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<blockquote data-quote="jujumantb" data-source="post: 605419" data-attributes="member: 555241"><p>Back to the origional question...</p><p></p><p>Even if you did have them all on crossovers being seperated, there is still going to be overlap between them. Crossovers, nomatter what the slope, still have a rolloff. In any audio setup, the less total x-over points the better, you want to use each driver to its FULL range of usefull frequencies, only crossing to a different driver when ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY. IE: From subs to midbass/midrange to tweeter. Or even better: Subbass/midbass to horns.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jujumantb, post: 605419, member: 555241"] Back to the origional question... Even if you did have them all on crossovers being seperated, there is still going to be overlap between them. Crossovers, nomatter what the slope, still have a rolloff. In any audio setup, the less total x-over points the better, you want to use each driver to its FULL range of usefull frequencies, only crossing to a different driver when ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY. IE: From subs to midbass/midrange to tweeter. Or even better: Subbass/midbass to horns. [/QUOTE]
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