Wow. That's quite a rise, and an ugly section from 2300-3500 hz. It would be hard/impossible to tame with passive components. I guess you could tame that peak with a notch filter, but the dropout would still be audible. Your computerized crossover seems to be a good solution.
When we would make speakers from driver like this one, the crossover components would run more that the drivers cost. It made me appreciative of the mid woofers like the M-130 that Danny sells.
Hi S Clark,
I am sure the extended range drive I bought a few years back
from Common Sense Audio (Audio Nirvana 8"basic 98 USD/pair)
had the same bump between 2Khz to 3.5Khz because it was very
ear piercing and fatiguing.
Well, what did I expected for that price.
I am not a fan of active crossover,
but I guess in this case that would be almost the only solution
to tame that peak.
I would be very curious to see the frequency response curve
of the Omega 7F that I own and like very much,
because it sound pretty linear to me,
but a curve might say otherwise.
Guy 13
Sorry, maybe I did derail this post/topic.
Sorry if I did.

I also like the Danny's GR Research M130-16
that I have in my N3 speakers.