimizing the smooth handoff of imaging sectors across adjacent microphones in the array. Ideally we want both. If either is sufficiently wrong we are more likely to get "smearing" of some sort or another.
The 15-20cm spacing suggestion is something of a compromise between achieving the most coherent arrival across multiple microphones for a wavefront arriving from directly ahead (best achieved with all mics in a horizontal line), verses wavefronts arriving from a slight angle, such as from each PA speaker. Can't have both at the same time. For a while I schemed about possibly spacing the center mic forward in such a way that a line between the center mic and left mic would be perpendicular to wavefront arrival from the left PA speaker. And a line between the center mic and right mic would be perpendicular to wavefront arrival from the right PA speaker. That angle is going to change with recording position, just like PAS angle does, but 15-20cm is reasonably close to achieving something like that in many cases.
Secondarily, OMT is strongly influenced by Michael William's arrays (Stereo Zoom and MMAD or Multi Microphone Array Design) and Gunter Thiele's OCT arrays. Those arrays are designed to achieving very precise image placement and smooth image hand-off between adjacent mic-pair sectors of in the array. OMT is not as seriously concerned with "distortion free" imaging. Clear, distinct, believable and engaging imaging is its goal. It's more specifically attuned to PA recording, and values achieving better impulse coherence for a wavefront arriving from directly ahead, in addition to and even more so than, sharp and clear if not totally accurate imaging. Still, sharp and clear imaging is a nice to have thing and one of the goals.
But with imaging concerns in mind, it quickly becomes apparent that arranging all mics in a line in unable to achieve accurate image linking between adjacent mic pairs along that line. Any pair of microphones regardless of the spacing between the two will have some Stereo Recording Angle that is greater than 0-degrees. Yes the wider apart they are the narrower that SRA becomes, but it is always "splayed out" at some angle wider than 0-degrees. So the imaging from adjacent linear segments is always going to overlap each other with some image smear. The only way to correct for that is to angle the segments somewhat relative to each other. Pushing the center mic forward a bit does that. The edges of the two adjacent segments that each have an SRA of some angle come closer to handing off from one to the other without overlap. If you play around with the Schoeps Image Assistant microphone-array visualizer, you will note that to achieve good image linking with any 3 mic array requires pushing the center mic forward.
So I compromised and made it a bit of a Goldilocks thing - seeking the middle way - not going fully one way or the other in the attempt to maximize collective benefit and minimize the potential for harm. 15-20cm seems to do that.
If you can't achieve that, or choose not to for whatever reason, no problem. Do your own thing. These are only guidelines that are deeply considered and have worked well for me. I hope they work well for others as well and very much enjoy our discussions about all this stuff here. Thanks for the bandwith.
Respect to all you folks, including those who feel this is just a bunch of hooha.