Reading through this thread, I can’t help but wonder if everyone is on the same page regarding what “active speakers” genuinely are. People use active and powered interchangeably, when they’re not one in the same.
I’ll probably get proven wrong, but active speakers use an active crossover. Built-in amplification may or may not be present. Powered speakers have built-in amplification. Most that I’ve seen do not have an active crossover.
The we have the issue of which market. Mass market? Audiophile market? Pro audio/studio market?
Back to what I think is the original intent of the thread...
I don’t see truly active speakers dominating the audiophile market due to a simple thing - cost. While there are “cost is no object” people out there, they’re few and far between. An active 3 way design is going to take 6 channels of amplification too, driving up the cost further than the speakers and crossover alone. 6 quality channels are going to cost more that 2. And best of luck to you finding a great sounding and affordable 6 channel amp. More like 2 stereo amps or 6 monoblocks.
I’d love to be a cost is no object guy. That $2 billion lottery drawing passed me by, so I’m stuck in the struggle for the foreseeable future. I’m not alone in that one.
Look at what James has posted here and elsewhere. Active designs don’t sell very well. His bean counters don’t want him going all out with active designs because there’s no money in it for them. Audio companies aren’t exactly charitable organizations that aren’t concerned about turning a profit. No profit AND no market isn’t a recipe any business wants to follow. The ones that followed that plan followed it unintentionally or unknowingly. They’d comment, but they’re not around to defend their actions.
