.5 dB is most likely the cause of the brightness you're hearing. If you know what you're doing, you could add a resistor to bring the level on the tweeter back to normal. A less optimal option would be to adjust the treble on your preamp.
Phase is crucial. Checking it is easy. Take a C or D cell battery and connect the + to one lead, the - to the other. If the dome moves forward, you have the + to wired to the + on the tweeter, if backward, then you know that the - is connected to the + on the tweeter. Usually there's some indication of which lead is the positive.
You also need to know whether the original tweeters were wired in phase or out. Depending on the crossover, out of phase might be correct.
If you have the phase is wrong, there will be a very audible drop in the frequency response in the crossover region. Use an SPL meter and a test CD with sine waves to double check.
Phase is crucial. Checking it is easy. Take a C or D cell battery and connect the + to one lead, the - to the other. If the dome moves forward, you have the + to wired to the + on the tweeter, if backward, then you know that the - is connected to the + on the tweeter. Usually there's some indication of which lead is the positive.
You also need to know whether the original tweeters were wired in phase or out. Depending on the crossover, out of phase might be correct.
If you have the phase is wrong, there will be a very audible drop in the frequency response in the crossover region. Use an SPL meter and a test CD with sine waves to double check.