Since it's too long to PM (I tried), i'll just copy and paste here:
My speakers are now moved into my house for home audio, because I got into a car accident back in september and I haven't gotten a replacement car yet. I actually went with full active instead of using the passives. Reason being that I have the alpine PXA-H701 with is a
very flexible using, allowing me to go active.
I've heard them with passive crossovers though and they sounds very very nice. A friend of mine has Seas Lotus in his car and he ran passives during the 2005 IASCA national finals and placed 2nd in his class, which isn't bad since it was his first time competing and no real tuning was done. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif
3-way setups are harder to setup due to having too many drivers, where errors can be made easily. A good 2-way setup will outperform an okay 3-way. Honestly, most people wouldn't even be able to tell a difference between 2-way and 3-way as far as clarity.
I really do enjoy these. When dropped into the car, they sound pretty good, but the real deal is when you tune them. Voices will sound basically real and you'll hear details that you never have. These are very revealing speakers and are not as forgiving as the CDT HD-series. Revealing as in they will play whatever is on the CD. If the recording is bad, it will play bad. If they recording is great, it will play great. It doesn't sugar coat the sound like the CDT will. It does what it's suppose to do.
The lotus reference midrange is based on the Seas Excel Magnesium. The same driver that is heavily used in home audio, especially in $10k+ setups due to their details. The lotus mid is basically a 4ohm version, 6.5" in size version of the seas excel mag. If you haven't already, take a look at this review.
http://forums.caraudio.com/vb/showthread.php?t=128519
btw, where are you located in orange county? If you want, I can
try to get you to listen to the lotus in a friend's car (Seas Lotus sales rep). He's works in Pasadena, but sometimes he comes down here. This way, you can get an idea of how they sound.