I am curious as to what are some tricks, techniques, methods, etc. to designing a crossover and then finding out it has a nominal 2 ohm impedance. How would you get the impedance up into a higher range? I have a mid driver with a 5.8 ohm DC resistance and a tweeter with a nominal 3.5 ohm DC resistance. After constructing a 'classic' 2nd order electrical xover at 2,000 Hz the impedance chart goes a little too low, I believe.
Ignore anything below 250 Hz because I did not measure that. This is a generic question. The crossover is just an inductor in series and capacitor in parallel for the mid and the reverse for the hi. I really hope there is a simple answer and I have just been dumb and overlooked it. Thanks.
Chuck
Ignore anything below 250 Hz because I did not measure that. This is a generic question. The crossover is just an inductor in series and capacitor in parallel for the mid and the reverse for the hi. I really hope there is a simple answer and I have just been dumb and overlooked it. Thanks.
Chuck
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