IF cans, IF alignment, staggered IF-tuning, et al
> cause IF cans don't really adjust the frequency.
Actually, they do.
One could/can shift the IF frequency from its nominal 455 Khz
or 21.4 MHz value by a noticable, but perhaps not enormous
amount, but the shift in any case in a standard, non-ceramic
filter IF-equipped AM radio, is enough to force touch-up on
the tuning dial.
Additionally, I have staggered-tuned some IF 'strips' with
the goal of broadening up the response, and yes, it made
a definite improvement.
One radio in particular I tried this trick on was a solid-state
sixties model Sears 4-band 'Portable' that was equipped with a
5 x 7 speaker, ran on 4-D cells, had a built-in AC adapter and
had a pair of 455 KHz IF 'cans' lightly coupled to each other
as the first stage in the IF chain and the tuning of those cans
markedly affected the resulting IF bandwidth and AM fidelity.
FM 'alignment' in older gear can require the use of a sweep
generator in order to properly align an IF that needs to have
a 'flat' passband on the order of 200 KHz wide.
Good TV 'work' of yesteryear required one of thise B&K Dynascan
TV sweepers to align those MASSIVE 4.5 MHz TV IF video strips
that had double-tuned IF cans that required peaking at half
a dozen different freqs! Not to mentioned the one or two
suck-out filters (traps) that required artful tuning.