This should not cause notable problems if you have a movable crossover on each cabinet or on the head which will allow you to tune the response of each cabinet. Without frequencies from both sets of speakers crossing over, you will not encounter phase issues, because their won't be identical waveforms to conflict with each other. Instead, you are changing the times that the high frequencies arrive at the ear in relation to the waveforms and times that the low speaker frequencies arrive...
This should not cause notable problems if you have a movable crossover on each cabinet or on the head which will allow you to tune the response of each cabinet. Without frequencies from both sets of speakers crossing over, you will not encounter phase issues, because their won't be identical waveforms to conflict with each other. Instead, you are changing the times that the high frequencies arrive at the ear in relation to the waveforms and times that the low speaker frequencies arrive...
SameFloorBelowStudio 1 year ago
Won't that cause phase problems?
Seathal 1 year ago
This would work, however you would create phase problems in the higher frequencies for anybody inline with the front of the stack.
I would however love to see a kickback 2x10 cabinet to use as a dedicated floor monitor along with the other range of speakers.
maybe some form of wedge to sit the combo on top of the bottom cabinet
lukebaumer 2 years ago