Yes, I want to change the capacitors a they are showing higher readings on a capacitor tester. The midrange is also not giving clear output.
The midrange driver is original, there's a garnish ring around it which I have removed.
I have attached a rough circuit diagram (sorry about my bad drawing ) of the crossover, which I strongly believe is not original because the person who sold it turned out to be a shady character. He must have switched the original with this locally made crossover. Believe me, they do such things here
Can film capacitors be connected in parallel to double the values??
(Attachment Link)
The woofer circuit is -- providing the component values are sane -- a 12dB/octave low-pass filter.
The midrange still is a 6dB/octave high-pass, and not a band-pass. As stated in the thread earlier, this trusts the natural roll-off of the midrange to keep it from interfering with the treble drivers.
The treble also is 12dB/octave, but high-pass.
All in all, there is a plan to the circuit. Is it the best circuit for the application? Perhaps not. I'd think twice about the lack of low-pass for midrange, OTOH, the first circuit from the manual also lacks this.
A lot of the character and clarity of a multi-element loudspeaker system lies in the interaction (or lack thereof) between drivers, and this is largely governed by whether they try to reproduce the same frequencies. To achieve this most crossovers actually have some gap in the response curve so that there is a 3 dB drop in level at the crossover frequency when the outputs are summed. It does look non-intuitive on paper, but it works in reality. A high-pass-only midrange meeting a high-pass treble circuit will not satisfy this -- there will need to be a low-pass filter on the midrange too. But, this was not deemed a problem in the original circuit, so..
The proper minimal-compromise solution of course is an active crossover and separate power amps per speaker, but that's seriously expensive.
Oh, and on capacitors, have a look here:
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/physics/chapter/19-6-capacitors-in-series-and-parallel/