I've decided to plunge into the DIY audio realm (morass?) by building a pair of line source (LS) speakers which can use either active or passive filtering, configured by jumpers at the terminals the way Linn does it. I don't know the first thing about circuit design, which limits me to purchasing a kit. I'd like to use the Behringer active crossover and maybe 4 Wave 8s for amplification. Buying one of these kits is a complete act of faith amd so I've set down my initial responses below, ranked in the order of how the kits seem to stack up to me (highest first).
1. Selah LS-2
Pros: price, 10 5.5 in. non-metal mid/woofers per side, line source tweeter array, small size, ribbon tweeters
Cons: No speaker grill
2. CSS audio Needles
Pros: The LS design presumably overcomes the limited dynamics of the otherwise remarkable TB driver. Size is right. The price is right considering the brutal cost of the ribbon tweeters.
Cons: tweeters aren't line source, no grill, lilmited info available on website. Still I'm very intrigued. This design could be a home run.
3. Bottlehead straight 8s
Pros: price
Cons: tweeters not line source, hocus-pocus with the woofer 'treatments', huge cabs. It could also be argued that these speakers aren't truly line source anyway. But I'm willing to believe that they sound good.
4. Everything else. Prices put the kits out of my budget. Unless I'm missing something.
I'd be grateful for any feedback from anyone who has done any of these kits. I want to include the passive crossovers as reference points for configuring the active xover--ie see how much better I can make the speakers sound in an active configuration.
Happy New Year.
Thayer