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Worst being active means the amount of harmonic & phase distortions generated by active X-overs onto the complex music signals will be getting magnified by the active electronics down the audio . Getting worse & worse.c-J
I think what c-J is referring to there is the fact that a passive speaker crossover does its filtering after all of the electronics. So any out of band (for a given driver) electronic noise and distortion will be filtered, which is not the case for an active system. He is correct, that is a weak point of active systems.
I agree, although usually the only additional piece of hardware between the crossover and driver in an active system is the amp. I admit that I haven't looked at this issue specifically when researching amps, but has out-of-band noise been a big problem in well-designed amps, especially when considering the reduced frequency spectrum each amp in an active system is required to address?
They're certainly not a waste to time. If the application is straightforward enough they can make an excellent solution. Obviously, if a person is trying to create a higher-order crossover, with possibly some dips and shelving, etc, etc, then they are not suitable. But I certainly wouldn't dismiss them out of hand.I see a whole bunch of silly commenting was deleted from this thread. Good moderating.Cheers,Dave.
But this too is getting somewhat of jtwrace's original question which I read as wanting to know if anyone has had experience with the same speaker using both passive cross-overs and active cross-overs. I am thinking of doing this and the whole topic is quite interesting but only some of what Rclark has said has seemed to intend to at least look into it further (and hopefully report back).
Yes, I have had that experience with 3 different speakers - the VMPS RM40's, the diy Elsinore speakers, and the GR Research V2's. And I've used 4 different active crossovers - the miniDSP 4x10, the stock Behringer 2496, a highly modded Behringer 2496, and a DEQX HDP-3. In every case, going active was a big step up, no contest.
Which one did you keep?I was considering the Behringer or the 4x10, leaning towards the 4x10.Randy
Passive line-level filters are really a waste of time. I would do a standard passive or DSP active filter for much more control over the performance of the speaker.
Afraid I don't understand the comment about reduced spectrum - very few amps are designed specifically for a reduced spectrum (wrt 20-20k).
And I've used 4 different active crossovers - the miniDSP 4x10, the stock Behringer 2496, a highly modded Behringer 2496, and a DEQX HDP-3.
(1) What makes you think that this is gospel? (2) You can contruct a single pole 6/db active filter that will have less harmonic and phase distortion than a passive filter. (3) The biggest problem I see with going active is matching the levels and accommodaing any passband irregularities that the speaker vendor had handled before with a trap or such.
There are advantages to each type. Reliability of passive is a big win in my book.
The more I mull this over, the more I agree that reliability is a key factor and might be the winning ticket.