@mrdon
Yeah, nothing inherently wrong with 1st order crossovers, but it does require that both drivers can easily play past the crossover region, so it’s usually more appropriate for speakers that are 3-way or greater. Because, if you cross over a tweeter at 2000Hz with a 1st order, it means it’s only 12dB down when at 500Hz, no way do you want a tweeter playing that deep (and that means the 6.5” woofer is down 12dB at 8000Hz, you also don’t want such a large driver playing such high frequencies). If you have a hard time grasping what a 12dB difference sound like, being 3ft from a riding lawnmower is 12dB louder than 50ft from a jackhammer. So yeah, you don’t want your tweeter playing that loudly at that low of a frequency.
Yeah, nothing inherently wrong with 1st order crossovers, but it does require that both drivers can easily play past the crossover region, so it’s usually more appropriate for speakers that are 3-way or greater. Because, if you cross over a tweeter at 2000Hz with a 1st order, it means it’s only 12dB down when at 500Hz, no way do you want a tweeter playing that deep (and that means the 6.5” woofer is down 12dB at 8000Hz, you also don’t want such a large driver playing such high frequencies). If you have a hard time grasping what a 12dB difference sound like, being 3ft from a riding lawnmower is 12dB louder than 50ft from a jackhammer. So yeah, you don’t want your tweeter playing that loudly at that low of a frequency.