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As I tried to suggest in my last post to this thread, theory is NOT what was requested. Jason is asking for experience from members who have actually changed from passive to active and vice versa. What did you learn? What did you prefer? And why? That sort of thing. Therefore, I feel sure in what I'm saying. He's a practical, pragmatic guy so I'm sure he's not just asking for speculation. He wants to know which approach you preferred and why you chose it over the alternative. If you have never tried both active and passive crossover systems in the same pair of speakers, he is not talking to you.
"I auditioned a pair of Genelec 1037 studio monitor in my friend's home, made by a Finland manufacturer specialized in recording studios monitors since 1978.It is a 3-way active design with built-in X-overs & power amps for 12" woofer (180W), 5" mid (120W) & 1" dome tweeter (120W).Tagged for Stg Pd 2,540=USD4,000, it gets 126dB/1.7M sensitivily & FREE field response: 37Hz-21KHz (+/-2.5dB).Impressive history background & specs, right? It may sound good to many people, but to me - only so so. Instead of sitting at my favourite 11th row centre seat in a concert hall, I found myself seated at the front row centre - way way too upfront, too overwhelming, lacking the air & space of a live performance. Yes, It may sound like a splendid curtain raiser, but I don't want a rock concert in home."- so, it is your preference for a mid-hall presentation vs the front row presentation on the active genelecs, that you did not like? does this mean it is inferior per-se?- did you hear this speaker designed by the mfr in a passive iteration? ie: as the original poster posited - did you compare passive to active, for the same speaker? if not, your comments, regardless of your findings, are meaningless in a "passive vs active" context, w/the same speakers."(2) Click to Audio Asylum DIY tube forum you will see how real fights & mud slingings read like. Yet, not very often foul langauge posted there as it is prohibited by the owner & moderators there."- so, it is ok to be a rude f**k, as long as the rudeness is ok by your standards... "(3) Passive bi-wiring using 2 pairs of cables parallel running from the amp O/p terminals to the loudspeakers I/P terminals, one pair connected to tweeter terminals & the other pair to woofer terminals.Such parallel running cables have been criticized as LF & HF signals running along 2 pairs of cables will cause interference or so called "cross-talk". Not good enough as active bi-amping.Maybe for this reason, a few loudspeaker manufacturers produced loudspeakers with OUTboard X-over so that the X-over box can be placed behind the amps to shorten the Lf & HF common cable frun from the amp to the X-over."- several loudspeaker mfr's offer as an upgrade an active option for their passive speakers - vmps, paradigm, atc, selah audio, to name a few. maybe because it is superior to passive, it is for this reason, that these manufacturers offer this active option? and, have you ever considered that many mfr's produce speakers w/outboard x-overs, as this makes it easier for the owners to upgrade, by going active, w/o having to get inside the speakers to bypass the x-overs?c-j, what is about to follow is not a rude insult, but simply an accurate description of how you come across on this forum. (yes - you are entitled to your opinions - like a$$holes, everyone has them.):the way you present your opinions here on a/c is ignorant, arrogant, insulting and pathetic.ymmv,doug s.
(1) Yes, I auditioned a pair of Genelec 1037 studio monitor in my friend's home, made by a Finland manufacturer specialized in recording studios monitors since 1978. It is a 3-way active design with built-in X-overs & power amps for 12" woofer (180W), 5" mid (120W) & 1" dome tweeter (120W). Tagged for Stg Pd 2,540=USD4,000, it gets 126dB/1.7M sensitivily & FREE field response: 37Hz-21KHz (+/-2.5dB).Impressive history background & specs, right? It may sound good to many people, but to me - only so so. Instead of sitting at my favourite 11th row centre seat in a concert hall, I found myself seated at the front row centre - way way too upfront, too overwhelming, lacking the air & space of a live performance. Yes, It may sound like a splendid curtain raiser, but I don't want a rock concert in home.Mind you, my friend already used an Audio Research tube preamp & CD player. No micky mouse stuff.So given such studio standard active monitors, where not many DIYers can build anything come close. Should I still worry about active loudspeakers????
Hi Jim, do you mean DEQX 2496? What did you use as a crossover - the DCX 2496?
Hey Russell. I had a DCX (Behringer) for a while but upgraded to a DEQX 2.6P (http://www.deqx.com/products4.php). Its a significant step up from the Behringer.The 2.6P was discontinued but it had similar functionality to the current 3.0. I used the 2.6P as a stand-alone 3-way crossover with its 6 outputs going into 3 separate stereo amps.-Jim
I had Yorkville Unity speakers in stock form which were great, but I always thought there was room for improvement. I bought a DEQX 2.6P with Earthworks m30 mic and modified the cabinets for full active duty (added 1 Speakon to the two already present on the back, pulled the crossovers, directly wired drivers to Speakons). Did the pseudo-anechoic measurements with the DEQX and Earthworks mic. Setup crossover points to replicate the stock Yorkville (300hz and 1250hz) but increased the slope to 8th-order.All in, a very worthwhile experiment. Dynamics and overall coherence increased, substantially.-Jim
If I end up giving this a go, I'd just plug in Davey's numbers into the dsp.Maybe we can make a list of people running active with which speakers, and those who want to try, and have the same speakers, can have an easier in.
Thanks for this feedback. This (DEQX) is your current setup still?
It's not always that easy but you can certainly start a new thread for that.
Rclark - I believe if you review this thread you will find that everyone who has actually done this active speaker thing says it was a lot of work. Your belief that it would be fun stands in contradiction of numerous testimonials. You also seem to think that you will hitchhike on the back of others who have sweated to learn how this process is accomplished. That is apparently what you were hoping for when you suggested a data bank. My answer to you is simple: If you want to benefit from the work of others without contributing any creativity or enterprise, buy a finished product and pay the designer for his efforts. I found out the hard way that active speaker design was over my head. Since you do not have the experience requested by the OP, you are unable to provide the testimony he is seeking. I trust you understand that. An occasional request for clarification is not a problem but constant intercession to the point of behaving like head cheerleader and master of ceremonies is unnecessarily intrusive and counterproductive. Please climb in the backseat and pay attention from there.