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Early B.,The information I am requesting does not belong to Danny but belongs to VMPS and its heirs. I am NOT asking for Danny's crossover design. I am a VMPS owner, and Brian would not have held back information and he left all component values on his supplied crossover components. Since when did VMPS component values become proprietary to Danny, and Danny never said he had propriety over them, but you say that he does??? You are making an assumption.
...is the actual values of those crossover components in the 626R speaker you modified.
Also, a low order design can reproduce a square wave, such as the Vandersteen 2Ci did back when John Atkinson tested it for Stereophile magazine. Can your crossover design do that, Danny?
I am not seeing the cancellation effect you are talking about. I do have a floor dip around 300Hz, but that is normal and unavoidable. I have the normal floor/ceiling boost around 70 Hz and a sidewall boost around 55Hz, which are the calculated half wave values. There is a dip between these peaks, of course. Nothing I can do about that, and these are the biggest discrepancies in frequency response. I used the Stereophile test CD, second version.
The fact of the matter is that sound from the speakers and the room is bouncing all around anyway, and it would be rare for a truly linear loudspeaker to sound linear in most rooms to most people.
The best crossover upgrade is no passive crossover. Pro installations were abandoning passive crossovers a long time ago and it's time for audiophiles to come out of the crossover stone age. I have a spare B&K ST-202+ amp that can power the bass section. That could get rid of the inductor on the woofers and an inductor and capacitor on the Neopanel. What I need is a digital electronic crossover that I can place between my preamp and the power amps. It also needs to be combined with equalizer functions. Then I can dump the L-pads as well. I will probably have to go looking in the pro audio market to find what I need.