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I have a pair of Klipsch 2-way monitors that sound pretty good, but I think they can do better with improved crossovers.The stock crossovers appear to be using some electrolytics, mylars, and cheap coils and resistors with 2nd order to the woofer and 3rd order to the tweeter.How much improvement can I expect by rebuilding them using the same configuration but substituting better parts like Sonicaps, Erse, Mills, etc?I would not do this except the speakers appear to have real promise. I'm also thinking about rebuilding the cabinets.Thanks for any advice.
You'll get an increase in resolution for sure, I'd start with no rez in the cabinets for damping and maybe use sonicaps or jantzens. Use a decent quality bypass for the tweeter, too. As for the coils, I'd check the layout first and probably wouldn't mess with anything but positioning just to be safe. Inductors don't seem to show as much improvement when upgraded.
motorcityM3 tried upgrading some Klipsch speakers and ended up with new speakers instead. Cost him money he could have put toward new.
Done this many times to older classics. The coils and resistors are fine. It's the caps you want to experiment with. Always, same values of uf and same or higher voltage. You can sub the lower value ones by Dayton polypropylene caps. I also get electrolytics of the same value (they are pennies, be sure they are "bi-polar") and bypass with a .022 film/foil, sometimes this sounds better. For higher value caps, a combination of electrolytic and polypropylene, whatever is within your budget. I usually don't spend more than $10 or so on replacement caps for both sides. I like to solder slip on connections and replace woofer wiring with higher gage speaker wiring. Reinforcing cabinets is always a good idea. Expensive "boutique" type capacitors are a waste of money, especially on lower grade speaks. Have fun.