I asked the seller around 5 hours ago if I were to remove the resistors would I need to replace it with a wire running across if I don't replace with a better resistor and he didn't respond yet. I asked him yesterday would removing the resistors cause an affect or difference to the crossovers and he replied yesterday and said exactly this, "Nope, the white stand-offs just allow the crossover to sit up a bit, other than that no function." and then he also replied, "The resistors in the crossover help it maintain a constant 8 ohms to your amplifier".
SO is there still a chance if I were to remove the resistors and not solder a wire back, will the bass, mid and tweeter all work or will any of them not work until I solder a wire or other resistor back? I'm kind of an amateur and would rather not solder at all for fear I may damage the crossover, can I use a tool to remove the resistors or is melting the silver solder the only option?
FINAL question, if I decide to buy a new 3 way crossover now or in the furture, can I buy a 3 way crossover with NO resistors? Do they make 3 way crossovers with no resistors or do all of them have them?
You can't just remove a resistor and replace it with a piece of wire; the resistor is used for a reason- decrease the signal to the driver in order to decrease its output.
You need to look into the principles of crossover design, amplifier power, audio and if you really want to understand what's happening, think in terms of Physics.
The reason the resistor becomes hot is due to a well-known phenomenon that follows one of the basic laws of Physics- Energy can neither be created, nor destroyed but it can be changed from one type of energy to another. The thing is, changing from one form to another always wastes some of the initial energy as heat.
The next bit has to do with the fact that when a conductor's temperature increases, it will resist electron flow. If you were to measure the resistance of your resistors at room temperature and after they become hot, you WILL see a difference.
What receiver (brand and model) are you using, what brand of speaker components and how are they wired- series, or parallel (referencing your midrange comment)? You listed two of each- is this in each cabinet, or total for two speaker systems?
How are you determining the receiver's power- some dealers (like Best Buy) state total power from all channels on the card stuck to the shelf, some state it very optimistically.