Many thanks to both of you!
SteveFord I appreciate the contact. Neolith's calculator (from what I have read in discussions here) has all sorts of extra goodies, suggestions, analysis based on input impedance, load etc. I would really like to check it out so hopefully he can repost the spreadsheet somewhere or let us know a new URL if it has moved.
Richidoo WOW, thanks a ton for all these insights and tips. The kind of info I'm sure I'll look back to many times as gradually I understand more, and your info makes more sense

Perhaps I can throw at you what I'm trying to accomplish? I'm building a portable boom box with Lithium batteries and a 2-way stereo+mono sub design. Sealed stereo chambers, MTM, each with:
2 * Tymphany TC9FD18-08 3.5" full range
1 * Tymphany BC25SC55-04 1" Square Frame Tweeter
Mono/centre sub: 1 * Dayton Audio SD270A-88 10" DVC Subwoofer
Amp: Sure Electronics AA-AB33184 4x100W TDA7498
Preamp/tone control: Yuan-Jing NE5532 Stereo Preamplifier Volume Control Board with Treble Midrange and Bass Tone Controls
My plan is to use 2*100w channels for stereo, with a 1st order PLLXO highpass at ~200hz for the full ranges, and a 1st order capacitor HPF at speaker level for the tweeters somewhere between 5,000hz - 10,000 hz for the tweeters since the TC9s have a very gradual roll off, way up high. (Cost is a big factor building these since I have an order for 5, and I'm doing them for cost, for some not-so-rich folks! So the dollars saved avoiding inductor designs for Subwoofer LPF is appreciated!)
For the design of this boom box I have been attracted to the PLLXO concept and doing channel attenuation and sensitivity balancing across the drivers, at line level, when it will be cheaper and easier than inductor LPF networks for speaker levels. I also hear efficiency, distortion, phase may have advantages with PLLXO. The subwoofer in this design is a bit more sensitive than the full ranges and tweeters so insertion loss and attenuation in the PLLXO circuit is interesting to me, I want to learn how I can deliberately factor this in to balance channels pre-amplifier. I have a UMIK-1 measurement mic and REW to test different configs, so I can take my time about this and get it right. I can also use hybrid PLLXO/XO setups, I'm not the slightest bit principled if there's a good technical justification.
My main questions right now are:
1. The Sure amplifier has an input impedance of 10kohms. The typical PLLXO calculator suggests 5k-10k R1. Is there any consideration here, for which end of the 5-10k scale to start from? Or even lower, since I have such a low input impedance for the Sure?
2. The dual-NE5532-based pre doesn't have any documentation about output impedance, really no info at all that I've been able to find. However the NE5532 datasheet states:
Zo Output impedance: AVD=30dB,RL=600Ω,f=10kHz...............0.3Ω
I'm not sure how to read this, since 0.3Ω actual output impedance seems really low and I don't know the impact of the rest of the circuit. Can anyone help me decipher this, and any idea how this might affect my PLLXO decisions?
3. I'm mixing the stereo channels into a mono bus for the sub, filtering that PLLXO/LPF (2nd order preferably), then splitting to 2 amp channels for the Sure amp blocks, which feed the 2 coils of the Dayton DVC driver. My summing circuit is simply 2 * 10kΩ resistors in series with input (+), tied together, into PLLXO/LPF. Any idea how I should START with a design like that, with line source splitting into 4 lines like this:
in 1 --------> Left main -----> PLLXO HPF, 200hz(?) 12dB/oct(?) -----> amp channel 1
|
-----> 10k R -----
|-----> Center/Sub: PLLXO LPF, 200hz 12dB/oct(?) ----=====> amp channels 2,3
-----> 10k R -----
|
in 2---------> Right main ----> PLLXO HPF, 200hz(?) 12dB/oct(?)
I wired the sub already to a Harrison Labs FMOD PLLXO at 12dB/oct 200hz but I since learned my 10k input impedence on the amp will throw off the XO point, that it's a non-ideal design since it is built for input impedance variation over quality, and I'd be better off doing my own... which brings me here. Also they seem cool but overpriced compared to a simple circuit to DIY. On testing I heard a lot more high freq content than I'd expect with a traditional LPF.
My head is spinning a bit over:
- the effect of splitting the L and R to independent channels for 4 amp lines on PLLXO specs
- the effect of summing L and R for the sub pre-PLLXO for a LPF (should I build parallel PLLXO circuits, and sum them afterward maybe?)
- where to begin with that all-important initial resistor starting point for a 10k input impedence on the amp. If I could just get a hint there, I could at least start hacking & measuring with REW.
Thanks for reading!!!
David