Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Hi guys,
I have had these speakers in storage for some time now and wanted to put them in my man space for some tunes. Now then only issue is, I am unable to find the external crossover that they came with. As the mid and high are separate, I am unable to use them.
I was wondering if anyone on here would be able to help me out with advice on how I could make a simple crossover to get them working again?
I will be just putting them into a box with an old sony headunit I have and powering it with my bench power supply.
I have attached all the details I have on these speakers.
http://www.crutchfield.com/S-l9HYGFT37L ... 62-5i.html
Product Highlights:
Plus One C.M.M.D. woofer cone is 30% larger than other speakers of this size, ensuring strong bass response
high-roll rubber surround allows greater woofer movement
1" Unipivot C.M.M.D. balanced dome tweeter may be rotated up to 355° for improved imaging
2-way external crossovers (18 dB/octave, 3,500 Hz high- and low-pass)
sensitivity 90 dB
frequency response 45-21,000 Hz
recommended power range 2-75 watts RMS
peak power handling 225 watts
top-mount depth 2-1/8"
I have had these speakers in storage for some time now and wanted to put them in my man space for some tunes. Now then only issue is, I am unable to find the external crossover that they came with. As the mid and high are separate, I am unable to use them.
I was wondering if anyone on here would be able to help me out with advice on how I could make a simple crossover to get them working again?
I will be just putting them into a box with an old sony headunit I have and powering it with my bench power supply.
I have attached all the details I have on these speakers.
http://www.crutchfield.com/S-l9HYGFT37L ... 62-5i.html
Product Highlights:
Plus One C.M.M.D. woofer cone is 30% larger than other speakers of this size, ensuring strong bass response
high-roll rubber surround allows greater woofer movement
1" Unipivot C.M.M.D. balanced dome tweeter may be rotated up to 355° for improved imaging
2-way external crossovers (18 dB/octave, 3,500 Hz high- and low-pass)
sensitivity 90 dB
frequency response 45-21,000 Hz
recommended power range 2-75 watts RMS
peak power handling 225 watts
top-mount depth 2-1/8"
"Amplifiers don’t kill speakers, people kill speakers" - Don Boomer
- Bill Fitzmaurice
- Site Admin
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- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 5:59 pm
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Those are what you need. See if you can get them from Infinity. Generics will work, but not as well as purpose built.spiltmidi wrote: 2-way external crossovers (18 dB/octave, 3,500 Hz high- and low-pass)
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Hi Bill,
Thanks for the quick reply. I had contacted Infinity but they no longer produce these crossovers. I was advised to search for secondhand ones from ebay or elsewhere or build my own.
I have done some searching on ebay and nothing I was able to find. The new version of the speakers have built-in crossovers now.
I knew that (18 dB/octave, 3,500 Hz high- and low-pass) would mean something to someone but not myself. The only other crossovers I have made are ones that I have purchased off Leland for my Otop12J's.
So I went for a little search for something.
http://www.apicsllc.com/apics/Misc/filter2.html
I thought to myself, if I brew my own beer and fix and tinker with my kids toys. I might as well make my own crossover. However, as I have no clue. I punched in the following from the information I know and got the following.
Would this work? Also, what is the phase shift message mean down the bottom?
Thanks for the quick reply. I had contacted Infinity but they no longer produce these crossovers. I was advised to search for secondhand ones from ebay or elsewhere or build my own.
I have done some searching on ebay and nothing I was able to find. The new version of the speakers have built-in crossovers now.

I knew that (18 dB/octave, 3,500 Hz high- and low-pass) would mean something to someone but not myself. The only other crossovers I have made are ones that I have purchased off Leland for my Otop12J's.
So I went for a little search for something.

http://www.apicsllc.com/apics/Misc/filter2.html
I thought to myself, if I brew my own beer and fix and tinker with my kids toys. I might as well make my own crossover. However, as I have no clue. I punched in the following from the information I know and got the following.
Would this work? Also, what is the phase shift message mean down the bottom?
"Amplifiers don’t kill speakers, people kill speakers" - Don Boomer
- LelandCrooks
- Posts: 7242
- Joined: Thu May 04, 2006 9:36 am
- Location: Midwest/Kansas/Speaker Nirvana
- Contact:
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Each additional 6db filter rotates the phase, just like on a circle. 90, 180, 270. Since you're doing the same filter on each driver it's no biggie. When you start mixing filters it can become a real problem.
If it's too loud, you're even older than me! Like me.
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- Bill Fitzmaurice
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Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
A calculated crossover will work, but not perfectly, as it assumes the driver impedance at the crossover frequency to be exactly 4 ohms, which it will not. But without impedance charts of the drivers it's the best you can do. The phase shift doesn't matter when it's not 180 degrees.
That chart is odd, the values are off by a mile. C1 should be around 7.5uF, C2 22uF, C3 15uf. L1 should be 0.14mH, L2 0.27mH, L3 0.1mH.
That chart is odd, the values are off by a mile. C1 should be around 7.5uF, C2 22uF, C3 15uf. L1 should be 0.14mH, L2 0.27mH, L3 0.1mH.
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
It looks like that program calculated for 3.5Hz, not 3500 Hz (I can see the decimal point)
But that wouldn't make sense either - the values are not off by 1000...
But that wouldn't make sense either - the values are not off by 1000...
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Hi Gents,
Looks like it was a mistake on my behalf. Thanks for the reply's also.
It in fact was a full stop and not a comma. I have removed it and just had a direct input of 3500. Now I have something that looks correct.
All I can say is spot on both Bill's.
Looks like I have some buying to do.
Looks like it was a mistake on my behalf. Thanks for the reply's also.
It in fact was a full stop and not a comma. I have removed it and just had a direct input of 3500. Now I have something that looks correct.
All I can say is spot on both Bill's.

Looks like I have some buying to do.
"Amplifiers don’t kill speakers, people kill speakers" - Don Boomer
- bitSmasher
- Posts: 628
- Joined: Fri May 30, 2008 2:55 am
- Location: Sydney, Aus.
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
If you're keen, measure the impedance of the individual drivers, then work out what that value is where you want to cross over
Impedance measuring can be done fairly easily, with a few bits and pieces. Was just reading that Room EQ Wizard has such capabilities built in
Impedance measuring can be done fairly easily, with a few bits and pieces. Was just reading that Room EQ Wizard has such capabilities built in

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Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
^^^^bitSmasher wrote:If you're keen, measure the impedance of the individual drivers, then work out what that value is where you want to cross over
This would be prudent. Infinity car audio has a habit of using 2 ohm drivers in order to (artificially) increase their sensitivity spec. Designing a 4 ohm crossover for a 2 ohm speaker won't give you good results. Also, very few home audio amplifiers can handle a 2 ohm load.
Built:
17" width 10" driver Autotuba
2 x 29" width dual Lab12 Tuba60
6 x DR250 2510/asd1001
In progress:
2 x DR250 2510/asd1001
For best results, point the loud end of the array towards the audience
17" width 10" driver Autotuba
2 x 29" width dual Lab12 Tuba60
6 x DR250 2510/asd1001
In progress:
2 x DR250 2510/asd1001
For best results, point the loud end of the array towards the audience
Re: Crossover for 6.5" Speaker
Most can't handle 4 Ohm. The vast majority of modern HT amps are rated to a minimum of 6 Ohms.CoronaOperator wrote:Also, very few home audio amplifiers can handle a 2 ohm load.
I know money often seals the deal, but seriously, quality is an investment, not an expense... Grant Bunter
Accept the fact that airtight and well-braced are more important than pretty on the inside. Bill Fitzmaurice
Accept the fact that airtight and well-braced are more important than pretty on the inside. Bill Fitzmaurice