0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 35424 times.
Well, there are a good compromise: passive speakers with very good selection of speakers with great slope => first order crossover. If we know all the parameters of the speakers, frequency response, phase, impedance of the box ... better.And if they are small coaxial, much better (or with a good waveguide).So I bought the "cheap" KEF Q100 They are sounding incredible after my improvements.In a BIG room => we need two (or three) 12/15" active subwoofers (with adjustable phase 0...180º) at 180 - 200 Hz.
I want to hear what perfect zero phase response top to bottom sounds like.
I know of very few passive speakers with a woofer dragging on the bottom end @ 20hz, 30hz, 40hz, even with 1000 watts that could possibly be efficient enough to achieve outputs like an active system.
Also IMO, speakers tend to start sounding worse when DSP is used above the bass frequencies.
Like much in audio, it depends on the implementation. I haven't yet tried an active set-up, but the DSP in my DEQX has greatly improved the sound of my system, from top to bottom.
I have a 2 inch co-axial compression driver hanging on the back of a large wooden horn. Underneath is a 5 cu.ft. ported cabinet with a 15 inch pro woofer...
You could just use a good 15 or 20 band equalizer for cheaper and easier to use if this is the case. Your simply boosting frequency response, and contouring with gain actively "essentially", but still just running thru a passive crossover in your speakers. Really all your doing is correcting room response anyway, a better room is always the real answer, but impossible for most to pull off.Everybody will argue added distortion, loss of purity, blah, blah, but truth is whatever makes you happy. I don't like putting band aides on 10,000 dollar preamps and amps though so luckily since my days of cheap receivers, and equipment no EQ is needed.
IMO, it's not a big deal, our ears aren't sensitive enough for it to matter outside of the midrange.
Hearing research is done with untrained listeners who never focus on sound quality. So I take blanket statements about the generic human performance envelope with a grain of salt. Most audiophiles are skilled listeners and can hear phase error and group delay at any audible freq. And in my experience they tend to prefer lower phase error when they hear it. https://trueaudio.com/post_010.htmhttps://trueaudio.com/post_011.htmImplementation matters. 'DSP' is just a non-physical concept, and there are many opportunities in the implementation of DSP to ruin the signal quality. They can be solved, but with refinement comes higher price. Better filter algorithms, more processing power, better quality i/o.
There is more than one way to skin a cat no question, sometimes the simplest, and cheapest though nets the best results I guess was the point.
This is the only reason I jumped in if you read all the following comments from there after "Proves you need to up the complexity of the system going active"... This is not that simple, nor exactly a guaranteed solution for most people in this game. There is more than one way to skin a cat no question, sometimes the simplest, and cheapest though nets the best results I guess was the point.