1) having a large room I don't need a diff. inductor than the one you sent me, unlike people w/ smaller rooms?
The bass management system does not change the size of your main inductor or anything else about your crossover.
2) I didn't much like the idea of adding more stuff to a x-over. And resistors on a switch didn't seem like I'd want that in the signal?
Actually it does not add anything directly in the signal path. It goes in the shunt path and looks like this...
+----------------------------------+
large value inductor
resistive load
- --------------------------------- -
The resistor value can be adjusted to allow more or less to be by-passed through the shunt inductor.
I am putting a switch on mine that will allow resistive load adjustments of 33 ohms, 27 ohms, 20 ohms, and 16 ohms.
See measured impedance curves of the effect of this circuit:
http://www.gr-research.com/AlphaLS/measurements.htmDid you change the x-o in your Alphas to the new system you worked up (as our rooms are about the same size)?
My Alpha's do use the new network design and the bass management system.
When measuring the room response of one speaker setting in the middle of my room, I got a smooth response with little to no room gain.
When I positioned them to the idea listening position about 5' from the rear wall and 3 or 4 feet from the side walls, I got some room gain in the range below 250Hz. Mostly in the 100 to 125Hz range.
When engaging the bass management system lower vocals sound much clearer and balanced.
Hey... what is are the ports tuned to?
See impedance plots. Tuning is at 45Hz.
I think you said you made the cabinet too big on purpose and used the ports to pull down the woofers?
No. The enclosure was made larger than optimal to extend the bottom end which also brought the output down about 3db.
I makes the response look a little like this:

This is not an image of an Alpha LS response. It is just an example.
With the Alpha LS the response drops down about 3db (not 6db) and extends a lower than it would if it were in an optimal ported enclosure.
Then the network becomes active at about 80 to 90Hz and effectively folds the response over making it level with the bottom end. The network pulls 3db worth of output away from it and allows it to equal the output of the Neo 8's.
What was the F6 is now the F3.
Plus, using woofers in an array actually increases the low end extension by a factor based on the length of the array.
With the Alpha LS about 8db more bottom end extension is present than what you would get from a single driver.
How's that?[/list:u]