The last couple of weeks I have been demoing a pair of stand mount speakers in 2.1 mode. I was using an AV receiver, and after much experimenting, I found that setting the speakers to small and using a 120Hz cross-over to be optimal. A lower cross-over was not effective because it muddied up the sound of the mains. I believe it was sound coming back through the midrange cone. There was significantly less muddiness at 120Hz than 100Hz. For subs I have two 15" drivers each on their own open baffle. Baffle width is 18". Baffle height is 48". I have simply re-purposed my open baffle speaker to use just the bass drivers. If I were to stay with the monitor speakers, I would like to reduce the baffle height considerably.
This setup worked extremely well. I had always thought that a much lower cross-over point would be better. This has been a bit of a revelation though. If I only need my mains to work effectively at the 120Hz cross-over point, my mains can possibly be quite small. A small monitor could afford significant cost savings. I was thinking maybe something with a 4.5" driver.
However, since the polar response is so critical to good sound, I figure this should determine the optimal mid-range driver size.
If I keep the two 15" drivers in open baffle, and I keep the 120Hz cross-over(12db per octave), what is the ideal mid-range driver size to keep a good polar response?
The demoed speaker used a 5" long throw driver.