Actually, I designed the removable bottom insert to hold the final crossover, for easier installation than fitting it inside the cabinet through the mid-woof opening. Also easier to remove to upgrade caps and make repairs on.
Hard lesson: A few years ago, I made a pair of tower speakers and installed the crossover through the woof opening after lots of contorting moves. A year later the tweeter quit. I ordered an new tweet, removed the woofer and discovered the big resistor lead had melted through because of current concentration at a very sharp right angle bend in the resisor lead wire. Some dummy

in my assembly department had squeezed the resistor lead HARD with needle nose pliers, bent the lead 90 degrees, weakening it and thinning the lead material in half at that point. It was a BEAR to replace that resistor, as I couldn't remove the crossover board that I had Luquid Nailed in place, giving no thought to having to remove it again
