ok well this is my first ever build so i guess i wont be doing that if i do this and single amp it will 145 watts be enough because i dont know how to figure power or even begin to understand all that but thanks for fast input
I can't answer those questions yet, until the crossover is complete.
Now there will be many hours of work in this. The cost of the components for two three way crossovers is going to run to between $300 and $400 dollars. Are you sure you want to proceed?
I have taken a quick look at your plans. Already I see problems.
The tweeter you have chosen will require a crossover around 4 kHz, the woofer about 350 Hz. That is fair enough, but your mid range is only 25 watts, and yet has to handle about half the power at least with the crossover where it needs to be.
Even if you used two midranges per side it would be marginal, and you would have to use at least two per side in MTM configuration.
Your tweeter is not suitable for MTM.
The mid is metal coned with nasty break up modes, which will need notching in the crossover. This will be a complex expensive crossover.
A bigger problem is that Dayton state there acoustic data is unreliable below 200 Hz. I absolutely have to have reliable acoustic data in this region to begin to design a crossover. There is also no off axis data for the mid range you selected.
The nest issue is that this design is not worth the trouble. F3 will only be 35 Hz. You can design a two way or 2.5 way speaker a lot cheaper and with better results than in your approach. Multiple crossover points are not an advantage. They are a disadvantage, with each crossover point introducing a whole set of problems and stealing amp power as line insertion losses really mount. You will end up with a design with a sensitivity of only about 82 db 1 watt one meter.
I'm sorry but this design can easily be outclassed by something simpler and cheaper.
These days to make a three way speaker worth the trouble and expense, you need at least two 10" drivers, a 12" or 15" driver.
I'm sorry but I have seen enough of this project to see that it is not worth the effort, so I respectfully decline to get involved further.