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Interesting as those are the exact frequencies I ended up on my system. The way I understand it active crossovers do more than just let you select the crossover frequencies. It lets you have a clean path from amplifier to speaker with the frequencies to do so already decided. As well more amplifiers give you more headroom. If you have a wiring problem you might want to consider wire management. You will not get the same sound out of passive as you will from active. Passive limits, adds, or degrades the sound one way or the other. That is not to say that there is not well designed passive speakers out there. There are many instances one would need to use passive components in a speaker. Such as Ribbon tweeters must just for protection (from what I understand).I personally like the active crossover sound and even though I will admit my audio rack looks like a wire jungle in the back as well, it will not make me sway from it. If you like you can move to the passive setup and see if you like it, but remember it's going to be an experiment for you to decide. I hope this helps, you a little bit. There is plenty of information on the internet about active vs passive setups. Take a look around, a lot of helpful information out there. I am sure someone else can help you out here as well the differences. Best of luck.
as a relative newcomer to speaker building and an apartment tenant with a 13x18 living room, my passive 3-way OB gives me all the sound I can handle without affecting the neighbors. I'd probably do something different with my own property. "horses for courses" .
Is it possible to atleast go passive on 2 out of 3 speakers so that atleast i can get rid of one speaker ...just asking...i want to put some crossover between Eminence alpha and beta this way i can run both of them from one amp...doable?