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As most of us know an x-over contains caps and inductors.There is some agreement that caps and inductors should be avoided if possible due to the phase shift these tend to introduce.Avoiding caps and inductors in a passive x-over is however not possible so why not just discard the x-over altogether?The Hifi Cave channel on YouTube does exactly this by connecting a 15 inch driver and an 8 inch driver in parallel.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85VLiXg0eYcSo, what do you all think of this?Good or bad?
There are plenty of reasons 99% of speakers rely on crossovers.
I noted in this video you posted he is not using a woofer but two FR drivers, an F-15 and an Fast-8 if I understand english well.
...if you want to learn and get a good result I advise not taking this kind of video seriously and instead learn to measure, learn how a crossover actually works, and if you really want to "avoid phase shift" then look into DSP solutions.
As most of us know an x-over contains caps and inductors.There is some agreement that caps and inductors should be avoided if possible due to the phase shift these tend to introduce.Avoiding caps and inductors in a passive x-over is however not possible so why not just discard the x-over altogether?
I'll also add -- imagine some dude on YouTube with no knowledge of astrophysics discussing how the planets are formed. He would sound like an idiot compared to Neil Degrasse Tyson. In other words, listen to people who have been designing speakers for decades, not some inexperienced YouTuber. A basic knowledge of speaker design will help you identify those who know what they're talking about from those who shouldn't be doing videos on the subject.
The necessity of using XOs is a patch to allow the use of two or more drivers with no identical Voice Coils to they be aligned in freq, but if all the drivers use the same VC (usually FR drivers) there is no reason to use a XO, unless the guy is a engineer or work for a speaker manufacturing company, which constantly is the case.
I wish it was as simple as plopping a driver or two in a box and VIOLA! -- exceptional sound emerges. A crossoverless speaker is often used as a marketing ploy. Even a speaker consisting of only a full-range driver can benefit from a crossover. That's because almost no drivers on the market have a perfect frequency response, especially full-range drivers. Part of the benefit of the crossover is to correct inherent issues in the drivers. Unless the full-range driver you're using is perfectly designed, you'll hear every flaw it has. It would be analogous to eating a meal without seasoning; crossovers make music more palatable.
Every road has one ditch on either side to fall into.In one ditch you'll find the extremes of "less is more", and in the other ditch, "the more the merrier".Especially in the world of audio reproduction any attempt to cure one problem often creates a new one.
Even Lii Audio's OB speaker contains a crossover: https://www.lii-audio.com/product/pair-liionidas-extreme-open-baffle-and-crossover-and-drivers-high-class-ob-solution/
Every road has one ditch on either side to fall into.