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Why not just shop for active speakers? Would be much cheaper, simpler, smaller, elegant, and the manufacturer would have optimized all the bits and setup any software.
Just beware that most actives are designed for studio work and intended to find the nits with a dry presentation versus home audio speakers that are designed to be emotionally satisfying (which explains all the variety of designs). Good actives for "civilian" use include Adam, ATC, AVi, Focal, Meridian, PMC, and Quad. Notice that they're all European and mostly British?
Years ago I auditioned Paradigm Studio 20's ($800/pair stand-mount 2-ways) versus Paradigm Active 20's ($1600/pair with the same cabinet/drivers, just active). It was no contest. The Actives had startling dynamics, flat frequency response (a revelation, due to more sophisticated crossover that is possible), and unbelievably deep/full bass. Bystanders were gobsmacked when they realized we were playing the Actives and not Paradigm 100's ($2000 floor-standers), which on all but scale of presentation were surpassed by the Actives. This was one of a handful of epiphanies I've had in 40+ years at this.
Search TNT audio for a good read on active versus passive and focuses in on your proposal.
BTW don't believe that EQ solves room issues below 120 Hz.
The weak spot of this article is that the author don't mention you have to remove the passive cross-over from the speakers.He even recommends to leave the cap at the tweeter in place.Now this cap is the high pass filter You can of course do the active crossover with a PC but if you leave the passive in place you have 2 totally different filters, a nice disaster scenario.
This surprises me.In the HiFi world they talk DRC (Digital Room Correction) and pretend DRC can correct the entire 20-20k range. In the pro-world they call it bass management because that's the part you can control using DRCThis as far as I know because you cannot correct indirect sound (the reflections from the wall).What are the reasons one cannot correct below 120 ?
Above the Schroeder frequency (that 120 Hz that JLM referred to; actually varies according to the room dimensions), the room acts like a sound reflector and/or diffuser. So while the indirect sound (reflections) will play a part in what you hear at the LP, you can use EQ (and/or good speaker design) to achieve a flat in-room response; what you hear coming straight from the speakers will essentially be mirrored properly in the reflected sound. Below the Schroeder frequency, the room acts as a resonator. In that resonator model, the big ole' bass waves sum (amplify) each other in some spots and at some frequencies as they slosh around, and also cancel each other out at still other spots and frequencies. So you end up with room modes. At the listening position you'll hear a bass line get crazy loud at some moments, and get thin and wan at others. You'll also perceive an overall boomy or 'sucked-out' character to the low end in general. But go to a different spot in the room, and the frequencies at which these peaks and nulls occur will be different. So you can't really eq out the problem areas, as they vary depending on listening position. I do have my bass eq'd for my LP in my room, but I also have multiple bass sources (three subs, one in each speaker and a third in a different location), so that 1. the need for the eq is less, and 2. the eq I do apply is closer to helpful at other positions. This is because the multiple bass sources 'fill in' the room modes (actually, create 'more' modes, but all of them have lesser effects). For more on this, see Duke's replies here. He makes a multi-subwoofer system with a specific crossover network. Here he explains the physics better than I can:http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=132434.msg1407877#new
neekomax:Near-field setup takes care of most of the higher frequency room interactions.Tinking with DSP can be undone easy enough, but would probably drive you crazy and end up making a mess of things. Besides we're conditioned to listen in "normal" residential settings, so I don't obsess about higher frequency room interactions.macrojack:Any Guitar Center around me would never stock Opal's (I've only seen cheaper monitors there). Again most studio monitors have a dry, fatiguing sound versus home audio that provide a more colorful, satisfying experience, so auditions would be in order.Vincent:The best explanation for in-room bass behavior I've read is to think of the room as a bath tub with a few inches of water in it. As you move your hand the length of the tub (to produce low frequency waves) the resulting waves can be seen to travel to the end of the tub and then rebound. As the returning waves meet the next wave it will add to, cancel, or otherwise affect the other wave. Where that would occur will depend on the wave size (frequency) and location. Adjusting the size of your hand (volume) does not change the concept, so DSP can't help.
Thanks for sharing. I have been starting to look into something similar but using Richard Taylor's open source solution. See here http://rtaylor.sites.tru.ca/2013/06/25/digital-crossovereq-with-open-source-software-howto/This is the same solution that mirrored the performance of Linkwitz LX521 speakers. http://www.linkwitzlab.com/LX521/DSP_challenge.htmSo this solution is an alternative option that may be cheaper to implement but requires some Linux knowledge. I will use it on some diy speakers.Btw:are there any good multichannel USB Dacs out there that won't cost a fortune?