Common Sense Prevails

Well I’ve never seen a reason to do that, and in the two years of testing I have yet to blow anything except a pair of tweeters while trying to hear pavel’s 20khz test tone (should have known better!)

And besides I’m not the one trying to spew my belief system, it just happens that I disagree with the blanket statements you make. There are exceptions to most every rule.

Edit.....Not to fret Douglas,in these two yrs I have learned one very important thing about passive xo’s;
That active dsp multi amp is in my future!

He's right about the capacitors. They form a network that decreases impedance with frequency, with zero being the theoretical minimum impedance. Not kosher at all.
 
Well technically if I don’t see a reason to do something I don’t do it.......first law of laziness!

Believe me everything I do gets researched in depth, implemented carefully, then stress tested before becoming part of the system. Just because I can’t spot another’s mistakes doesn’t automatically mean I’m making them. Again with the blanket statements.
 
And besides I’m not the one trying to spew my belief system, it just happens that I disagree with the blanket statements you make. There are exceptions to most every rule.

I'm not talking a belief system ... I'm talking science and physics the way things actually work in the real world.

You want to talk a belief system --bordering on a religion-- go talk to the "Golden Ears" who claim that listening is good enough and spend ludicrous amounts of money tuning their systems with wire, cap swapping, changing OpAmps, replacing output transistors and so on, without any hint of real electronics knowledge among them. These guys will decry the very science that gave them the products they so happily tamper with.
 
Just because I can’t spot another’s mistakes doesn’t automatically mean I’m making them.

True it doesn't mean you are making those mistakes ... But it DOES mean that you see no reason not to do those things and are likely to have terrible outcomes with no idea why.

I've shown you one mistake you failed to catch ... There are tens of thousands more. If you actually understand electronics you can avoid most of them.
 
Well technically if I don’t see a reason to do something I don’t do it.......first law of laziness!

Believe me everything I do gets researched in depth, implemented carefully, then stress tested before becoming part of the system. Just because I can’t spot another’s mistakes doesn’t automatically mean I’m making them. Again with the blanket statements.

I think that crossover is a mistaken attempt to make a second order crossover with baffle step correction.

You really have to look at a design from all angles. All unintended consequences will be realized in an electronic design.
 
Wouldn’t L1 and C3 alone just be a band pass if C1 was in series where it belonged?

L1 and C3 are in parallel and will resonate at some frequency. As a parallel resonant circuit they will pass the minimum current at their resonant frequency, forming a band STOP filter. In fact you can see the resonant frequency on the impedance chart at about 2700hz.

If C1 was in series, your woofer would be outputting only very distorted treble, since a capacitor is most conductive at higher frequencies.
 
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L1 and C3 are in parallel and will resonate at some frequency. As a parallel resonant circuit they will pass the minimum current at their resonant frequency, forming a band STOP filter.

If C1 was in series, your woofer would be outputting only very distorted treble, since a capacitor is most conductive at higher frequencies.

Sorry thought that was tweeter! Wasn’t paying attention (should practice what I preach eh!)