@timlub You are mixing up the impedance of a driver for the impedance of a completed speaker, meaning 1 driver on your desktop vs. multiple drivers attached to a crossover.
Of course anything with a coil will eventually behave like an inductor, and woofer’s are the easiest of these to use to make an example. However to tell an end-user that has much to do with the end result is really not a good characterization.
Here’s a typical impedance curve for a simple 2 way:
https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2016/12/crossover-basics-impedance.html
It’s very very different than the impedance curve for the woofer it used, which can be seen in this impedance chart:
https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/8271724650517523711/3931230143413830127
To say all speakers rise with frequency ignores everything that happens in between, and ignores both frequency and impedance equalization, not to mention the basic high and low pass filters as well.
Of course anything with a coil will eventually behave like an inductor, and woofer’s are the easiest of these to use to make an example. However to tell an end-user that has much to do with the end result is really not a good characterization.
Here’s a typical impedance curve for a simple 2 way:
https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2016/12/crossover-basics-impedance.html
It’s very very different than the impedance curve for the woofer it used, which can be seen in this impedance chart:
https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/8271724650517523711/3931230143413830127
To say all speakers rise with frequency ignores everything that happens in between, and ignores both frequency and impedance equalization, not to mention the basic high and low pass filters as well.