I second Leporello's point that getting greedy with the sweet spot will sacrifice some of the virtues of limited dispersion. Essentially; you can have a wide sweet spot or a precise image but physics doesn't allow having it all. You can only choose a compromise that best suits you.
What you might try, with only two speakers, is crossing their beams. That is; aiming them at a point several feet in front of the listening portion so that their beams cross and separate in front of the listening position.
If you try it, let us know how it sounds.
If you're not irrevocably married to curved perf-metal panels, there are other options for tuning the dispersion pattern, but you'll have to roll your own:
I've built many ESLs. My earlier versions used un-curved flat panels with perf-metal stators. These gave big slam and truly magical imaging at their focal point, but were directional to the extreme--- basically one-person "head-in-a-vice" speakers. A friend described them as "remote head phones".
Then I started building flat-panel wire-stator ESLs with symmetrically segmented stators. Segmentation works something like what Quad did with their ESL-63 except that where the Quads simulate a point source projecting a spherical wave-front, segmented wire panels function as a line source projecting a cylindrical wave front.
With segmented wire panels, the dispersion pattern can be tailored by varying the number and widths of the individual wire groups (i.e. more/narrower wire groups give wider, smoother trending dispersion).
I once built a pair using TIG welding rod stators, configured with switch-selectable wide and narrow dispersion modes. The switch mode feature was fun for a while but the novelty wore off pretty quickly because I had to power down to switch modes (lest arcing destroy the switch) and then re-EQ the panel each time, because the two modes had different response curves.
I still use segmented flat panel wire stators, which I consider the current state of the art, but I abandoned the switch-mode feature as impractical.
My current ESLs don't have quite the slam and pinpoint imaging of my old unsegmented flat panels, but their dispersion is exactly tailored to my taste, they look great, sound wonderful and they don't lock my head in a vice
(I could hook you up with a pair)