Thank you for pointing that out. Forgive me, just so tired of this.
It is not helpful being tired of all this. Education is hard work.
I do have to comment that your approach is would require many, many yours of design work. There is a reason why only a few really expensive speakers have large woofers, a mid and a tweeter.
The reason is that you have to deal with a large front baffle, and that causes a lot of reflection from the mid, and especially the tweeter. The other problem is that you have to manage the transition frequency where the speaker becomes a monopole and transitions to an omni pole. This frequency becomes lower the wider the cabinet. This makes it more difficult to manage in the crossover.
The other problem is that you have a very low crossover point from the woofer to the mid. This is not a good idea with passive crossover networks. I never advise a passive crossover point below 350 Hz and preferably not below 400 Hz.
The problem with first order crossover is that the roll off is only 6db per octave, above and below the crossover point. That means that there is considerable overlap of the drivers. This is very hard to manage, and often impossible. The other point I would make, is that all crossovers are the sum of the electrical components and the acoustic responses of the drivers, including, but not limited, to their innate roll offs and their out of band responses. Most speakers usually roll off smoothly on the bottom end, but seldom on the high end. This is because of break up modes above the upper limit of the drivers, that results in horrible peaks. These have to be managed in the crossover design.
If you are set on that speaker, then the woofer should be in its own cabinet, for sure. The mid and tweeter need to be in a much narrower cabinet on top.
The next issue is, you have not considered the power bands of your drivers. One of those Tangband does not have enough power to handle the bandwidth, with a crossover that low. It would require two of those drivers per side. An MTM arrangement would be best with the tweeter between the two.
So I am going to advise you to design a speaker system with better smaller speakers, with a much narrower cabinet, and design and build separate subs. This is a much easier and generally a better and especially a more cost effective approach.
There is a reason there are few really full range speakers, and they cost an absolute fortune.
I have designed such, but it is a really formidable and expensive undertaking.
Designing a speaker correctly is many hours of work.
I am prepared to help you, but I would like you to consider something much easier, and for that matter much better, for you first build.