Let’s start with your comment about capacitors. Assuming the capacitor is bipolar, which pretty much all capacitors in speakers are as well as many audiophiles, it works the same in both directions of the AC signal. Voltage lag is not 90 degrees, but may be 90 degrees at some given frequency.
On the second point, to a speaker, all amplifiers are essentially balanced. There is no ground reference in a speaker, so the speaker has no concept of what single ended or balanced is. It is getting some sort of AC signal.
On the concept of "perfect phase", it sounds like a nice concept, except the lower and upper drivers have different excursions for a given power level, the lower driver could be playing the high frequency superimposed on a low frequency that moves the speaker in and out of phase at the high frequency, etc. When you move to the digital domain, there are techniques to correct for more of the issues.
On the second point, to a speaker, all amplifiers are essentially balanced. There is no ground reference in a speaker, so the speaker has no concept of what single ended or balanced is. It is getting some sort of AC signal.
On the concept of "perfect phase", it sounds like a nice concept, except the lower and upper drivers have different excursions for a given power level, the lower driver could be playing the high frequency superimposed on a low frequency that moves the speaker in and out of phase at the high frequency, etc. When you move to the digital domain, there are techniques to correct for more of the issues.
cousinbillyl172 posts10-31-2019 5:29p
Let me explain; when an alternating current (sinusoidal waveform for music) goes through a capacitor, voltage lags current by 90 degrees. If a single capacitor is used on a tweeter, it’s only the +ve portion of the waveform which is affected.
Gauder Akustic? have designed a symmetrical parallel crossover. When driven by a balanced (symmetrical) amplifier, their speaker is close to phase perfect.