Atmasphere, thanks for the recommendation - but for a number of reasons I'll probably be limited the BBS options (beg, borrow, or steal) . . . at least the nearfields in this control room are stand-mounted so they're easily swappable and moveable. Console meter bridge is also nice and low.
Shadorne, you make the excellent point that active designs can allow much more flexibility in the crossover design as well as more idealized response. But I think that the vast majority of both active and passive designs use fourth-order Lindquitz-Reilly alignments - and with analog filters this is usually an excellent overall choice. I believe that the 1038 also uses a fourth-order slope, and rotating the waveguide assembly eliminates the horizontal-axis lobing for the mid-high transition only . . . the low-mid transition is that of a horizontally-placed design.
Shadorne, you make the excellent point that active designs can allow much more flexibility in the crossover design as well as more idealized response. But I think that the vast majority of both active and passive designs use fourth-order Lindquitz-Reilly alignments - and with analog filters this is usually an excellent overall choice. I believe that the 1038 also uses a fourth-order slope, and rotating the waveguide assembly eliminates the horizontal-axis lobing for the mid-high transition only . . . the low-mid transition is that of a horizontally-placed design.