I redo a crossover for speakers I bought in 1973, and now I'm the resident JBL expert
. Well not really, but I can always speculate
.
I had to look up the
LSR6332 to see what it is. Although it and the L100A are both large boxy 3-ways, I doubt if there is much similarity between them. The tools for crossover design have changed significantly since those distant days. The drivers are almost certain to be very different. I hope the midrange is smoother that that of the L100. And JBL is not at all the same company today as it was in the 1970s.
The LSR6332 has its 3 drivers arranged in a vertical array, if the cabinet sits vertically on its narrow end as pictured. I read on the link that the midrange/high frequency sub-assembly may be rotated 90° for horizontal or vertical orientation. See the illustration on page 4 of
the spec sheet. The frequency response curves on pp 2-4 look good, but they don't seem to show it measured both vertical and horizontal.
Most people who had L100s in the 1970s kept them horizontally, on their long sides. Way back when, I kept mine that way, but by the early 90s, I sat them vertically on stands. I once heard someone say that the L100 had its drivers arranged that way so it wouldn't matter whether they sat vertical or horizontal, they would sound similar. I don't know if that was true or not, but it sounded like a clever idea at the time.
So it does seem that both speakers had similar marketing goals. I suspect the modern speaker may do a better job, but I certainly have not heard it.