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Davey,I would like to learn more about a line level crossover that uses no active components, no power supply, and retains the coherency of the original signal. I assume it plays nice with the pre amp, the cables, and power amps too. Do you have a link?
The full range guys are right. The best crossover is no crossover. The 2nd best crossover is active, and the 3rd best is passive, all other things being equal.Same goes for rooms - a well treated, acoustically ideal room is best. 2nd best is a well treated, non-ideal room, and worst is a non-ideal room with no treatment.Doesn't mean a system in an untreated room can't sound good, but it will never sound as good as it possibly could in a better room. Same with crossovers - lots of good speakers out there with passive crossovers, but they would probably sound even better still if active. I mean, think about it - a single amp driving a full range speaker with a passive crossover is seeing a very complex load with very large demands on it to do bass, mids, and treble simultaneously. Now imagine that same amp only having to drive a tweeter. Much easier load. Do you think the highs will sound better? Oh yeah. Same applies for the mids and bass, only more so IMO. With a passive setup, you need a single amp that has both delicate highs and an iron grip on the bass. That's a tall order, and it's expensive to get one that can do it. On the other hand, with active, you can use a bass amp that's a monster, and you don't have to worry how it sounds on the mids or the highs, and that's a lot cheaper/easier to do. Same with the mids and highs - you can use amps that have delicate highs and that "midrange magic" without having to worry about either of them having an iron grip on the bass.
Davey,I would like to learn more about a line level crossover that uses no active components, no power supply, and retains the coherency of the original signal. I assume it plays nice with the pre amp, the cables, and power amps too. Do you have a link?Tyson,If money is no object (or you accept the greater cost), why would you buy an amp that requires the help of a bandwidth limited signal in the first place? And why is the filter so evil at the speaker level but friendly at line level voltages (with the money not an issue)? I think what you are really saying is that at a certain price point, active makes more sense to you. I would never argue with that.Everyone else,I heard two really good examples of active speakers at ces2012. I was actually blown away by one pair, but I think they were more than $20k per pair. Since i have been blown away by passive designs too, it did not make it a universal truth that active is inherently better. That's all I meant to say.Jtwrace,Sorry for derailing your thread. I don't think this is what you had in mind when you posted.
This might help:http://www.t-linespeakers.org/tech/filters/passiveHLxo.htmlYou'd need to know about the circuits on either end of it to get the best results, and that article there is not very specific about that. Please remember, though, that this discussion is in "The Lab"
John,Are you saying a discussion of this topic is not appropriate for "The Lab"? (I'm confused.)
No, I'm saying that active beats passive at any given price point, all other things being equal. For a technical explanation of why this is true, see http://sound.westhost.com/bi-amp.htm
I would like to learn more about a line level crossover that uses no active components, no power supply, and retains the coherency of the original signal.
Oh I didn't see they are $120.I just have an aversion to Behringer. And that will make for an interesting comparison then STS. Davey and I have the same speakers, his are active, and he seems to know how to do it right.
No, sorry, I meant the opposite... saying that you can't just put the line-level passive crossover in circuit without considering what's connected to it, it's not "plug and play"
There is no line amplifier (voltage amp) requirement. (Otherwise the crossover would not be passive.) I'm not sure where you fellas are getting some of this information. A line-level passive network would/may have some insertion loss, yes. But the existing preamplifier (in most cases) can easily make up for this. These days, most of our systems have excess voltage gain anyways.
FYI, I want to know as I am an audio designer/builder, not only an audiophile.c-J
The full range guys are right. The best crossover is no crossover. The 2nd best crossover is active, and the 3rd best is passive, all other things being equal.
For which company?
Here is the Lab. Please tell us how you will insert the C/R line filter or so called "line-level passive X-over" in the audio chain assuming you got a preamp & a poewr amp there.